Wood v. Dunham

105 Iowa 701 | Iowa | 1898

Deemer, C. J.

— Defendants moved, to transfer the case to the equity side of the calendar. This motion was submitted, but does not appear to have been passed upon. The case did not present any matters of equitable cognizance, and the reference was. practically by consent, — as no objection was made or exception taken to the order.

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*704 3

4 *703The case was not of equitable cognizance, and the'findings of the referee have the force and effect of the verdict of a jury, and, a© no exceptions were taken to these findings, the sole question for solution is whether the plaintiff was entitled to judgment against Emma L. Dunham upon the fact© found by the referee when applied to the issues presented by the pleadings. No direct attack was made upon the pleadings filed by the appellees, and down to the time appellant filed Ms motion for judgment all parties seem, to bavie treated the facts pleaded in answer as a good defense to appellant’© petition, although neither fraud nor mistake was. pleaded nor reformation asked. The; motion wa© based upon the ground “that the defendant© both signed the note, and the evidence shows that the said Mrs. Z. T. Dunham signed the note for a good and valuable consideration; and, further, because, on the whole record, the ©aid Mrs. Dunham should, be held liable for her signature to the said note.’’ If this case had been tried prior to the time chapter. 96, Act© Twenty-fifth General Assembly took effect, there would *704be no doubt of the correctness of'the decision; for prior to that time it was uniformly held that if matter pleaded as a defense is not attacked by motion or demurrer, and there is testimony to sustain it, it will defeat the action,, although it may not amount to a legal defense. Benjamin v. Vieth, 80 Iowa, 149; Bank v. Zeims, 93 Iowa, 140. The case was tried after the enactment of the twenty-fifth general assembly, which made a change in the statute under which these decisions were rendered. This statute, in effect, provide® that no pleading shall be held' sufficient on account of failure to’ demur thereto-; and strikes from section 2650 of the Code of 1873 this sentence: “If no objection is taken to it [the pleading], it shall be deemed waived.” In construing this act of the general assembly, we held in the case of Weis v. Morris, 102 Iowa, 327, that, notwithstanding the provisions of the law, the insufficiency of the pleadings could not be raised for the first time in this court, and that if the parties1 treated the matter pleaded as a good defense in the trial court they could not come to’ this court and insist that the answer did not constitute a defense. To cite authorities, for the proposition that these matters pleaded in the answer of Emma L. Dunham1 did not constitute a defense is wholly unnecessary. We have, then, simply this question: Was the insufficiency of the pleading presented to the trial court? An examination of the motion leads us to the-conclusion that the question was properly raised. The record •shows that appellee Emma L. Dunham signed the note with her husband, that, the note is unpaid, and that plaintiff is entitled to recover although she signed the note, as the referee found, simply to- release her dower in and to- the mortgaged' premises. The motion was grounded upon, the thought that,, considering the whole record showing these-facts, plaintiff was entitled to- recover. Such motion *705would, of necessity, present the question as to the sufficiency of the defense. The trial court held that plaintiff was not, as a matter of law, entitled to a judgment against the wife, because of the matters pleaded in answer, found by the referee to be established by the evidence. In this we think there was error. The judgment ÍS REVERSED.

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