Hannon v. Hilliard

101 Ind. 310, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 308
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1885
DocketNo. 11,952
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 101 Ind. 310 (Hannon v. Hilliard) 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
Hannon v. Hilliard, 101 Ind. 310, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 308 (Ind. 1885).

Opinion

Black, C.

The appellee sued the appellants, who have assigned as error the overruling of their motion for a new trial, in which the causes stated were that the finding was contrary to law; that the finding was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and that the amount of the plaintiff’s recovery was too large.

The appellee sought the foreclosure of two mortgages executed by the appellants, Audley M. Hannon and his wife, ■Sarah E. Hannon. One of the mortgages, that declared on in the first paragraph of the complaint, was executed on the 19th of June, 1869, to the appellee, to secure a promissory note of that date, due five years thereafter, given by said husband to the appellee.

[311]*311The first paragraph alleged, amongst other things, that the defendants, on, etc., executed to the plaintiff a mortgage, thereby conveying to him “the lands therein described, to wit, the west half of the northwest quarter of section 11, in township 23 north, in range 8 east, in Grant county, Indiana, containing ninety and acres, more or less; and the plaintiff avers that at the same time and place and in the same mortgage, the said defendants undertook to convey to said plaintiff the additional and following described lands, to wit: Also, fifty-nine acres off of the west side of the east half of the northwest quarter of said section, described as beginning at the northwest corner of said east half of said northwest quarter of section 11, and running thence east thirty-nine rods to a stone; thence south two hundred and twenty-eight and one-fifth rods to the Mississinewa river; thence down said river to the southeast corner of said west half of said quarter section; thence north to the place of beginning; and that the whole of said tract is in township 23 north, in range 8 oast, in Grant county.

Plaintiff avers that in drafting said mortgage a mistake was made in said description by the' person who drew the same, in this, that a part of said description was not written in the said mortgage; that the description written therein is .as follows : “Also the west part of the northeast half of the northwest quarter of section 11, township 23 north, in range 8 east, and running thence east thirty-nine rods to a stone; thence south to the river; thence running with the river to the southeast corner of the west half of the northwest quarter of section 11, town 23, range 8 east, containing fifty-nine .acres, more or less.”

It was alleged that the description should have been written as first herein set out, and that the mistake in not so writing was a mutual mistake of the parties and the draftsman. The plaintiff asked the correction and reformation of this mortgage and its foreclosure.

The description in the copy of the mortgage exhibited [312]*312with this paragraph corresponded with the description in the mortgage exhibited with the second paragraph, except in the use of the word “north” before the words “east half of the' northwest quarter.”

The second paragraph declared upon another mortgage executed to one Bond, February 13th, 1869, to secure four promissory notes of that date given by said husband to said Bond, one of which, due in 1873, with so much of the payee’s interest in the mortgage as secured it, was assigned tO' the appellee in 1878. In this paragraph it Avas alleged, Avith other things, that, on, etc., the defendants executed a mortgage to said Bond, thereby conveying to him “ the real estate therein named, and being the same real estate described in the first paragraph of this complaint, to secure,” etc. In the copy of the mortgage filed with this paragraph as an exhibit, the real estate was described as follows: “ The following real estate in Grant county, in the State of Indiana, to Avit, the west half of the northAvest quarter of section 11, in toAvnship 23 north, in range 8 east, containing ninety acres and acres, more or less; also, the west part of the east half of the north'west quarter of section 11, toAvnship 23 north, in range 8 east, and running from thence east thirty-nine rods to a stone; thence south to the river; thence running with the river to the southeast corner of the west half of the northwest quarter of section 11, toAAmship 23, range 8; thence to the place of beginning; containing fifty-nine acres, more or less.”

Another paragraph, numbered the fourth, alleged the assignment, in 1878, by said Bond to the plaintiff of another of said four notes, the one due in' 1871. It Avas alleged in this paragraph that, “on the 13th of February, 1869, the said defendants 'executed and delivered to one Levi L. Bond their mortgage, thereby conveying to said Bond the land therein described, as security,” etc. A copy of the mortgage was referred to as being “ hereAvith filed and made part of this complaint.”

[313]*313No attempt was made, either in the second paragraph or in the fourth, to allege any mistake in the mortgage executed to Bond, and the reformation of this mortgage was not asked.

Issues were formed, and the court found for the plaintiff upon all these paragraphs, and in its finding stated, with other things, that the appellants, on the 19th of June, 1869, executed to tlie appellee a mortgage on real estate described in the finding, the description thus given being that set out in the first paragraph of the complaint as the description of the real estate which the defendants by their mortgage of that date undertook to convey to the plaintiff. It was also found that on the 13th of February, 1869, the appellants executed to said Bond a mortgage on the same land.

It appeared from the evidence, that by each of the mortgages the parties thereto intended that a certain farm should be mortgaged thereby, the mortgage executed to Bond being given to secure the purchase-money of the land mortgaged, and that executed to the appellee being given for money borrowed of him by said husband and used by him to pay a part of the purchase-money of said land, a correct description of which was set forth in the first paragraph of the complaint and in the court’s finding.

Upon some questions involved in the trial, which we do not specially mention, there was conflict of testimony. The only question not disposed of by application of the rule that we can not pass upon the weight of evidence is, whether, under the complaint, there could be a finding that by the mortgages declared on the real estate described in the finding was mortgaged.

As was said in Davis v. Cox, 6 Ind. 481, it is not what the complaint alleges simply, without proof thereof, nor what the plaintiff proves without having alleged it, that is the measure of his remedy, but what he alleges and proves. White v. Hyatt, 40 Ind. 385. It is a familiar rule that each paragraph. of a pleading must be complete within itself, and one paragraph can not be aided as to the allegation of material facts [314]*314by mere reference therein to the allegations of another paragraph. Entsminger v. Jackson, 73 Inch 144. But where no question is made upon the pleadings, and the question to be examined by this court relates to the sufficiency of the evidence, the insufficiency of a paragraph of pleading, because of its reference to and adoption of part of the allegations of another paragraph, will not avail the appellant. Larsh v. Test, 48 Ind. 130.

If a mistake was well pleaded in the first paragraph of the ■complaint, no mistake of fact in the execution of the mortgages or of either of them was proved.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Ind. 310, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannon-v-hilliard-ind-1885.