Ryon v. Thomas
Citation | 3 N.E. 653,104 Ind. 59 |
Decision Date | 24 November 1885 |
Docket Number | 12,048 |
Parties | Ryon, Receiver, v. Thomas et al |
Court | Supreme Court of Indiana |
From the Hancock Circuit Court.
The judgment in favor of the appellees upon demurrer is reversed with costs, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
J. A New and J. W. Jones, for appellant.
E Marsh, W. W. Cook and M. B. Gooding, for appellees.
While the firm of Cook & Allen was engaged in the prosecution of its partnership business, Allen borrowed of Thomas, one of the appellees, about $ 300 for his individual use, and executed to him a chattel mortgage upon all the property of the firm to secure the payment of the money thus borrowed. Ryon, the appellant, was afterwards, by the Hancock Circuit Court, appointed receiver of this firm of Cook & Allen, and entered upon the duties imposed by his appointment. By his second report of the condition of the assets of the firm, known as report No. 2, it was shown that he had in his hands a balance of $ 122.03 in cash, and of $ 125.48 in uncollected notes.
Thomas had in the meantime filed his claim for money borrowed by Allen, against Ryon, as such receiver, asking its allowance as a demand against the firm. Ryon resisted the payment of this claim out of the assets of the firm, but after report No. 2 was made, as above stated, and before a trial upon the claim was reached, the parties came to an agreement concerning it, and a record entry intended to carry such agreement into effect was made by the circuit court, substantially as follows:
This record entry was made in October, 1883, and on the 10th day of September, 1884, Ryon filed his complaint in the court below, in the nature of a petition in equity, charging that at the time the foregoing order and decree was entered he had in his hands only the sum of $ 122.03 in cash, as shown by Report No. 2, and that in that report he had by mistake overcharged himself as with cash in hand in the sum of $ 2.81; that out of the notes referred to in said report he had only collected the additional sum of $ 34.86, the remainder of said notes being worthless; that, consequently, the finding of the circuit court that he had on hand, at the time the record entry set out as above was made, the sum of $ 247.51, was an erroneous finding; that such erroneous finding resulted from a mutual mistake and inadvertence of the parties to the proceeding; that after paying the indebtedness against the firm, and the expenses of the receivership, there would not remain in his hands a sum sufficient to pay Cook and Thomas $ 100 each. He therefore prayed that the order and decree, entered as above, should be reviewed, reformed and modified, so as not to require him to pay out a sum of money greater than he might have in his hands as receiver of the firm herein above named, when final settlement should be made.
The complaint was verified by affidavit, and contained two paragraphs.
An appearance on behalf of both Thomas and Cook was entered to the complaint. Thomas demurred separately to the complaint, and, his demurrer being sustained, final judgment was rendered in favor of both Thomas and Cook upon demurrer.
All mistakes in a final judgment of a merely clerical character may be amended in a direct proceeding for that purpose, where the rights of some third party have not intervened in such manner as to render an amendment inequitable. Jenkins v. Long, 23 Ind. 460; Makepeace v. Lukens, 27 Ind. 435; Goodwine v. Hedrick, 29 Ind. 383; Hebel v. Scott, 36 Ind. 226; Bales v. Brown, ...
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