This action was trespass de lords asportatis. The defendant below, appellant here, justified under a chattel mortgage of the plaintiff below, respondent here. Some of the goods actually in controversy appear not to have been in the mortgage. And the appellant, claiming that they should have been, put in with his answer a counter claim in equity for the reformation of the mortgage, to include goods in controversy omitted from it.
The proper practice, in such a case, is to try the issue upon the equitable counter claim first; afterwards, the issue on the legal defense. Du Pont v. Davis, 35 Wis., 631. Though this rule generally rests in discretion, yet in such a case as this, it *220seems to be imperative. For it is difficult to understand bow the legal issue of justification under the mortgage could properly be tried, until the determination in equity, what the mortgage should properly cover.
But it appears by the record, that no distinction was made in the court below between the issues at law and in equity; and that both were tried indiscriminately by a jury. The impropriety, if not error, of such practice, appears manifest upon consideration that the verdict, while it stands, is conclusive upon the court on the legal issue, and advisory only on the equitable issue. Indeed the counter claim seems to have been very much overlooked throughout. For the judgment goes upon the legal issue only, and leaves the counter claim undis-posed of.
This view was not taken at the bar; but we are inclined to think the error in the judgment itself sufficient to reverse it.
A special verdict was ordered; and the court below submitted the matters in controversy to the jury, in the- form of questions. One of these was, whether it was the understanding between the parties that the mortgage should cover the entire stock of goods in the respondent’s store. The jury professed inability to answer this question as proposed, and asked permission to divide it. For reasons not apparent, the court below indulged the jury in the rare luxury of dividing an indivisible question. And so the proverbially intelligent jury answered the question, “ yes,” as to the appellant, “ no,” as to the respondent. This was severing the truth, not the question nor the answer. The ex pcvrte yes, affirms a mutual understanding; the ex fa/rte no, disaffirms a mutual understanding. The verdict on a material point finds for each party, and against each party; being, in effect, equivalent to disagreement of the jury. The answer assumes to cut a single and indivisible truth in two, as Solomon proposed to cut the child. No judgment can rest on such a verdict, and no court should receive it.
The jury gave evidence of evasive talent, in another instance, *221in another way. They answered a question, no, upon a hypothesis, giving no answer to it upon any other hypothesis; 'thus leaving the court to find a fact for itself, which, being found and taken with the verdict, would or would no t, as it might be found, constitute an answer to the question put to the jury.
The statute providifig for special verdicts is an excellent one; tending to dispel the occasional darkness visible of general verdicts. But special verdicts are worse than useless, if courts do not submit for them single, direct and plain questions, and insist upon positive, direct and intelligible answers. Indirect, evasive, uncertain or unmeaning answers should never be received. And when none other can he drawn from a jury, the verdict should not stand for a moment. Davis v. Farmington, 42 Wis., 425.
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the court below for a new trial.