Brinkmeyer v. Helbling

57 Ind. 435
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 57 Ind. 435 (Brinkmeyer v. Helbling) 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
Brinkmeyer v. Helbling, 57 Ind. 435 (Ind. 1877).

Opinion

Howk, J.

Before and on the 19th day of October, 1874, two actions were pending in the court below, severally entitled as follows:

1. Frederick W. Brinkmeyer v. Anton Settling et al.; and,

2. Thomas and James M. Scantlin v. Anton Settling and others.

The plaintiff in the first of these two actions was a defendant in the second, and the plaintiffs in the second were defendants in'the first.

Each of said actions was brought to foreclose a certain mortgage, executed to the plaintiff or plaintiffs in the particular action; and the mortgages sued upon in the two actions covered the same property. Other parties, having or claiming to have an adverse interest in the mortgaged property, or some part thereof, were also made [436]*436parties to said actions. Issues had been made up in both said actions, and afterward, on said 19th day of October, 1874, the said two actions, by consent of all parties, were consolidated, and were thus submitted to the court below for final trial.

Upon this trial the court made a finding, which will be hereafter noticed, and, over the appellant’s written motion for a new trial, and his exception saved to the decision of the court thereon, the judgment, from which this appeal is now prosecuted, was rendered upon the finding.

As the issues joined in these two actions present substantially the same questions, and as the alleged errors assigned by the appellant, which call in question the decisions of th e court below in relation to the pleadings of the parties, have been assigned with special reference to the first of said actions, in our consideration of the questions presented by those errors, our examination of the pleadings will be chiefly directed to those in the first action, in which the appellant was the plaintiff in the court below.

In his complaint, the appellant alleged, in substance, that on the 29th of December, 1868, the appellees Anton Helbling and his wife, Emanuel K. Grayville, and Frederick Browneller and his wife executed a mortgage conveying to the appellant the real estate therein described, to secure, save harmless and indemnify the appellant against all loss or damage, as the endorser and surety on notes, bills and acceptances of the said Anton Helbling, and all renewals of the same to banks or individuals, to an amount not to exceed four thousand dollars; and the said mortgage further provided, that the appellant might institute legal proceedings to foreclose the same, to indemnify and save himself harmless as endorser and surety on the notes, bills and acceptances of either the said A. Helbling & Co., which firm was composed of the male mortgagors, or of the said Anton Helbling, or of both, which the appellant had then, or might thereafter, become liable for; that is to say, in case any of the said notes, [437]*437bills or acceptances on which the appellant, at the time of the execution of said mortgage, was liable, or might thereafter become liable, were not paid or renewed at maturity, then the right to foreclose said mortgage should immediately accrue to the appellant. And the appellant said, that in consideration of the delivery to him of said mortgage, .and for no other consideration, he endorsed and became the surety for said Helbling on notes and hills, in the sum of four thousand dollars, the whole of which said sum (except about four hundred dollars then outstanding, as per bill of particulars filed with said complaint) the appellant had been compelled to and did pay, as the surety of said Anton Helbling, whereby an action had accrued to him upon said mortgage for said sum of four thousand dollars; that, at the instance and request of the male moi’tgagors, he had released certain parts, describing them, of the mortgaged premises from the operation of said mortgage on the 31st day of May, 1869, and again on the 1st day of November, 1869; that, after the execution of said mortgage, the other appellees had, or claimed to have, acquired some interest in, or lien upon, the said mortgaged premises, or some part thereof, junior to said mortgage; and that,- by reason of the premises,, the appellee Anton Helbling was indebted to the appellant in the sum of four thousand dollars, and in the further sum of five hundred dollars for attorney fees, etc.; which remained due and unpaid. "Wherefore, etc.

A copy of said mortgage was filed with, and made part of, appellant’s complaint. We set out so much of the conditions of said mortgage as seems to be material in this action, as follows:

“And the said Anton Helbling desires the said party of the second part to endorse and become liable upon his paper, notes, bills and acceptances to hanks and individuals, -for an amount not to exceed $4,000; and the said party of the second part having agreed to become endorser for the said A. Helbling & Co. and the said Anton Hel[438]*438bling, upon tbeir paper, notes, bills and acceptances, for sums of money not to exceed the amount aforesaid, and whereas it may be necessary ‘for the said party of the second part to become the endorser and surety of the aforesaid parties of the first part on the renewal of the paper, notes, bills and acceptances aforesaid: Now the object and purpose of this mortgage is to secure, save harmless and indemnify the said Brinkmeyer * * * * against all loss or damage as the endorser and surety upon notes, bills and acceptances of the said Anton Helbling and all renewals of the same to banks or individuals, to an amount not to exceed $4,000.”

As the main controversy in this appeal is between the appellant and the appellees Thomas Scantlin and James M. Scantlin, we think it necessary to a proper understanding of the questions at issue between the said parties that we should set out in full the answer and cross-complaint of the said appellees, as follows:

“ Said defendants, Thomas Scantlin and James M. Scantlin, partners doing business under the name and style of Thomas Scantlin & Son, for answer to said complaint, and for a cross-complaint against said plaintiff, say, that they admit the making and delivering of said mortgage. But they say, that the claim of said plaintiff is junior to these defendants’ claim, because, they say, that heretofore, to wit, on the 9th day of July, 1872, defendants Anton and Dorothea executed to these defendants a mortgage upon the same property described in the complaint, a copy of which is filed herewith as part of this answer, as exhibit ‘A.’

“And these defendants say, that any claim of plaintiff under this mortgage ought to be postponed to the claim of these defendants, because, they say, that heretofore, to wit, in Eebruary, 1871, these defendants were engaged, in the city of Evansville, in the business of selling stoves, under the firm name of Scantlin & Son; and defendant Anton Helbling had erected a new foundry upon the six [439]*439lots first mentioned in the complaint, of which he then was, and now is, the owner, with the agreement with the plaintiff', that they, the said Helbling and Brinkmeyer, who had been former partners in the foundry business, would go into the foundry business as partners for the manufacture of stoves, in said foundry.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Ind. 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkmeyer-v-helbling-ind-1877.