39 Ind. 136 | Ind. | 1872
In 1838, the appellant, by written, contract, sold to William Bennett, the ancestor of the appellees, certain real estate, and put him in possession thereof. William Bennett paid a considerable part of the purchase-money; the time for the payment of the residue thereof was extended by a subsequent agreement; but Bennett died without having made full payment for the land. The appellant, by bill in chancery, proceeded to subject the land to the payment of the residue of the purchase-money, making the widow and heirs of the deceased parties thereto. In 1845, he obtained a decree, ascertaining the amount due to him, and directing the sale of the land for the payment thereof; and at the sheriff’s sale he became the purchaser' thereof for less
On the return of the case to the circuit court, issues were made upon the counter claim.
The trial of the cause was then submitted to the court, by agreement of the parties, the Hon. A. L. Osborn acting as judge, on account of a change of venue which had been taken from the regular judge, the cause having been set down for a hearing before him on a day in vacation. After hearing the evidence, by consent of the parties the court ordered that the cause be continued until the next term, and that at any timé during the next term, or during any subsequent term of the court, the same judge should make any and all orders and entries, including his findings and rulings and the judgment thereon, and other necessary orders, subject to all just exceptions then to be taken. At the succeeding regular term of the court, Judge Osborn did not attend, and the cause was continued by the regular judge until the next term. At that term, Judge Osborn appeared, when Welch objected to his proceeding to decide the cause or taking any further steps therein, because there had been no continuance of the cause by him from the special term. This objection was overruled, and the appellant excepted by proper bill of exceptions. The judge then made a special finding and declared his conclusions of law, which finding is not signed by the judge, but is in the record, and referred
“That the said defendant, Turner Welch, did on the eleventh day of June, 1838, sell to the said William Bennett the said real estate in the said complaint and amended complaints mentioned; and on that day the said contract mentioned in said complaints, of that date, was executed by said defendant, Welch, and Bennett, and by said Jacob D. Mustard and Samuel Mustard as the sureties of said Bennett; and that the land mentioned in said contract is the same land mentioned in said complaints; that on the twenty-fifth day of December, 1838, the said Bennett paid to said defendant, Welch, the sum of three thousand dollars, as stipulated in said contract for him to do; that said defendant, Welch, did not make or tender to said Bennett a deed for said land or any part of it; that said Bennett did not make and tender to said Welch any mortgage upon said lands to secure the deferred payments, and no demand was made by either of said parties upon the other for such deed or mortgage; that afterward, on the first day of July, 1841, the said Bennett and Welch executed the contract in said complaint mentioned of that date, and that Thornton W. Sargeant executed said contract as the surety of said Bennett; that after the first payment of the said sum of three thousand dollars, said Bennett, in his lifetime, paid to said Welch the sum of one thousand one hundred and ninety-tw,o dollars and fifty cents, as follows, to wit: January, 18th, 1840, four hundred dollars; July, 23d, 1840, one hundred and ten dollars; November 13th, 1840, one hundred and eighty-two dollars and fifty cents; September, 1841, five hundred dollars ; that said Bennett died intestate, in March, 1842, leaving surviving as his heirs, and only heirs at law, the said Samuel T. Bennett, Louisa J. Talbott, and William S. Bennett; that said Louisa
“ First, that the said Welch is accountable to said heirs for the rents and profits of said real estate during all the time
“ Second, that said defendant, Welch, is entitled to be credited with the amount of the value of said repairs, with interest thereon from the first day of March, 1847, to which the plaintiffs except.
“Third, that said heirs are not accountable to said Welch for any rents and profits for the use of said lands by said William Bennett, or by themselves, or by the said administrator, to which said Welch excepts. And the court, after taking an account between the parties on the basis aforesaid, find that there is due to the said Welch the sum of sixteen hundred and thirty-one dollars and nine cents.
“ And the court further find that there would be due the said heirs the sum of five thousand and fourteen dollars and seventy-three cents, if said Welch was not allowed for said repairs; which is excepted to by said Welch.
“And the court further find as a conclusion of law that upon the payment of said sum of one thousand six hundred*and thirty-one dollars and nine cents by the said heirs to the said Welch, or into the clerk’s office of this court for his use, and the assumption of their own costs herein, they are entitled to a deed of conveyance from said Welch for said real estate vesting the title thereof in said heirs in fee simple; which is excepted to by said Welch.”
The appellant moved the court for a new trial, for the reasons, that the finding was contrary to the evidence, and because of the errors of law in the legal conclusions set forth in the special findings. This motion was overruled by the court. The court having found that there was due Welch on the purchase-money, after settling the accounts for rent against him, and for taxes and improvements in his favor, the sum of sixteen hundred and thirty-one dollars and nine cents, the appellees paid that sum into court and agreed to pay their own costs; the court thereupon adjudged specific performance of the contract in their favor, and appointed a
The following errors are assigned by the appellant in this court:
First. The overruling of the appellant’s demurrer to the counter claim.
Second. Overruling appellant’s demurrer to appellees’ reply to appellant’s answer..
Third. Sustaining the appellees’ motion to strike out portions of appellant’s answer, as stated in the abstract herewith filed.
Fourth. In assuming jurisdiction to decide said case and render a final decree therein.
Fifth. In refusing to grant a new trial.
Sixth. In the legal conclusions from- the findings of,the court.
Seventh. In overruling appellant’s motion to set aside the decree.
Eighth. In rendering a decree for specific performance under the evidence and its own findings.
Ninth. In overruling appellant’s several motions to reject the appellees’ counter claim.
Tenth. In overruling appellant’s motion to set aside first, third, and last conclusions of law, specified in the findings of the court.
Eleventh. In overruling appellant’s motion to set aside the second conclusion of law, specified in the findings of the court.
Twelfth. In its findings in the first, second, third, and last conclusions of law.
So far as any of the questions presented to us have been already decided by this court, we shall not disturb them'. We have examined them, so far as to satisfy ourselves that there is no sufficient reason for overruling what has already been decided.
When the case was last in this court, and decided as reported in 25 Ind., supra, it was held that the facts set forth
The next error relates to 'the action of the court with reference to a pleading which the party had no right to file. A counter claim is properly set up in the answer. 2 G. & H.'83, sec. 56, third.division. .Whén 'a counter claim is pleaded, the reply-thereto ends the pleading. 2 G. & H. 68, sec. 48. If there is any new matter which might have been pleaded to the reply under., the. former practice, it maybe given in evidence without further pleading. 2 G. & H. IOO, sec. 74, and p. 195, section 318. In this case, the reply to the counter claim is denominated in the record an answer, and then the appellant filed another pleading, which is styled a reply. The second assignment of errors relates to the overruling of a demurrer to the last named pleading. It was not material what the court did with that pleading; its action cannot be'successfully assigned for error.
It was only a Repetition of what had been stated in the counter claim, and did not change the material facts from what they were in the previous pleadings. It should, had a a motion been made, have been stricken out by the court. A demurrer to it did not, however, perform the office of a motion to strike it out.
The next question relates to the action of the court in striking out certain facts of the reply, but improperly spoken of in the assignment of errors as the answer. Upon as careful an examination of the facts of that pleading thus set • aside as we have been able to make, we have come to the conclusion that the matter thus stricken out was irrelevant and immaterial, and that it was properly stricken out and set aside. We do not deem it necessary to set out the parts of the pleading stricken out in this opinion.
■ It is scarcely admissible for the appellant to object to-the authority of Judge Osborn to sit in the case, and finally dispose of it at the time of. such final disposition. . It would be to allow the appellant to violate an agreement made and
Passing over the fifth assignment of errors, for the present, the sixth is based on alleged error in the conclusions of law by the court upon the findings of fact. As we have seen the special finding was not signed by the judge, and instead of having been incorporated in the bill of exceptions, it is only referred to as being elsewhere in the record. According to the bill of exceptions, the appellant excepted to the findings, and not to the conclusions of law. The exception should be to the conclusions of law. 2 G.& H. 207, sec. 341. See Peoria Marine, etc., Co. v. Walser, 22 Ind. 73. Without deciding that the special findings and conclusions of law and the exceptions are properly in the record, or the exceptions properly taken, we have examined the conclusions of law, as if the findings, etc., were properly in the record, and the exceptions properly made, and see no error in such conclusions of law.
There is no reason shown for setting aside the decree, or judgment, and we do not see that any question is presented by this assignment.
The eighth assignment attempts to call in question the action of the court in rendering the decree or judgment; but when the pleadings are sufficient, and the facts are found as alleged, the proper judgment is an inevitable conclusion or consequence, which cannot be avoided or arrested, except by showing that the pleadings do not assert the necessary
The motions to reject the counter claim were properly overruled. When the first judgment was reversed by this court, and the cause remanded to the circuit court, there was no answer on file, none having been filed by any of the defendants, except that the usual answer of the infants by their guardian ad litem wás filed. It seems to us that it was proper that the appellees should then file then-counter claim, setting up the facts upon which they relied for specific performance of the contract. It was, doubtless, with this view that the case was brought to this court, that they might get rid of the judgment and the sale of the land by the sheriff on the judgment to Welch. The counter claim having been filed in vacation, without any permission from the court, it was proper to test the question of the right to have it on file by a motion to reject it. We know of no law to prevent a defendant from filing his answer or an amended or additional answer in vacation, when the other party has not completed the issue by a reply to the answer. 2 G. & H. 117, sec. 97. As the court might unquestionably have allowed the counter claim to have been filed, as it was filed, and the court refused to set aside the pleading, we ought not, we think, to reverse the judgment on account of this action of the court.
10th, ixth, and 12th. These assignments of error relate to the overruling of the motions to set aside the conclusions of law. The proper mode in which to reserve questions with reference to the conclusions of law is by excepting to them. A motion to set them aside is unknown to correct practice.
The • fifth assignment of error is the refusal of the court to grant a new trial, and, as we have seen, the new trial was asked for the reason that the finding was contrary to the evidence. The other reason assigned for a new trial,
We have thus examined all the assignments of error, and are of the opinion that there is no error in the record.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
Petition for a rehearing overruled.