Harshbarger v. Eby

156 P. 619, 28 Idaho 753, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 43
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 156 P. 619 (Harshbarger v. Eby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harshbarger v. Eby, 156 P. 619, 28 Idaho 753, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 43 (Idaho 1916).

Opinion

BUDGE, J.

This action was commenced in the district ’ court of the ninth judicial district in and for Fremont county [756]*756by respondent to'recover on a promissory note in the sum of $2,500, together with interest and attorney’s fee.

Appellant, prior to the date of the execution and delivery of this note, resided at Elko, Nevada, where he was following his profession as a physician and surgeon. Respondent, who was also a physician and surgeon, following ■his profession at St. Anthony, Idaho, had authorized the publication of a notice in “The Journal of the American Medical Association” that he desired to sell his business, briefly describing the same. The notice having come to his attention, appellant J. R. Eby went to St. Anthony for the purpose of investigating, and, if satisfied with the result of his investigation, purchasing respondent’s business. The parties met at St. Anthony and as a result of their negotiations a sixty or ninety days’ option was given by respondent to appellant for the purchase of the former’s business and certain real and personal property, and the goodwill. Prior to the expiration of the option, appellant concluded to exercise his right thereunder, and made the purchase. When the transaction was concluded, appellant paid respondent $3,000, and, with his wife, executed and delivered to respondent a note for $2,500 in full payment of the purchase price for the business, the goodwill and the property.

An instrument designated a contract of sale, which was executed by the parties, and which appears in appellants’ amended answer, sets out in full and describes the real and personal property purchased and the total sum to be paid for the business, the goodwill and the property enumerated, being $5,500. Included in this contract of sale is a further agreement between the parties that respondent would cease to engage in the practice of his profession in St. Anthony and Fremont county for a number of years, which provision respondent complied with by moving away from the state.

When the note fell due, respondent commenced this action for the purpose of enforcing payment, and alleged in his complaint, inter alia, that the note was due; that it provided for a reasonable attorney’s fee; and that $500 was a reasonable attorney’s fee. Respondent prayed for judgment for [757]*757the amount due on the note, together with interest and attorney’s fee. To this complaint appellants filed an answer, to which respondent demurred, and also moved to strike out certain affirmative allegations contained therein. The demurrer ,and motions were sustained. Thereafter appellants filed their amended answer, in which they admit the execution and delivery of the note, but affirmatively allege that it was executed and delivered to respondent without a valuable consideration and that they received no valuable consideration therefor; also admitting that they have not paid the note, but denying that $500 or any other sum is a reasonable attorney’s fee. They further allege as a conclusion, in avoidance of the note, that they were induced to sign and deliver it to respondent through his fraud and misrepresentations. They undertook to allege in their amended answer, as a further second and separate defense, fraud of respondent in procuring the note in suit, and as a further third and separate defense, a breach of warranty on the part of respondent.

Respondent filed a motion to strike from appellants’ amended answer the allegations of fraud and of breach of warranty, for the reason that these allegations were inconsistent with the allegation of want of consideration. He also filed a demurrer to each of the separately alleged defenses, on the ground that neither of them stated facts sufficient to constitute a ground of defense. The motion to strike was denied and the demurrer was overruled.

Respondent then sought to have appellants elect upon which of the defenses they intended to rely, but from an examination of the record we are unable to determine definitely the final ruling of the court on this latter motion. It was the duty of the court, under the pleadings in this case, either to have granted respondent’s motion to strike or to have required appellants to elect upon which defense they intended to rely. The evidence upon the trial should have been confined to the defense upon which they elected to stand. (Ferguson v. Prince, 2 Kan. App. 7, 41 Pac. 988.)

Respondent introduced evidence in support of his complaint and rested. Whereupon appellant J. R. Eby was [758]*758sworn, but before any material testimony was introduced through him, respondent objected to any evidence under any of the alleged defenses, for the reason- that none of them stated a proper ground of defense. This objection was overruled. Thereafter evidence was introduced on the part of appellants; and after they rested, respondent moved for a directed verdict in his favor, which motion was granted and the court so instructed the jury. Thereupon the jury returned a verdict in favor of respondent for $3,052.85, upon which verdict judgment was duly entered. This is an appeal from the judgment.

Appellants specify and rely on three assignments of error. The first involves the ruling of the court in sustaining respondent’s motion to strike out certain testimony given by witness Eby.

The record discloses that appellants had set out in their amended answer and separate defenses a complete enumeration of all of the property purchased, as shown in the contract of sale signed by the parties when the deal was consummated. They affirmatively allege in their second separate defense, among other things, that, for and in consideration of the business, the goodwill and the property, they were to pay respondent $5,500, and that they made, executed and delivered to respondent for the balance of said purchase price their promissory note dated September 1, 1911, which is the note in suit. They then allege that the real and personal property purchased would not exceed the value of $1,750, and that the remainder of the $5,500 was for the business and the goodwill. The same admissions are again made in the third separate defense, where breach of warranty is alleged. It will thus be observed that in one of the allegations of appellants’ amended answer they allege that they received no consideration for the note sued upon and plead want of consideration, and immediately thereafter they allege that they entered into a written contract, whereby they agreed to pay $5,500 for the business, property and goodwill, but that the property was not worth what they agreed to pay for it. They then allege that the note was executed and delivered to respondent for [759]*759the balance of said purchase price, i. e., the balance of the purchase price agreed to be paid for the business, property and goodwill.

These allegations of the amended answer cannot be reconciled under any rule of pleading. While it is true that, under see. 4187, Rev. Codes, the appellants were permitted to set forth in their amended answer as many defenses and counterclaims as they might have, and the same might, to a certain extent, be inconsistent with each other, yet they must not be so inconsistent that the proof of one defense would necessarily disprove the other. (See to the same effect, Seattle National Bank v. Carter (Jones), 13 Wash. 281, 43 Pac. 331, 48 L. R. A. (Extra Annotated) 177.) Where the allegations of the amended answer are inconsistent, appellant would be bound by those against him. (Mitchell v. Ripley, 5 Kan. App. 818, 49 Pac. 153; Bierer v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P. 619, 28 Idaho 753, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harshbarger-v-eby-idaho-1916.