National State Bank v. Delahaye & Purdy

82 Iowa 33
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 29, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 Iowa 33 (National State Bank v. Delahaye & Purdy) 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
National State Bank v. Delahaye & Purdy, 82 Iowa 33 (iowa 1891).

Opinion

G-rangker, J.

I. The defendants, in pleading payment of the note, averred that they delivered to plaintiff 1. Pi.eatiihg and practice:. motion: separation of in full payment, which was accepted by , j. -i A,. . plaintiff, a stock of goods consisting of . n. -,, .. ., wines, liquors ana beer, and the vessels containing the same, located at Grindstone, Illinois. The plaintiff moved the court to require the defendants to “state whether or not the agreement referred to, by which the property was taken in payment, was oral or in writing; and that they be required to set out a copy of the same.” The court overruled the motion, and properly so. Admitting, for the purposes of the case, that by a proper motion plaintiff was entitled to a statement of whether or not the agreement was in writing, still the court is not in error, for the motion asks for what the plaintiff, under the law, was not entitled to, and that is, that the agreement, if in writing, be set out. The action is not founded on such writing as evidence of indebtedness, so that the requirements of [37]*37Code, section 2648, apply ; and we know of no consideration on which, the plaintiff was entitled to have it set ont in the pleadings.

But the appellant says the motion should have been sustained “so far as it was well taken,” and that the defendants should have been required to state if it was in writing. We think a motion should be so presented to the court that its request, or a particular request thereof if it contains more than one, may be sustained or overruled, and not require the court to sift out and inquire if it may grant some part of a request. Such gratuitous services have often been criticised, because granting what was neither asked nor desired. In a motion to strike from a pleading a particular portion, it is often true that a part thereof might be stricken, but not all; but the party does not desire less than it asks, and the court may reasonably so assume. In this case the court could not have sustained the motion except by requiring the defendants to set out the agreement. Less than that it was not asked to do, nor does the motion indicate a desire for less.

II. Issues were formed on the petition and the petition of intervention on and prior to October IS, 1889. 2. Remedy: eiection: waiver. On January 7, 1890, the plaintiff filed an “amended and supplemental petition in equity,” in which it freaffirms the allegations of the original petition; details to some extent the transac-tionsxout of which the note in suit originated, whereby the stock of liquors, etc., before referred to, and other property, including real estate, were conveyed to defendant Fleming, plaintiff’s cashier, in trust for the' payment of the note in suit, with others; alleges that the written agreement by which it was sought to be accomplished was hastily made, and does not express the intentions of the parties ; states other facts as to the rights of intervenors, and concludes with the following prayer: “ Wherefore plaintiff prays said parties above named, and each of them, be made parties defendant hereto, and be required to set forth and exhibit what [38]*38title or interest they and each of them have, or claim to have, in and to the property seized under the writ of attachment issued in this cause; that the written contract above set forth may • be reformed so as to correspond with the agreement in fact made by and between the parties thereto, as above set forth ; that an account be had and taken of the amount due plaintiff upon the note set up herein, and that plaintiff have judgment therefor against the firm of Delahaye & Purdy and said Hiram Purdy 5 that the property seized under the writ of attachment in this cause, hereby referred to as part hereof, be declared the property of Hiram Purdy, and,, as such, be subject to sale for the payment of the amount so adjudged to be due plaintiff, with interest and costs ; and that the said parties above named be made defendants hereto, and each of them be barred from any right, title, interest or claim in and to said property, or any part thereof; and that said property be ordered sold to satisfy the amount so adjudged to be due plaintiff, with interest and costs ; and plaintiff prays, general relief.”

The defendants and intervenors moved to strike the petition from the files, which motion the court sustained, and from such order the plaintiff appealed, and, hence,, it will be seen there are two appeals in the case, and both for our present consideration. The appeal from the order sustaining the motion was perfected January 29, 1889, and, on January 31, plaintiff filed a motion for a continuance of the cause until the appeal could be heard, which was refused, and thereafter the parties proceeded to trial on the issues presented in the action at law, and from the judgment therein obtained the other appeal is taken.

The proceeding to trial in the law action was clearly a waiver of the action of the court in striking the petition in equity from the files. Both the action in equity and the one at law could not be maintained (Code, sec. 2630); nor could plaintiff legally rely on both at. the same time. It must place its reliance on one,, and that at its election. If it had chosen to stand on [39]*39its petition in equity, and properly disregarded the action at law, it could, by its appeal, have compelled the district court, if in error, to entertain the proceeding; and it is not true, as claimed, that it was compelled to go to trial because the continuance was refused. The refusal of the continuance placed the plaintiff in the position to make its election of the remedies chosen. In the law action it was determined that the note in suit had been paid, and the judgment, if valid, operates to discharge the attachment, and nothing remains for trial. If we are to reverse because of the action of the court in striking the petition, then the plaintiff is permitted to test its right of recovery on the note in two actions, and the note constitutes its entire interest in both proceedings. It invoked, by its petition, and accepted, by proceeding to trial, the adjudications in the law action, subject to a right of appeal from the judgment, and is now bound thereby. This holding is in harmony with very many rulings of this court where parties have waived their rights on appeal by proceeding to trial- after rulings against them on motions and demurrers. We need not cite the cases. The spirit of the rale is that a party may be entitled to his choice of remedies, but not to a plurality of them.

III. Upon the trial of the issue of payment Hiram Purdy was a witness for defendants, and gave evidence 3 evidence-Jeution-°prae-tlue-certain property being transferred to the plaintiff! payment of the note. Mr. Blake was also a witness for defendants and tes- ' tided that he was present when a transaction took place, and at the instance of the parties, or at least one of them, wrote out an agreement that was ¿signed by Hiram Purdy and J. J. Fleming, as parties to it. Mr. Blake also testified as to what the talk was between the parties, from which he wrote the agreement. The plaintiff then moved that the testimony of both Purdy and Blake be stricken out for the reason that the writing was the best evidence, which the court refused. The appellees’ contention in this respect is that the contract, as to pay ment, was not reduced to writing ; that the writing [40]*40pertained to other matters. The cashier of the plaintiff bank was a witness, and testified that the writing was in the bank, and he could get it.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Iowa 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-state-bank-v-delahaye-purdy-iowa-1891.