Citation Numbers: 87 Fla. 73, 99 So. 359
Judges: Browne, Ellis, Eoncua, Taylor, Terrell, West, Whitfield
Filed Date: 1/31/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This a suit in equity on a promissory note. The defendant makers of the note are H. F. Wildman and J. E. Easterly, co-partners doing business'under the firm name of Brevard Construction Company, Dorothea Wild-man, complainant payee, is the wife of Defendant EL F. Wildman, who made no defense to the suit and a decree pro confesso was in due course entered against him. Defendant J. El. Easterly filed an answer to the bill of complaint. Several paragraphs of this answer upon motion were stricken. From the order granting the motion to strike this appeal was taken. The order appealed from is assigned as error.
By the fourth paragraph of his answer, which was-stricken; defendant Easterly averred: “that on the 19th day of February, 1921, the defendant H. F. Wildman, and this defendant entered into and executed a written agreement under and by virtue of which the co-partnership existing between them under the firm name and style of Brevard Construction Company be dissolved, a copy of which said agreement is hereto attached, marked “Exhibit A” and made a part of this answer; that by the'terms of said agreement this defendant became the liquidating partner, that is to say, he took over all the personal property,, accounts, equipments, sawmill, engines, mules, steel forms, concrete buggies, wheelbarrows, all lumber then manufactured or in process of manufacture, and all things what-so ever theretofore used in the business, without further-claim of the defendant, EL F. Wildman, except, however, that said H. F. Wildman should have the option of assuming payment of the obligations due S. F. Williams, of Jacksonville, Florida, and settle with him in full and keep the-
The suit is in equity because of the marital relation existing between the complainant and one of the defendants. 30 C. J. p 951.
It is well established'in this jurisdiction that if matter contained in an answer in a chancery cause is relevant and can have any influence upon a decision of the issue involved in the controversy, it is not impertinent and should not be stricken upon motion. Canal Lbr. Co. v. Florida Naval Stores & Mfg. Co., 83 Fla. 501; 92 South. Rep. 279; Walker v. Am. Agr. Chem. Co., 83 Fla. 153, 90 South. Rep. 696;. Stokely v. Connor, 80 Fla. 89, 85 South. Rep. 678; Southern Ferro Concrete Co. v. Federal Terra Cotta Co., 79 Fla. 376, 84 South. Rep. 171; Campbell v. Wilson, 74 Fla. 608, 77 South. Rep. 540.
There is sufficient in what is averred in the stricken paragraph of the answer to permit the introduction of evidence tending to prove knowledge of the complaint of the agreement having for its object a dissolution of the partnership existing between the defendants,' and acquiescence
This paragraph of the answer averred also, by way of set-off to complainant’s claim, several items of indebtedness due by her to the partnership accruing, according to the averments of the answer, subsequent to the execution of the note to her by the defendant makers, who constituted the partnership. By statute this procedure is allowable, and there is sufficient in the answer to admit evidence of the set-off averred. Sec. 3120, Rev. Gen. Stat; Southern Ferro Concrete Co. v. Federal Terra Cotta Co., supra; Bates v. Lanier, 75 Fla. 79, 77 South, Rep. 628.
The controlling principle in the 'case is whether the complainant by her conduct is estopped from asserting that the note upon which she sues is a valid and subsisting obligation to the co-partnership. The defense interposed is not an attempt to subject the property of a married woman to the debts of her husband. If she by her conduct has estopped herself from asserting in a court of equity the
The order appealed from is reversed.