Priestley v. Law Et Ux.

262 P. 931, 33 N.M. 176
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1927
DocketNo. 3011.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 262 P. 931 (Priestley v. Law Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Priestley v. Law Et Ux., 262 P. 931, 33 N.M. 176 (N.M. 1927).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

WATSON, J.

Charles A. Law and Alice- M. Law appeal from a judgment of foreclosure and sale rendered upon certain instruments given by them and held by the Union Trust & Savings Bank of Clayton as security for their notes. The judgment also denied them relief prayed for by their cross-complaint. After the commencement of the suit D. W. Priestley was appointed receiver of the Union Trust & Savings Bank and was substituted as plaintiff. It will be convenient to refer to the parties according to their status in the court below.

Bji- the answer defendants admitted the execution of the notes and the giving of the securities, but denied that the amounts claimed in the complaint were due and payable. By cross-complaint they alleged that the notes in suit were the latest renewals! of earlier notes given from time to time throughout a long course of dealing between the defendants and the Union Trust & Savings Bank, the First National Bank of Clayton, and H. J. Hammond, both of which corporations were alleged to have been under the control of H. J. Hammond, and all doing business at the same place; and that the notes were shifted among these three according to their convenience. This seems to be an admitted fact in the case, and it also- appears that the Law indebtedness was always treated as a unit, however, at a particular time, it might be distributed among the three. It was further alleged that during the course of these dealings there had been exactions on the part of the banks and of Hammond, by way of interest charges in excess of the legal rate, and of service charges in excess of the amounts actually expended; for such service, and for services for which the defendants were not obligated to pay; which, being included in the final renewals, constituted usury and entitled the defendants to the statutory penalty. It was further alleged that the defendants had kept no record of these transactions; had never been furnished with complete accounts thereof; and so were unable to set forth the amount of such usurious exactions, or the items thereof. All of the books and records disclosing the details of these transactions were alleged to be in the possession of, or available to, the receiver. The defendants therefore prayed that the receiver be required to make full accounting of all transactions, that judgment be finally rendered in the receiver’s favor for only the true amount of the principal of the loans, as shown by .such accounting, and that the defendants have judgment on their cross-complaint for double the amount of interest received and reserved.

The plaintiff filed, successively, a reply, ¡an amended reply, and a second amended reply. In the latter two he denied the exaction of any usurious interest, or the making of any illegal charges; denied knowledge or information as to the records of the transactions which defendants might have kept; and alleged that defendants had been at all times furnished with correct statements of the transactions as they occurred. In addition to this there was set forth, in some detail, the various charges which had been made to the defendants for service, and also the total amount of defendants’ indebtedness on eleven different dates between July 16, 1919, and October 7, 1922.

The first contention is that the court erred in overruling' the motion to make the amended reply more definite and certain. For present purposes it may be admitted that neither the amended reply nor the second amended reply was sufficient as an accounting, and that if, as a matter of pleading, defendants were entitled to have such an accounting in the reply, the court erred in its ruling. It is not plain, however, that they were so entitled. Accounting, as we understand, is an equitable remedy. It is not to be had for the mere asking, but upon allegation and proof of facts warranting the relief. We assume that the facts alleged in the cross-complaint would, if true, justify an accounting; but, as above stated, those facts were; denied. It seems to us, therefore, that defendants’ motion was premature. They had not yet established their right to an accounting, and the time had not arrived for putting the court to a decision of it. See, generally, 1 C. J. “Accounts and Accounting,” §§ 122, 129, 130.

It is next contended that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the second amended reply. The so-called demurrer is peculiar. It is not addressed to the reply as a whole, but to certain portions of it. It is not grounded upon the proposition that the reply, as a whole, states no defense to the cross-complaint. It picks out certain items of charges which plaintiff admits it made, and urges their invalidity. Assuming, for present purposes, that defendants were right in each of the contentions made in their demurrer, it does not follow that the demurrer should have been sustained. If it had been sustained, judgment would not have followed, because it would not have determined the issues. Defendants prayed for an accounting and for judgment, not for any fixed sum, but for double the sum such accounting should show to have been paid as interest. • If defendants had wished to rest their case upon what they considered admitted illegal exactions, they would, no doubt, have moved for judgment on the pleadings. We do not understand that a demurrer is to be used, as it was employed here, merely to obtain rulings as to the admissibility of evidence in advance of its offer. It is a pleading. If sustained, and in the absence of an amendment of the pleading held insufficient, final judgment follows. We think that counsel mistook the office of a demurrer, and that the court was not in error in overruling it. It does not conform to Code 1915, §§ 4110, 4111. It states no statutory ground, nor does it go to the whole reply or to one or more alleged defenses stated therein. See Kleiner et al. v. O’Kelley, 22 N. M. 624, 167 P. 1.

H. J. Hammond and Charles C. Hammond, as witnesses for the plaintiff, in their examination in chief testified that they were officers of the bank and had a general knowledge of its transactions with the defendants. They identified the notes and securities, and testified that certain sums were due and unpaid thereon. All this without 'objection. On cross-examination of these witnesses it was developed that their knowledge was general; that while they had personal charge of some of the transactions, others were handled by clerks; and that their testimony as to the amounts due was necessarily based upon the books and records of the banks. Defendants then moved to strike their testimony in chief. The overruling of their motion is assigned as error; the grounds being that it was not the best evidence and was hearsay. This assignment must be overruled. A motion to' strike evidence which has been admitted without objection is addressed to the discretion of the court. State v. McKnight, 21 N. M. 14, 153 P. 76; State v. Blacklock, 23 N. M. 251, 167 P. 714; Crawford v. Gurley, 23 N. M. 662, 170 P. 736; State v. Lazarovich, 27 N. M. 282, 200 P. 422.

Upon the principle just invoked, we hold that there was no error in overruling the motion for judgment made at the close of plaintiff’s case upon the theory that the only supporting evidence was secondary and hearsay. The evidence having been received without objection, and the court in its discretion having refused to strike it out, it made the plaintiff’s case. State v. Blacklock, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 931, 33 N.M. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priestley-v-law-et-ux-nm-1927.