Pollard v. Pittman

77 N.E. 293, 37 Ind. App. 475, 1906 Ind. App. LEXIS 60
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1906
DocketNo. 5,612
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 293 (Pollard v. Pittman) 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
Pollard v. Pittman, 77 N.E. 293, 37 Ind. App. 475, 1906 Ind. App. LEXIS 60 (Ind. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

’ Wiley, J.

Action by appellant against appellee and others upon a promissory note. Issues were joined by answer and reply. Trial by the court, resulting in a find[476]*476ing and judgment for appellee. Appellant’s demurrer to the third and fifth paragraphs of answer was overruled, as was also his motion for a new trial, and these rulings are the only errors assigned. •

Counsel for appellant suggests in his brief that the same legal questions are presented by the ruling of the court upon the demurrer to the third and fifth paragraphs of the answer as those presented by the motion for a new trial, and that for this reason they may be considered jointly.

The note sued upon was for $500, and was executed April 17, 1888, and became due six months after date. The interest rate fixed in the note was eight per cent, and the complaint avers that the interest was paid to April 17, 1897. A succinct statement of the material facts disclosed by the record is important before taking up the questions for decision. On December 14, 1885, appellant, appellee and four others became sureties for the First Avenue Coal Mining Company, on a note for $3,000, payable to the People’s Savings Bank of Evansville. Subsequently the mining company paid on the note $1,500. On February 11, 1888, the mining company executed to all of the sureties on that note & mortgage upon all of its real and personal property to indemnify them from any loss. April 17, 1888, appellant paid $500 on said indebtedness of the mining company, and took back from it a note for that amount, with his other cosureties as sureties thereon. April 23, 1889, Cicero Buchanan, one of the sureties, paid a like amount, and took back from the company a like note. January 9, 1892, appellee paid a like amount in full discharge of said indebtedness,.and received from the company a like note for that amount. In 1896, one McWilliams and others filed a suit in the Superior Court of Vanderburgh County against said mining company, and all of said sureties, to enforce liens as laborers and miners for wages. Such proceedings were had that a receiver was appointed for said company to wind up its affairs, which receiver [477]*477sold all of the tangible property of the mining company and applied the proceeds thereof to discharge liens, etc. Before the beginning of this suit, Buchanan, one of the sureties, died, and his administrator was made a party. On March 27, 1896, appellant, appellee and the administrator of the Buchanan estate, filed their cross-complaint in said receivership proceedings, predicated upon said notes, and for the enforcement of the lien of said indemnifying mortgage. They subsequently filed an amended cross-complaint, to which the receiver filed an answer in three paragraphs. Upon the trial of the issues thus made appellee recovered á judgment for the amount due upon his note and for the enforcement of the lien of said mortgage. The finding and judgment, however, against appellant and the administrator of Buchanan’s estate were against them on the ground that their claims were barred by the statute of limitations. Bray, as administrator, appealed to the Supreme Court from that judgment, and succeeded in securing a reversal, and a direction to the trial court to restate its conclusions of law on the special findings, and render judgment in favor of the administrator for the amount due on the note. Appellant refused to join in said appeal, but elected to abide by the judgment rendered against him. At about the time of the bringing of the McWilliam’s suit, appellant, appellee and Bray, as administrator, etc., entered into an agreement to the effect that they would together pursue their legal remedy by suit to its utmost limit, and enforce the lien of their said mortgage on the property of said company; that they would pursue their said claims and rights under the mortgage in and through the courts, and would carry their said suit, if necessary, to the court of last resort in their effort to collect their said claims and save themselves harmless by reason of their said suretyship.

The third paragraph of answer sets out in detail all of the above facts, and the pleading is builded upon the theory of res judicata. The theory of this paragraph is that in [478]*478the McWilliam’s suit and upon the issues joined and tried on the cross-complaint in which appellant, appellee and Bray, administrator, joined, as cross-complainants, the respective rights of the parties were adjudicated. The fifth paragraph counts upon the same facts substantially, but they are pleaded by way of estoppel. From the view of the law we have taken, applicable to the facts in this case, we deem it wholly unnecessary to make further reference to the many facts pleaded in the third and fourth paragraphs of answer.

While no question is raised as to the sixth paragraph of answer, yet it is important to state the facts upon which it is based; for upon such facts the rights of the parties may be finally determined. The paragraph avers in detail all of the material facts to which we have above adverted, relating to appellant, appellee and Bray, administrator, etc., and of the amounts paid by them respectively. It also makes averments in regard to the indemnifying mortgage, the appointment of a receiver, and the winding up of the affairs of the mining company; that in the McWilliams receivership proceedings, appellant, appellee and Bray, administrator, entered into an agreement whereby they mutually agreed to file a cross-complaint in said proceedings, based upon the notes given them as evidence of the payments they had made, and enforce their rights under the indemnifying mortgage, and thus save themselves harmless as far as possible.; that in pursuance of said agreement they did file such cross-complaint; that issues were joined thereon, and sets out in detail the proceedings, judgment, appeal, reversal of the judgment as to Bray, etc. It is also averred that appellee urged appellant to join in said appeal, which he declined to do, and that if he had kept his agreement and appealed from said judgment he would have shared equally with appellee and the administrator of Buchanan’s estate in the enforcement of their lien against the funds in the hands of the receiver.

[479]*4791. There are two reasons why it is unnecessary for us to pass upon the sufficiency of the third and fifth paragraphs of answer: (1) Because all of the material facts averred in either of such paragraphs were provable under the facts averred in the sixth paragraph; (2) because upon the facts averred in the sixth paragraph, which are abundantly established by the evidence, appellant is not entitled to recover in this action. 2. The appellant, appellee, and Buchanan, the three solvent sureties on the original note, each paid an equal amount in satisfaction thereof. Each of them paid his proportionate share at different times, and as each payment was made the mining company gave to the payor its note for the amounts paid, with all the other sureties on the original note as sureties.

3. It is alleged in this paragraph and there is evidence to support it, that these three notes were given as an evidence of the payments made. It is clear that no new indebtedness was created. The indemnifying mortgage was an equal protection for all the sureties who might be called upon to answer for the default of their principal. The three sureties who did pay stood upon an equality, for they all paid the same amount.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 293, 37 Ind. App. 475, 1906 Ind. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-pittman-indctapp-1906.