Glover v. Ottinger

400 N.E.2d 1212, 74 Ind. Dec. 420, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1357
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1980
Docket2-878A263
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 400 N.E.2d 1212 (Glover v. Ottinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glover v. Ottinger, 400 N.E.2d 1212, 74 Ind. Dec. 420, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1357 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

SHIELDS, Judge.

Appellants Sidney Lee Glover and Bar-. bara Rae Glover (Glovers) appeal from a judgment against them and for appellees Billie Lee Ottinger and Marjorie J. Ottinger (Ottingers). Glovers assert the following errors:

1. The trial court's failure to take judicial notice of a judgment by Glovers against Clifford C. Ottinger in the amount of $11,761.06;
2, An excessive judgment due to the trial court's
| (a) disallowance of certain claimed setoffs, and
(b) excessive award of attorney fees; and
8. The trial court's erroneous admission into evidence of certain of Ottingers' offered exhibits.

We affirm.

Clifford Ottinger contracted to purchase the Big Pine Golf Course. He later assigned the contract to Glovers. Part of the consideration for the assignment was a promissory note. Clifford Ottinger assigned the promissory note to Ottingers (his brother and his brother's wife). Ottingers brought suit on the defaulted promissory note; Glovers claimed setoffs arising out of the assigned contract which they pursued against both Ottingers and Clifford Ottinger, the latter being made a party to the litigation and subsequently defaulted.

I

Glovers contend the trial court should have taken judicial notice of a judgment they obtained against Clifford Ottinger.

Judicial notice

. means that the court will bring to its aid, without proof or evidence of the facts, its knowledge of the existence or nonexistence of _. . . facts.

Carter v. Neeley's Estate, (1936) 102 Ind.App. 257, 259, 2 N.E.2d 221, 222.

The trial court's judgment reveals it did take judicial notice of the judgment against Clifford Ottinger. The judgment Glovers appeal reads, in part:

On November 15, 1977, defendants (Glovers) obtained a default judgment against third-party defendant, Clifford C. Ottinger, in the amount of $11,761.06, being the total of the five setoffs.claimed in the Motion. -

Therefore, the issue has no merit.

II

A

Glovers urge the judgment below is excessive because it was not set off by the *1215 judgment they obtained against Clifford Ottinger. They present this alleged error by means of a three-sentence argument with a solitary statutory citation to IC 26-1-8-806 (Burns 1974 Ed.). The statutory reference is, at best, the threshold to the myriad of facets to Glovers' position, which should include, in part, the law of contract, assignment, pleading, and merger. Under Indiana Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rule 8.3(A)(7), an issue which is presented as a bald assertion of error without support by legal authority is deemed waived. Certainly this issue as presented by Glovers falls within this category. Glovers do not even attempt to argue they seek to overturn existing law or make new law or are presenting a new issue for which authority is unavailable. The issue of the setoff of the judgment against Clifford Ottinger is deemed waived.

B

Glovers next urge the judgment is excessive because it was not set off by the value of tables, chairs, golf balls, golf clubs, calendars, and coffee pot. The trial court in its judgment stated Glovers were "estopped from receiving credit" for the tables, chairs, and calendars "on account of the long delay in notifying plaintiffs (Ottingers) of such claims," and there was no "proof of payment" as to the golf balls, golf clubs, and coffee pot.

Glovers' argument concerning the golf balls, golf clubs, and coffee pot, expressed in three sentences with absolutely no authority, suffers the same defect as the issue of the Clifford Ottinger judgment and is deemed waived.

Glovers attack the trial court's "estoppel" of their claimed setoffs for the tables, chairs, and calendars by arguing the judgment is contrary to law because the evidence is insufficient to support findings of:

(1) a false representation
+(2) with the intention the Ottingers should act upon it, and
(8) detrimental action by the Ottingers on the false information. 1

Ottingers respond the purported setoffs were barred as they were not pled in a counterclaim as required by Indiana Rules of Procedure, Trial Rule 18. In addition, Ottingers urge the items were not asserted as setoffs in a timely fashion and thus, under IC 26-1-1-103 (Burns 1974), the trial court acted properly. |

Ottingers unsuccessfully defend the trial court's judgment by arguing the purported setoffs were barred because they were not pled.

Glovers did not attempt to use their claimed setoffs for the purpose of obtaining an affirmative recovery. Therefore, they had the option to use them as either a permissive counterclaim under TR. 18(B) or to use them defensively. Apparently Glo-vers chose the latter course of action because the record does not reveal the existence of any pleading construable as a counterclaim. However, under the provisions of T.R. 15(B) when an issue not raised by a pleading is tried by the implied consent of the parties, the pleadings are treated as amended to include the issue. Implied consent can result from evidence on the issue being received in evidence without objection. This is what occurred in this case. During the trial evidence concerning the disappearance of the tables, chairs, and calendars, as well as their value, was received into evidence without an objection based on a pleading deficiency from Ottingers. We therefore treat the pleadings as amended to include an affirmative defense of setoffs for the tables, chairs, and calendars.

In its decision the trial court made the following findings of fact which the evidence supports:

In mid-August, 1974, plaintiffs notified defendants of the assignment. The transaction was discussed and defendant, Sidney Lee Glover, expressed surprise at the number of unpaid bills relating to the golf course. He testified that plaintiff, *1216 Billie Lee Ottinger, said he was sure that Clifford would do his best to pay them, and if he did not get them paid, he, Billie would "step in." No specific bills were mentioned and plaintiffs returned to Arizona.
After the note became due in August 1975, Billie called Sidney about payment. Sidney related problems in obtaining financing and that they had applied for a loan from Small Business Administration. He then mentioned certain unpaid taxes and a bill from Harrison Steel Castings Company. Billie told him to deduct the amount of the taxes and Sidney promised to send payment of the note.

The evidence considered most favorable to the Ottingers is the Glovers did not advise the Ottingers of these specific claims for the tables, chairs, and calendars until the entry of the pretrial order on November 21, 1977, the first day of trial.

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Bluebook (online)
400 N.E.2d 1212, 74 Ind. Dec. 420, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-ottinger-indctapp-1980.