Dille v. Longwell

169 Iowa 686
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 169 Iowa 686 (Dille v. Longwell) 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
Dille v. Longwell, 169 Iowa 686 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Withrow, J.

— I. The petition states that on March 24, 1902, the defendant executed and delivered to J. B. Dille his promissory note in terms as follows:

“No.- 'March 24, 1902.
“When present indebtedness of Highland Park Co. is paid, after date for value received, I promise to pay to J. B. Dille or order, Twelve Hundred Fifty and no-100 Dollars, payable at................with interest payable annually at the rate of five per cent per annum until paid. Interest when due to become principal and draw five per cent interest. If this note is not paid when due I agree to pay all reasonable costs of collection, including attorney’s fee, and also consent that a Justice of the Peace may have jurisdiction hereon to any amount not exceeding three hundred dollars.
“$1,250.00. O. H. Longwell.”

It is pleaded that thereafter said note was assigned by endorsement to Florence F. Dille, and later by- her to John F. Dille, by whom this suit is brought; that demand for payment has been made, and no part of the note has been paid, although a reasonable time, about ten years, has elapsed; and that the defendant was an incorporator, officer and principal stockholder in the Highland Park Company when the note was given. 1

A second count pleads that all of the indebtedness referred to in the note has been fully paid and discharged.

[688]*688The answer of the defendant pleads a general denial; and in addition, that the note was given as a part of a transaction between the defendant and J. B. Dille, under which the defendant was to purchase from Dille one-half of the interest which Dille then had in Highland Park College. The substance of the agreement as pleaded was that “whereas the said college was heavily indebted, the said Dille should retain practically one-half interest in said college property, and this defendant and the said Dille should carry on the said college, and in the event that they were financially successful in carrying the same on and were able to pay off all of the debts of the said college, then and in that event only, this defendant should pay to the said Dille Twelve Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($1,250.00) without interest. . . . And it was understood and agreed between the said Dille and this defendant at the time said contract was entered into and at the time- said note was signed, that the said note should not be of any force and effect unless the said Dille and the said Longwell should succeed in carrying on the said college successfully and' in paying off the debts that then existed; that the said Dille and this defendant were not financially successful in carrying on said college. That they were never able to pay off the debts that existed, but on the contrary a large amount of additional debts had accumulated against said college, and the said Dille in consequence thereof sold and disposed of all of his interest in said college to other parties, and the condition upon which the said note was to become of force and effect was never fulfilled and cannot now be fulfilled.

It was further pleaded that the part of the contract which was in writing, being the note sued upon, does not truly and correctly express the understanding and intention of the parties, in that it provides for the payment of interest at five per cent, whereas it was understood .and agreed between the parties that the note should bear no interest; that-the written agreement expressed in the note through error or. mistake of the person drawing it did not contain such provision; and that [689]*689the note does not correctly set forth the understanding and agreement of the parties, and that it should be reformed by striking out the provision with regard to the payment of .interest. The defendant prayed for a cancellation of the note based upon the averments of the first division of his answer, and also that it be re-formed so as to be in accordance with the agreement of the parties as to the interest charged.

Following this was a motion on the part of the defendant to transfer the cause to the equity docket, on the ground that equitable issues were tendered in the pleading and prayer for cancellation, and also for reformation of the written instrument. This motion was denied, and from such ruling this appeal is taken.

1. Trial : action at law: intawe^siue1: when partially wRenf wholly II. The action was properly commenced by ordinary proceedings. Code Sec. 3435 provides in such cases that “ either party shall have the right, by motion, to have . . , .... any issue heretofore exclusively cognizable m equity tried in the manner hereinafter pre- . . scn5ed m cases of equitable proceedings; and if all the issues were such, though none were exclusively so, the defendant shall be entitled to have them all tried as in cases of equitable proceedings.”

It is contended by the appellee that not all the issues raised by the answer are equitable, and that therefore a motion to transfer the entire cause could not properly be sustained; that the answer raises no issue nor pleads any facts showing grounds for equitable action; and that appellant by his neglect lost any rights he may have had to a reformation.

III. The plea of mistake in the execution of the note, which we think is sufficient, and the prayer for reformation, while presenting an issue triable in equity, did not for that reason entitle the defendant to have the entire proceeding heard in equity. That issue did not reach to the whole cause of action, and while, if proper motion is presented asking for such, the trial of the question of reformation should be in equity, such does not entitle the defendant to have the case [690]*690transferred, as the plaintiff is in such eases entitled to a jury-trial upon the law issues in an action properly commenced at law. Eller v. Newell, 159 Iowa 711; Marquis v. Illsley, 99 Iowa 135.

As the motion of the defendant covered the entire case, unless the plea of cancellation, which went to the whole cause of action, presented an issue triable in equity, there was no error in denying the motion to transfer.

2 trial • action iensfveissue• equityfwhen not required. IV. The prayer for a cancellation of the note is based upon the averments of the answer that the note was not to be of any force or effect unless the parties to it succeeded in carrying orL the college successfully and in paying off its indebtedness; that the indebte(Iness had not been paid, that Dille had disp0Se(j 0f frig interest in the college, and that

the condition upon which the note was given had not been or could not be fulfilled. There is no plea of any fraud entering into the execution of the note, or of conditions which rendered it invalid at the time of its execution, and such generally is a prerequisite to such right. 1 Story’s Equity 694; Brainard v. Holsaple, 4 G. Gr. 485, 487. That which is relied upon as a defensive pleading, and also claimed to be of an equitable nature, goes directly to the condition in the note as to its time of payment, that is, “when the present indebtedness of Highland Park Company is paid, ’ ’ with the further provision as to their successful management of the college, and the averment that on account of having disposed of the property the provision as to the payment of its indebtedness cannot be fulfilled.

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169 Iowa 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dille-v-longwell-iowa-1914.