Dodge v. Pope

93 Ind. 480, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 37
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1883
DocketNo. 9033
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 93 Ind. 480 (Dodge v. Pope) 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
Dodge v. Pope, 93 Ind. 480, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 37 (Ind. 1883).

Opinions

Elliott, J.

— The appellant and his brothers and sisters were the owners by inheritance and as tenants in common of a tract of land. In proceedings for partition, had in April, 1867, a decree was rendered assigning to appellant eleven twenty-fifths of the land, adjudging that Alice and George Dodge had no interest in the land, and requiring Henry C. Dodge, the appellant, to execute to their guardian a mortgage for $1,100, and that notes of $550 each should be executed ; in accordance with this decree, appellant undertook to execute a mortgage on the land, but by mistake of the scriveners who drew the instrument, it -was misdescribed; on the 11th day of December, 187-, appellant and his wife executed to Elizabeth Manchester a deed, wherein the consideration was stated to be $3,500, and in which it was written that the grantors “ convey and warrant all their right, title and interest in and to the real estate.” It was agreed that appellant should procure his brothers, who were joint owners with him, to convey all their interest in the land to Mrs. Manchester, and this he did procure to be done. In addition to the consideration stated in the deed, a house and lot of the estimated value of $4,000 was also conveyed by Mrs. Man-[482]*482Chester to appellant; the consideration expressed in the deed was not paid in money, but to secure it the grantee and her husband executed to the appellant and his brothers five promissory notes and a mortgage covering the land and all their interest therein. Mrs. Manchester had no actual notice of the mortgage executed by appellant to the guardian of George and Alice Dodge; in 1869 the appellee became the owner of the last of the notes executed by Elizabeth Manchester by assignment from the appellant and his brothers. To induce appellee to purchase the note, appellant represented to him that it was secured by a first mortgage, and acting on this representation the former bought the note in ignorance of the existence of a prior mortgage, and, shortly after the purchase of the note just mentioned, appellee purchased the fourth note of one Proctor, to whom it had been assigned by appellant and his brothers. In March, 1870, appellee obtained a decree of foreclosure for the sale of the mortgaged premises, and on the sale under this decree obtained title to the land; after he had secured a sheriff’s deed, appellee learned of the existence of the mortgage executed to the guardian of George and Alice Dodge, and agreed with Mrs. Manchester that if she would secure its release he would pay the amount to her; under this agreement appellee paid the guardian $1,000 for the notes and mortgage, and took an assignment of the notes and secured a release of the mortgage, afterwards the notes were endorsed by him to Mrs. Manchester, but before this was done appellant informed her that Pope could not assign the notes without transferring the mortgage, and that he would give her $400 for the notes; at the time Pope purchased of the guardian the notes and mortgage, it was his intention to keep the notes alive as a personal charge against the maker but not the mortgage. The notes were assigned to Mrs. Manchester as a voluntary gift, and she took them as charges against the maker personally and not as liens upon appellee’s land.

We have extracted from the special finding, which is very [483]*483lengthy, the material facts requiring attention from us; but before proceeding to determine what the law of the case is upon the facts found we turn to some questions of practice which the record presents.

The appellant moved the court to add to its special finding a finding upon several points stated in the motion, but on appeal presses only one of these points. It is said that the court ought to have found whether or not Mrs. Manchester assumed the mortgage executed by the appellant to the guardian of his brother and sister, George and Alice. We think the court did find upon this point, for its finding is that Mrs. Manchester had no knowledge of the existence of that mortgage. If, however, the finding had been silent on that subject it would be regarded as against the appellánt, for the reason that upon him rested the burden of proof. It is now well settled that where the finding is silent upon a material point it is to be ■deemed to be adverse to the party upon whom rests the burden of establishing that point. Dixon v. Duke, 85 Ind. 434; Ayers v. Adams, 82 Ind. 109; Talburt v. Berkshire L. Ins. Co., 80 Ind. 434; Jones v. Baird, 76 Ind. 164; Henderson v. Dickey, 76 Ind. 264; Stropes v. Board, etc., 72 Ind. 42; Ex Parte Walls, 73 Ind. 95.

If the finding is against the evidence, then the remedy is by a motion for a new trial upon the ground that the finding is contrary to the evidence. Spraker v. Armstrong, 79 Ind. 577; Ex Parte Walls, supra; Vannoy v. Duprez, 72 Ind. 26; Gauntt v. State, ex rel., 81 Ind. 137; Ayers v. Adams, supra.

An exception to the conclusions of law7 stated by the court concedes for the purposes of the exception the truth of the finding, but it does not cut off a motion for a new trial. If the finding is against the evidence, then, notwithstanding the fact that exceptions have been alleged against the conclusions of law, the party is entitled to contest the correctness of the finding of facts by a proper motion for a new trial filed in due season. Bertelson v. Bower, 81 Ind. 512; Robinson v. Snyder, 74 Ind. 110.

[484]*484The special finding was filed at the September term, 1880, but no conclusions of law were stated until the December term of that year. At this term conclusions of law were announced and judgment rendered; prior, however, to the rendition of judgment, appellant requested the court to make some additions to the special finding, and the appellee not objecting the court directed that the original finding should be interlined, as also the entry on the order book. We do not think such a change as was made in this case, and when made as it was here made, can be deemed anything more than a mere nuno pro tune entry. The case must, therefore, be considered as one in which the special finding is to be regarded as having been fully made and filed at the term in which it was entered of record. At the same December term in which the conclusions of law were stated, appellant moved for a new trial, and this motion was afterwards struck from the files at the request of the appellee. As we have seen, the appellant had a right to file his motion for a new trial, and the only question is whether the motion was filed in season.

Under the code of 1852 it was imperatively necessary that the motion for a new trial should be filed at the term at which the decision was made. The question in this case is, when was the decision of the court rendered, at the September term when the special finding was filed, or at the December term when the conclusions of law were stated? This question is settled by the case of Wilson v. Vance, 55 Ind. 394, where it was said: “ The term decision/ as used in tire above statute, is clearly used in the sense of finding upon the facts where the cause is tried by the court.” In Rosenzweig v. Frazer, 82 Ind. 342, it is shown that the words finding” and

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ind. 480, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodge-v-pope-ind-1883.