Schultze v. Maley

105 N.E. 942, 56 Ind. App. 586, 1914 Ind. App. LEXIS 68
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1914
DocketNo. 8,308
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 N.E. 942 (Schultze v. Maley) 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
Schultze v. Maley, 105 N.E. 942, 56 Ind. App. 586, 1914 Ind. App. LEXIS 68 (Ind. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Hottel, J.

This appeal was taken from a single judgment rendered in five separate suits brought in the Vanderburgh Circuit Court by Henry Maley and Charles E. Maley, partners doing business under the firm name of “Henry [587]*587Maley Lumber Company”, each suit being based on a separate policy of insurance issued by a different insurance company. It appears from tbe record that these several suits were numbered in the trial court consecutively from 4044 to 4048, inclusive. The defendants named in the first case were George T. Schultze, Joseph "Whitman and Allen B. Cody, doing business under the firm name of Schultze, Wait-man and Company, and The Insurance Company of North America. The same defendants, except a different insurance company, were named in each of the other cases. In No. 4045, the Springfield Pire and Marine Insurance Company was made a defendant; in No. 4046 the Queen Insurance Company of America was made a defendant; in No. 4047, the Aetna Insurance Company was made a defendant; in No. 4048, the Phoenix Insurance Company of Brooklyn, New York, was made a defendant. Such insurance companies each paid into court $940.51 making a total of $4,-702.55 which was the aggregate amount due on all of said policies. In case No. 4044 appellants filed a demurrer to the complaint which was overruled. There was no answer filed tendering any issue of fact on the complaint. The appellants filed a cross-complaint in which they set out a contract of lease between them and the appellee lumber company and other facts on which they claimed and sought to recover the insurance money. To this cross-complaint the appellee lumber company filed an answer in general denial and also three affirmative paragraphs. To each of such affirmative paragraphs appellants filed a demurrer which was overruled and they then filed a general denial to each of such answers.

On the issues thus formed, there was a trial by the court of cause No. 4044, and it found .for the appellee lumber company, that it recover the sum of $940.51 in the hands of the clerk of the Yanderburgh Circuit Court, and rendered judgment accordingly. After the rendition of this judgment in No. 4044, the record shows the following entry: [588]*588“Afterwards on the 18th day of October, 1911, the same being the 9th judicial day of the October term, 1911, of the Posey Circuit Court, a record entry and order was made by said court which reads in the words and figures as follows: ’ ’ Here follows consecutively the title of each of the five separate causes and the respective numbers of each and the entry then proceeds: ‘ ‘ Comes now the plaintiffs by Edwin C. Henning their attorney and come the defendants Schultze, Waltman and Cody by Walker & Walker their attorneys, and now the judgment and decree hereintofore entered against the Insurance Company of North America and these defendants is set aside, and now all of the cases above stated, to wit: five cases be and they are hereby consolidated and tried as one cause, and it is agreed in open court that the evidence taken in said cause shall apply to each of said cases, and they shall be decided as one cause; that the issues in each case are the same and that the judgment and decree which shall be entered shall be entered as one judgment which shall control and be effective as a judgment and decision in each and all of said cases. And now pursuant to the agreement, these cases come* on to be heard as one cause, and the court having heard the evidence and being fully advised, finds for the plaintiffs that the allegations of the complaint are true; that there is due to said plaintiffs from said defendant insurance companies and unpaid the sum of * * # $940.51 upon each of said policies, making a total of * * * $4,702.55; that said sum is in the hands of the clerk of the Vanderburgh Circuit Court and should be paid over to the plaintiffs herein, the court further finds that the allegations of the defendants, Schultze, Waltman and Company’s cross-complaint are not true and that they take nothing by their said cross-complaint and that said plaintiffs are entitled to recover from said defendants Schultze, Waltman and Company their costs and charges herein laid out and expended, and to further recover from said defendants Schultze, Waltman and Com[589]*589pany, six per centum interest on said sum of * * * $4,702.55 from the 6th day of May, 1911. It is therefore considered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiffs recover of and from said defendants in each case the sum of * * * $940.51 aggregating a total of * * * $4,702.55 which said sum is in the hands of the clerk of the Vanderburgh Circuit Court, and said clerk is hereby authorized and directed to pay said sum to said plaintiffs, and it is further considered and adjudged that said defendants Schultze, Waltman and Company take nothing by their cross-complaint, herein, and that the plaintiffs recover from said defendants Schultze, Waltman and Company their costs and charges herein laid out and expended, to which ruling of the court and judgment the defendants, Schultze, Waltman and Cody at the time except and object.”

It will be observed that this agreement does not purport to be joined in by the respective insurance companies.

In the record, following the bill of exceptions and just preceding the precipe, we find what purports to be a stipulation under a caption like that above indicated setting out the title and number of each of the separate cases which stipulation provides as follows: “It is hereby stipulated and agreed that the five (5) cases designated in the caption hereof are identical in every particular, except as to the names of the insurance companies made defendant, and that as the money which was due upon the policies of each of the companies has been paid into court, they were nominal parties only at the time of the hearing of these cases. That the transcript shall contain one copy of the pleadings and that all the pleadings in each ease are exactly alike, except the name of the defendant insurance companies, and that the question arising in all of these cases, the same having been consolidated and tried as one case, shall be heard and determined upon appeal, and the finding and decision of the Appellate Court shall have the same effect upon all of the cases. It is further stipulated that all of the entries [590]*590made in each of the cases before the consolidation of the same were exactly alike, except the name of the defendant insurance companies, and it is agreed that the cases may be considered upon the transcript showing the pleadings in one case and the entries in one case the same as if the pleadings and entries in each case had been separately set out in full. Edwin C. Henning, attorney for plaintiffs. Walker & Walker, attorneys for defendants.”

1. Appellant companies attempted apparently to perfect a term time appeal, but in this they have failed for two reasons, viz., (1) because the sureties on the bond were not named or approved by the court at the term at which judgment was rendered, but were approved by the clerk of the court afterwards; and (2) because the transcript was not filed in this court until more than sixty days after the filing of such bond. Kellogg v. Ridgely (1907), 40 Ind. App. 423, 424, 81 N. E. 1158; Clark v. Evansville Boat Club (1907), 40 Ind. App. 420, 82 N. E. 112; Penn Plate Glass Co. v. Poling (1913), 52 Ind. App. 492, 100 N. E. 83; Trippeer v. Clifton (1912), 178 Ind. 198, 97 N. E. 791, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 522.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 N.E. 942, 56 Ind. App. 586, 1914 Ind. App. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultze-v-maley-indctapp-1914.