John A. Lackey averred, in substance, that Meredith executed his note for 1,500 to Catharine Lackey, John A. Lackey, Robert S, Lackey, and Richard M. Lackey, and that his wife joined with him in a mortgage on certain real estate to secure the payment thereof; that the note was assigned to plaintiff, who asked judgment for the amount and the foreclosure, &c.
The defendants answered, that the note was given for a part of the purchase-money of the lands described in the mortgage; and that the said lands were a part of the estate of one Ira Lackey, of whom the said payees were the widow and heirs; that one Richey was the executor of said estate and claimed the proceeds of said note, and. had forbid the payment to said heirs; that defendants had paid a *530part, &c., to said executor, which was to have been credited on said note; that he held a claim, &c., against said estate, which he asked might be set off, and that Richey might be made a defendant, &c.
Richey filed a petition, sworn to, stating such facts as induced the Court to order that he be made a party; but as no judgment was taken against him, and as he does not join in the appeal, we shall not further notice the questions raised by such petition, &c.
Reply, that after the death of Ira Lackey, certain parties, naming them, had, in a proceeding in said Court against this executor, widow, and heirs, obtained a decree directing a sale of said lands, and the application of the proceeds to the payment of certain sums due to said parties, and the return of the overplus, if any, to the defendants; that the sale was to be as upon execution at law, &c., and that said lands were sold by virtue of said decree, and Meredith became the purchaser for the sum of 4,333 dollars, being two-thirds of the appraisement thereof, and received possession under said purchase, to all which the executor and widow assented.
Upon the filing of these pleadings, the case was continued; and during vacation the plaintiff filed an additional averment to his complaint, namely, that since the purchase of Meredith, to-wit, &c., he had created a junior incumbrance by way of a mortgage to one Peelle, who was made a defendant.
Upon the calling of the case for trial, on the fourteenth day of the next term of the Court, Peelle appeared and filed his pleading, together with a note and mortgage, claiming that there was due him some 1,300 dollars from said Meredith.
No rule was taken against Meredith for answer, but he moved that the case be continued until the next day to enable him to answer. This the Court refused, and required him to answer immediately. He then answered, setting up usury, and filed interrogatories to Peelle directed to that point. Peelle immediately replied in denial, but did not answer the interrogatories. A rule was taken against *531Peelle to file such answer, but without the same having been answered, and, over the objection of the defendants, the Court proceeded to trial, &c. No affidavit accompanied the interrogatories. The bill of exceptions states Peelle was absent, although the reply has to it the name of said Peelle as if he had filed it in person. No motion was made for an attachment to compel an answer from Peelle. Lackey did not reply, nor in any manner respond to .the pleading of Peelle. A trial was thereupon had, and a verdict returned in favor of Lackey, and, also, in favor of Peelle. Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the verdict.
On these facts questions of practice are presented by the parties.
First. "Was it error to compel the answer (at the time) of Meredith to the pleading of Peelle ?
The junior mortgagee was not a necessary, though a proper party to the proceeding. Mack v. Grover, 12 Ind. R. 254.—Pattison v. Shaw, 6 id. 377.—Story’s Eq. Pl. § 193 and note.—Calvert on Parties in Eq., p. 128; but the plaintiff made him a party, and whether, without the consent of the plaintiff, the pleading of Peelle could have been filed at the time it was, if thereby the progress of the suit of said plaintiff might have been delayed, we' need not decide, for no objection by Lackey is shown. Indeed, the attorneys for Lackey appear, also, to have acted for Peelle. But if he had failed to answer, no judgment could have been rendered in his favor. Kenton v. Spencer, 6 Ind. R. 321. His rights, if he had any, as against the plaintiff (Howe v. Woodruff, 12 Ind. R. 214), might have been concluded. 6 id. 324. It was, therefore, the act of the plaintiff that brought Peelle into court, and caused the filing of the pleading at the time it was filed, and if Meredith was thereby entitled to further time, no question of hardship upon "the plaintiff, could have been permitted to weigh.
It is insisted that this is not such a pleading as, under the circumstances, required an affidavit from Meredith, under 2 R. S. p. 48, \ 97, to entitle him to a continuance, but that he was entitled thereto as a matter of right, because *532the pleading, as against him, operated and should be regarded as an original complaint; and that if, in this, the defendant is mistaken, then he was entitled to a delay of one day, or a reasonable time to answer (id. p. 42, § 68); and that, in this instance, such time was not allowed.
As to this whole proposition, we are of opinion that the pleading filed by Peelle, claiming as it did a judgment, &c.,-against Meredith, was, for that purpose, a new and substantive pleading to enforce a separate and distinct demand (12 Ind. R. 254), not embraced in the original complaint, nor such as, under that complaint alone, would have authorized Peelle to take a judgment thereon against the appellant, and, therefore, he should not have been compelled to respond to the same immediately. Whether the case should have been continued until the next term, is a question not raised by the record, although presented in • argument, and we intimate no opinion thereon; but that the appellant was entitled to such reasonable time as was necessary to enable him to answer that branch of the case, we have no doubt. We are further of opinion, as the pleading of Peelle did not make nor tender any issue on the complaint of Lackey, nor pray any relief as against him, that so far as the pleadings show, no right thereby accrued to the appellant to delay a recovery of a judgment, &c., on the claim of said Lackey. But if a judgment had been taken on such claim, and the cause continued, in consequence of such pleading, as to the junior mortgage, a question might, perhaps, have been made as to the application of the .overplus, if any, arising from the sale of the lands. But as to that, it seems to us an order could have been made to operate upon the officer, so as to compel an application in the contingency of a recovery, without prejudicing the rights or interests of either party. It will, perhaps, be said that a sale, before a final adjudication upon all the incumbrances sought to be enforced, would tend to prevent competition at such sale. The junior mortgagee did not ask to redeem the senior mortgage, and be subrogated to the rights of the holder thereof; nor in any other manner indicate that he desired delay, for the *533purpose of obtaining relief or security against the plaintiff. Whether he could have made a case, in that respect, which would have prevented a final judgment in favor of Lackey, before his claim was also passed upon, we need not determine. He did not attempt to make such a case. A default could not have been legally entered against the appellant if he had failed to obey the order of the Court to answer immediately the pleading on the junior mortgage; but as he filed an answer, the question is, whether by that act he waived the error of the Court in making the order. We are of opinion that he did not. He had by exception reserved the question; and cases might perhaps arise in which great present inconvenience, and ultimate injury, might result from standing by and permitting a judgment, under the circumstances, for want of an answer.
The next point made, is upon the refusal of the Court to continue the cause for an answer to the interrogatories. The record does not show within what time the answer was to be filed, under the rule therein granted. The statute (Acts of 1855, p. 59,) requires the Court to fix the time within which the answer is to be filed. If the party should fail to file it within the time, the opposite party could, by taking proper steps, delay the cause, and compel an answer. Cleaveland v. Hughes, 12 Ind. R. 512.
The statement in the bill of exceptions that the defendant was absent, must control, the presumption being in favor of the action of the Court, and that the absence was such as authorized that action, and made known to the Court in the proper manner. Boswell v. Travis, 12 Ind. R. 524. And, therefore, the statutory affidavit should have been filed.
A bill of exceptions states that on the motion for a new trial, it was shown to the Court that before the jury was sworn, defendant’s counsel asked time to prepare the affidavit; but that the judge did not hear the request. The failure to grant a request not heard, could not, under ordinary circumstances, be error. The party should, at the time, have excepted, and caused the exception to be noted. This would certainly have brought the matter to the notice *534of the Court. Whether, when the matter was brought to the attention of the Court upon a motion for a new trial, a new trial should have been granted for that cause, was a matter much within the discretion of the Court. We cannot say there was an abuse of that discretion.
The remaining point is, that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, &c. The evidence is not in the record. Rut it is insisted that the portion of the answer setting up a set-off is not contradicted by the reply, and is, therefore, admitted, and should have been so considered by the jury. We have not the evidence upon which the verdict was found. We have only the pleadings. If the Court should have varied the amount of the- judgment from the verdict, because of any admission in the pleadings, perhaps the proper mode to have reached that question would have been by a motion in the Court below. 2 R. S. p. 121, § 372. No such motion was made. Rut is there an admission by the pleadings? The answer set up that the note was given for lands purchased of the heirs, &c., of Ira Lackey, and that the executor claimed the proceeds had been partly paid, and a claim held against the deceased for another part. The reply does not directly deny this, and it is claimed that therefore, under § 74, 2 R. S. p. 44, the appellant was entitled to the benefit of the set-off at least. Although the reply does not directly deny the answer, yet it sets up a state of facts inconsistent with those alleged in such answer. It avers the land was purchased by the appellant, under a decree of the Court for the sale thereof, in favor of judgment-creditors of the deceased; that he had paid that purchase-money, and taken possession, &c., with the consent of the executor. This controverts, perhaps argumentatively, the allegations in the answer as to the consideration of the note. Pleading in that form has been held sufficient for some purposes. Riddle v. Parke, 12 Ind. R. 90.— Cooke v. Williamson, 11 id. 242.—Id., 293. The averment of payment to the executor, of a part, by the appellant, and that he held a claim against the deceased, &c., may not, perhaps, be controverted by the reply; but such a state of facts is set up as *535shows that even if such payment was made and claim held, they were not a proper set-off. It appears to us that if the issue thus made was found for the plaintiff, the allegation as to the set-off was then properly disregarded by the jury.
O. P. Morton and J. F. Kibbey, for the appellants. J. S. Newman and- J. P. Siddall, for the appellee. Per Curiam.The judgment is affirmed with 3 per cent, damages and costs as to that part of the judgment in favor of Lackey; and reversed with costs as to the judgment in favor of Peelle.