O'Haver v. Shidler

26 Ind. 278
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 Ind. 278 (O'Haver v. Shidler) 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
O'Haver v. Shidler, 26 Ind. 278 (Ind. 1866).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

This was a suit by Shidler, as guardian of Abraham A. Higgins, against the appellant, O’Haver, for the. [279]*279foreclosure of a mortgage executed by tbe latter to tbe former, on the 14th day of February, 1862, on certain real estate, to secure to Shidler, as such guardian, the payment of the sum of $3,440 44, payable at'the expiration of two years from the date aforesaid. The sum so secured is stated in the mortgage as “ being the amount ascertained to be owing from said O’Haver, as former guardian of Abraham A. Higgins, to the said Isaac M. Shidler, present guardian as aforesaid, and for which indebtedness the said Cornelius O’Haver has also this day delivered to the said Isaac M. Shidler, guardian,” &c., “ the following described promissory notes, to-wit: One note signed by Hiram Lindley, dated November 6, 1857, due five years after date, for the sum of $1,400, with interest from date, the interest to be paid annually, and which note is secured by a mortgage from said Hiram Lindley and his wife to the said Cornelius O’Haver on 280 acres of land situated in Story county, Iowa, conditioned for the foreclosure thereof on failure to pay the same at the end of any year, upon which there is a credit, dated November 6, 1858, of $84, in full of interest to said date.” Also a note on Hiram Lindley and John Carter, dated November 6, 1858, due one day after date, for $84. Also a note on David Mills and Silas Bryant, dated May 12, 1858, due twelve months after date, for $719 67, with interest from date, with a credit indorsed thereon of $50, February 29,1860. Also a note on Silas Bryant, David Mills and F. D. Bryant, dated May 12,1858, due in twelve months from date, for the sum of $719 67i, with a credit indorsed February 29, 1860, of $50, &c. The mortgage also contains an express agreement on the part of the mortgagor, two years after the date thereof, to pay the said sum of $3,440 44, with interest from date, provided the same should not sooner be collected on the promissory notes. The plaintiff collected the amount due on the note executed by David Mills and the two Bryants, and as to the other notes described in the mortgage, the plaintiff stated in the complaint that no suits had been brought thereon against [280]*280the makers, except the note on Mills and Silas Bryant, on which a judgment had been recovered, but that they were insolvent and no part of the judgment had been, or could be collected, and that the defendant had consented and agreed that no suit should be brought on either of the other notes, and that the makers thereof were all insolvent; that the lands in Iowa, mortgaged by Iliram Bindley to secure the payment of the note executed by him, had been sold for taxes before the execution of the mortgage to the plaintiff, now in. suit, but of which fact the plaintiff' had no knowledge at the time the defendant executed the mortgage.

The defendant demurred to so much of the complaint “ as seeks to recover for the amount of the note and mortgage executed by Hiram Bindley, for the reason that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” The demurrer was overruled, and the defendant excepted. This ruling is complained of. The objection cannot be sustained. The mortgage was not made to secure the several notes complained of, but to secure the sum of $3,440 44, in the hands of the defendant as the former guardian of Higgins. The complaint is for the recovery of this single and entire sum, and a demurrer will not lie to a part of a complaint consisting of but a single paragraph, and containing only one cause of action. The objection to a part of the paragraph, if valid, should have been taken either by motion or answer.

The defendant filed an answer of six paragraphs. The first was a general denial. Issues of fact were formed on the second, fourth and fifth paragraphs, and no question arises upon them in this court. Demurrers were sustained to the third and sixth paragraphs, to which the defendant excepted. The issues of fact were tried by the court. Finding and judgment for the plaintiff'.

The third paragraph of the answer, to which a demurrer was sustained, alleges, in substance, that the defendant, as the former guardian of Higgins, received the sum of [281]*281$3,440 44, mentioned in the mortgage, and loaned the same as follows: To Hiram Lindley, $1,400, to secure which he took from said Lindley a mortgage on lands in Story county, in the State of Lowci, of the value of $2,000; that he loaned to Silas Bryant $719 67§-, for which he executed his note with David Mills and B. D. Bryant as sureties, and also executed a mortgage on personal property sufficient to secure said sum, and that the makers of said note were still solvent and able to pay the same; that he loaned to David Mills the sum of $719 67J, for which he executed his promissory note with Silas Bryant as surety, both of whom at the time were reputed to be wealthy, and had in their possession and held in their own names large tracts of real estate, besides personal property of great value, and were generally regarded as safe and reliable persons to whom to loan money; that he used all proper diligence to prevent loss on account of said loans, and that he delivered said notes to the plaintiff at the time of executing to him the said mortgage. It is further alleged that at the same time the defendant delivered to the plaintiff notes on A. B. Biley and Beuben Coverclale for $600, and all the other-notes and mortgages in his hands belonging to said wards.

This paragraph assumes to answer the whole complaint, but the grounds of the defense intended to be set up thereby are not clearly perceptible. We infer, however, that as to the loans to Linclley, ' Silas Bryant and Mills, the question intended to be presented, or the ground of defense, is, that the money so loaned belonged to Higgins, the ward, and that the persons to whom it was loaned were solvent, or so reputed, at the date of the loans; and that the defendant, as the guardian of Higgins and the trustee of the fund, had used proper care and diligence in loaning and securing the money, and that he was not, therefore, responsible for unavoidable loss. .Whether this ground of defense could have been rendered available to all or any part of the claim, if the defendant had been sued on his bond as guardian, we [282]*282need not here determine. With a full knowledge of the facts, he entered into a settlement of the trust with the plaintiff, his successor, acknowledged his liability for the money, promised to pay it, and executed the mortgage in suit to secure its payment, and he-cannot now be permitted to go behind the settlement for the purpose of testing his liability. But the answer is defective for another reason. It assumes to- answer the whole complaint but fails to do so, as the aggregate amount of the three notes referred to do not cover the whole amount secured by the mortgage. And if otherwise valid, it would be bad because the averments in the answer fail to show that the defendant had properly discharged his duty in securing the payment of said notes. It is averred in the complaint that Mills

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ind. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohaver-v-shidler-ind-1866.