Allen v. Church

70 N.W. 127, 101 Iowa 116
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 70 N.W. 127 (Allen v. Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Church, 70 N.W. 127, 101 Iowa 116 (iowa 1897).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

The facts appear to be that in November, 1895, plaintiff filed a petition in the district court of Sac county, Iowa, in two counts, in which he demanded a judgment against one C. W. Cook, in the sum of one thousand two hundred and fifty dollars, upon two certain written contracts, signed by the parties, with reference to the digging of a well. Cook appeared and filed a motion to strike from the petition all allegations with reference to the reasonable value of the plaintiff’s services, for the reason that the action was based upon a written contract, and not on quantum meruit. This motion was submitted to the court, Judge Elwood presiding, and was sustained. Defendant Cook then answered the petition. After-wards, and at the January, 1896, term of court, the motion to strike was re-considered and re-argued before Judge Elwood, and he made an order to the effect that, as it was apparent that the case would be tried before another judge, he would leave the motion as if it had never been submitted and argued, and no ruling had been made thereon, so that the judge who was to follow him (the defendant in this case)1 might be able to decide the matter upon its merits, unbiased or unhampered by any ruling which he (Elwood) might feel called upon to make. Afterwards, and on the fourteenth day of January, 1896, Judge Church appeared, and proceeded with the work of the term. The motion to strike was submitted to him, and sustained, and plaintiff excepted. Thereupon plaintiff gave written notice of appeal to defendant’s attorney and the clerk of the court, and filed -a supersedeas bond, which was approved by the clerk. Thereupon the court made the following entry of [118]*118record: “January 16, 1896, the plaintiff files notice of appeal to the supreme court of Iowa, and said notice of appeal is duly accepted by W. A. Helsell, attorney for the defendant, and W. J. Dixon, clerk of this court; and at the same time plaintiff files supersedeas bond, and said supersedeas bond is duly approved by the clerk of this court, and plaintiff makes no further appearance.” On the next day, the case was reached in its regular order, and was called for trial. Plaintiff failed to introduce any evidence. -The defendant Cook offered his evidence, and, on the proofs adduced, the court found for defendant, and ordered judgment against plaintiff for the costs of suit. It is to review these proceedings that this action is brought. Plaintiff contends that the order made on the motion is appealable, and that when he gave the notice, and fifed his supersedeas bond, the district court lost jurisdiction, and thereafter acted illegally in rendering the final j udgment.

1 At the outset, we are to determine whether the order made by the trial court upon the motion to strike is appealable,, and, if appealable, we must next decide whether the bond filed operated to oust the court of jurisdiction to further proceed with the case. The petition declares upon a written contract made and executed between the parties on September 24, 1894, and a written modification thereof, entered into on the twelfth day of July, 1895. In the original contract, the price for doing the work is fixed, and this was not modified or changed in the supplemental contract. Cook moved to strike from the petition all allegations with reference to the reasonable value of the work, for the reasons that the same was immaterial, irrelevant, and redundant matter, in this: that the action is upon a written contract, and the value of the labor is immaterial. There is no doubt that such a ruling as the one under consideration may [119]*119be reviewed by this court upon appeal from the final judgment, and, if found erroneous, the judgment of the court below will be reversed, unless it be shown that no prejudice resulted. But is such an order appealable before final judgment? The petition, although in two counts, is based wholly upon the written contracts to which we have referred. Neither count is on the quantum meruit, and the statements found in the petition which defendant Cook attacked by his motion, did not have reference to an independent cause of action for work and labor done, but to the work done under the contracts to which we have referred. In other words, there was no attempt to state two causes of action, — one on the express contract for the agreed price, and another for the reasonable value of work and labor performed under an implied contract to pay for the same. The allegations which were stricken out were made in the two counts of the petition with reference to an express contract which fixed the compensation to be paid for the work done. In sustaining the motion, the lower court evidently found that the matter so pleaded was surplus-age. Code, section 3164, provides that an “appeal may * * * be taken to the supreme court from * * * an intermediate order involving the merits, and materially affecting the final decision.” Does an order, such as the one in question, involve the merits, and materially affect the final decision? We are not, in this proceeding, to determine whether the ruling, as applied to the facts of the case, was right or wrong, but, rather, whether appeals can be taken direct from this class of or'ders, and, if so, whether further proceeding are stayed by the filing of a supersedeas bond until the appeal may be disposed of. The statute provides, that “the court may, on motion of any person aggrieved thereby, cause irrelevant or redundant matter to be stricken from any pleading” (section [120]*1202719, Code, 1873); and we have heretofore defined irrelevant and redundant matter as anything stated in a pleading which, if established on the trial, would not entitle the party to obtain, or aid him in obtaining, the relief demanded, or in sustaining the defense pleaded. Johns v. Pattee, 55 Iowa, 665 (8 N. W. Rep. 663). We have also said that immaterial and redundant matter is mere surplusage, and will be treated as such on the trial of the case. In other words, neither party alleging it will be entitled to prove it, nor will the one defending against it, be required to rebut it. And, by a parity of reasoning, it follows that, if the matter be stricken out on motion, it does not follow that the plaintiff may not prove it as collateral to his cause of action, or that the defendant may not be called upon to meetitin his defense. See as bearing upon these propositions, Specht v. Spangenberg, 70 Iowa, 488 (30 N. W. Rep. 875)., Now, it is well settled that an appeal will not lie from every interlocutory ruling or order made during the progress of the trial. Many of such decisions may be erroneous, and yet, if the final decision is favorable to the party against whom the ruling is made, it would be error without prejudice, and would not be subject to review. In the case of Richards v. Burden, 31 Iowa, 305, we said: “In our opinion, the language of the section now under consideration contemplates such judgments or orders as settle or determine the rights of the parties to the relief or remedy asked, or to a substantial right as to the cause of proceedings, whereby the cause is determined or is tried ih a manner not authorized by law. The order appealed from must extend to and effect the merits of the case. If the merits may not be reached by or involved in the decision, there can be no appeal therefrom.” The necessity of such a construction is obvious. Were such not the rule, we might be compelled to decide, in advance of final [121]

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W. 127, 101 Iowa 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-church-iowa-1897.