Bowen v. Wood

35 Ind. 268
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 35 Ind. 268 (Bowen v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowen v. Wood, 35 Ind. 268 (Ind. 1871).

Opinion

Downey, C. J.

Suit by the appellee to foreclose a mortgage executed to him by Dewey and wife and Griffith and wife. Bowen was made a defendant as a subsequent incumbrancer. The plaintiff’s mortgage was executed on the 3d day of October, 1865, and was recorded on the 28th day of that month. It describes the mortgaged premises as follows:

“The following real estate, in Carroll county, in the State of Indiana, to wit: Lots 8, 13, and 14, in block 17, and lot 5 in block 18, together with all the privileges and appurtenances unto the same belonging,as also all the stock, implements, machinery, and apparatus in and about the paper mill upon said premises situate.”

It is alleged in the complaint, that by this description it ivas understood and intended by the parties to the mortgage that the same should, and did, embrace lots 8, 13, and 14, in block 17, and lot 5 in block 18, of lands on the west side of the Wabash and Erie Canal, in the south-east quarter of section 30, in township 25, north of range 2 west, in said county and State, and which had theretofore been conveyed by the trustees of the Wabash and Erie Canal to Messrs. Spears and Case; and also all the stock, implements, machinery, and apparatus in and about the paper mill upon said premises, which had been known as the “ Robertson and Wood paper mill,” and was then known as the “Dewey and Griffith paper mill;” that the said Dewey and Griffith were not, at the [270]*270date of said mortgage, or at any other time, the owners or in possession of any other property in said county or elsewhere, upon which there was a paper mill; that said note and mortgage were given fora balance of unpaid purchase-money of the premises mortgaged; that Bowen had, or claimed to have, a lien upon said premises; and that he had notice of the facts alleged, and of the understanding and intention of the parties to the mortgage; and that his lien, if any, was junior to that of,} the appellee.

Copies of the note and mortgage are filed with the complaint. The complaint consisted of three paragraphs, to the third of which a demurrer was sustained; and to the first and second demurrers were filed and overruled.

The first error assigned relates'to the sufficiency of the first and second paragraphs of the complaint The only objection to these paragraphs urged by counsel for the appellants Is, that they do not show sufficient reason for making Bowen a defendant to the action. We think there is sufficient reason shown for making him a party. See Martin v. Noble, 29 Ind. 216.

After the demurrers were overruled, Griffith was defaulted. Dewey answered, first, a general denial; second, payment; third, usury, in this form:

“That as to the sum of five hundred dollars, part and parcel of said note, they paid unto the plaintiff said sum as interest upon said note, over and above the legal rate of interest.”

Fourth, that as to certain machinery, apparatus, and fixtures in and about said paper mill, viz.: two turbine water wheels, four pieces of shafting, two trunnions, one boiler, one marking cylinder, one forming vat, one brick lime house, one frame bleach house, one frame boiler house, one pump in engine room, two bed plates, two pumps in machine room, and two hundred feet of piping, the same were not owned by the mortgagors at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and were not then on the premises, but have been placed there since by the.mortgagors.

The fifth paragraph was withdrawn.

[271]*271■ Bowen answered, first, general denial; second, payment by the mortgagors; third, that as to the sum of five hundred dollars, part of said note, the same waspaidto plaintiff by Dewey and Griffith as interest, over and above the legal rate of interest; that he had a mortgage on the premises which was due and unpaid; that his co-defendants were insolvent; and that the property mortgaged was insufficient to satisfy both his and the plaintiff’s demand; fourth, that on the 10th day of May, 1869, all his co-defendants executed to him a mortgage upon the premises mortgaged to the plaintiff, for the sum of five thousand dollars, which was recorded May 20th, 1869; that at the time he received his mortgage, he examined the records to ascertain whether there were other mortgages or liens upon the premises, at which time he saw a record of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and believing that the same did not embrace the property mortgaged to him, he received his mortgage, which was due and unpaid.

The fifth paragraph of Bowen’s answer was the same as the fourth paragraph of the answer of Dewey.

Demurrers were sustained to the third paragraph of the answer of Dewey, and to the third and fourth paragraphs of the answer of Bowen.

Bowen, by leave of the court, filed his amended third paragraph of answer, which states that since the execution of the note sued on, at various times, his co-defendants have paid the plaintiff the aggregate sum of one thousand and eighty-four dollars as interest thereon, and asks that the excess above the legal rate of interest be deducted from the plaintiff's demand; that he held a mortgage on the premises described, which was unpaid.

The plaintiff replied, first, by general denial; and for a further reply to the fourth paragraph of the answer of Dewey, and to the fifth paragraph of the answer of Bowen, the plain • tiff alleged, second, that the two turbine water wheels, four pieces of shafting, two trunnions, one boiler, one marking cylinder, one forming vat, one brick lime house, one frame bleach house, one pump in the engine room, two bed plates, [272]*272two pumps in the machine room, and two hundred feet of piping, were placed in said paper mill since the execution of the plaintiff’s mortagage for the express purpose of supplying the places of old and worn out articles of the same character belonging and attached to said paper mill when the plaintiff’s mortgage was executed. A demurrer to the second paragraph of the reply was overruled.

There was a trial by the court, and finding as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ind. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-wood-ind-1871.