The appellee, as plaintiff, sued the appellants, as defendants, in the court below.
Appellee’s complaint was in three paragraphs, and issues of law and fact were formed on each of these paragraphs ; but, before the final submission of the cause to> the jury, the appellee virtually abandoned the first and third paragraphs of his complaint, and the jury were so instructed by the court below.
In our examination of this cause, therefore, we will consider the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint alone, as if it were in fact, what it is in effect, the only complaint in the action.
In the second paragraph of his complaint, the appellee alleged, in substance, that on the 23d day of May, 1865, he sold to the appellant Sylvester Johnson and one Robert Johnson, who were brothers and partners in business, certain land hereinafter described; that, in part consideration for said land, the said Sylvester and Robert Johnson executed their promissory note of that date for two thousand dollars, a copy of which note was filed with said paragraph as a part thereof, which said note was *511made payable six years and six months after date, with interest thereon from December 25th, 1865, without relief from valuation or appraisement laws; that, to secure the payment of said note, the appellants Sylvester and Mary B. Johnson and said Robert Johnson executed to appellee a mortgage on said real estate, a copy of which mortgage was filed with said paragraph as a part thereof; that afterward said Robert Johnson conveyed his right, title and interest in and to said land to said Sylvester Johnson, who assumed and undertook the payment of said debt; that afterward, on the — day of-, 187—, appellant Sylvester Johnson, intending and contriving to cheat and defraud the appellee, falsely represented to appellee, that he, said Sylvester Johnson, wanted, and was arranging, to negotiate a loan with a certain insurance company, for the purpose of procuring money with which to pay off and discharge appellee’s debt, and that he had so far arranged to negotiate said loan as that all that remained to enable him to consummate said arrangement, and negotiate said loan, was, that the appellee should release said mortgage on said land, so that he might thereby mortgage it for said loan, and that he could only procure said loan by appellee’s releasing his said mortgage, and said Sylvester Johnson thereupon agreed and pledged himself, that, if appellee-would make and execute such a release, he would and could thereby procure said loan, and would, with the money so procured, immediately pay off and discharge appellee’s said debt; that appellee, relying upon said fraudulent representations, and believing that said Sylvester so intended to negotiate said loan, and to pay him his debt, which had then been long due, made.and executed a release of said mortgage, and recited therein that said debt was paid and satisfied, and did so for the purpose aforesaid and none other, and was induced thereto by said representations and none other; that the appellant Sylvester Johnson was not then intending nor attempting to negotiate a loan- with any insurance com-*512party, and had not made any arrangement for such purpose, and was not intending thereby to procure money to pay off appellee’s said debt; but that, having so procured said release to be executed, he, said Sylvester, thereupon, in violation and utter disregard of his promise, 'and in fraud of appellee’s rights, sold the said land to the appellant -Reagan, who agreed to pay him' therefor the sum of-dollars, and executed his promissory notes therefor; that there was still unpaid and owing, upon said notes, by said Reagan, the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, and that appellee’s said note, except the sum of one thousand dollars paid thereon, was due and unpaid, to appellee’s damage in the sum of two thousand dollars. Wherefore appellee demanded judgment against said Sylvester for two thousand dollars, that said mortgage be foreclosed to the extent of the amount of money yet due from said Reagan upon said land, or to the extent of appellee’s claim, and for all other proper relief.
. The copies of the note and mortgage, which were made parts of said paragraph of complaint, were filed therewith and are set out in the record.
The appellants Johnson and wife, and the appellants, the Reagans, severing in their' defence, demurred to the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint, for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein to constitute a cause of action, which demurrers were severally' overruled' by the court below, and to these decisions the appellants severally excepted.
And the appellants Jesse and John W. Reagan, severing in their defence, for answer to the second paragraph of appellee’s‘complaint, said, in substance, admitting the execution of the note and mortgage as therein averred, that it was true, as therein set forth, that appellee, on the 8th day of April, 1872, and again on the 11th day of April, 1873, executed and delivered to said Sylvester Johnson acknowledgments of satisfaction, and releases, of said mortgage, duly acknowledged, and the samé were *513duly entered of record with and upon said mortgage, copies of which releases were filed with said answer; and said appellants, the Reagans, further averred, that said Sylvester Johnson, immediately after the execution and record of said releases, procured a loan of two thousand five hundred dollars of The North-Western Mutual Insurance Company, and executed a mortgage therefor to said company upon the lands set out in said mortgage to the appellee, and before the execution of said release had negotiated said loan of said company; that on the 12th day of April, 1873, said Sylvester Johnson, by a warranty deed, conveyed said lands to the said Reagans, subject to said mortgage to said company, for six thousand dollars, which sum said Reagans paid to said Sylvester, except the sum of two thousand dollai’s, for which they executed notes to said Sylvester in instalments of five hundred dollars, which notes said Sylvester immediately assigned and transferred for value, as follows: one note to Charles W. Ballard and William A. Poe, who transferred the same for value to Samuel M. Mitchell, who then owned and held the same; and the other three of said notes said Sylvester transferred and endorsed, for value, to Leander Johnson, who, for value, immediately transferred the same to John C. Burton & Co., who then owned and held the same, which transfers and assignments of said notes were made, and said notes delivered, to the then holders thereof, before the said Reagans had any notice that appellee had or held any claim on said land, or that his said mortgage had not been fully paid and satisfied; and that the said Reagans had been notified of the said assignments of their said notes to the said holders thereof, long before the said Reagans had any notice that the appellee’s mortgage was not paid; that before said note was transferred to said Ballard and Poe by said Sylvester Johnson, the said Reagans, without any knowledge or notice of any of the fraud or matters set up in appellee’s complaint, *514undertook and promised said Ballard and Poe, that said • Reagans had no defence to said note, and would pay the same to said Ballard and Poe, according to its tenor and effect, nor had said Ballard and Poe, or Mitchell, any notice of any of the fraud or matters set up by appellee in his complaint, when said note was so assigned. And the said Reagans denied all fraud charged in said complaint, and denied that they then were, or were when this suit was commenced, indebted to said Sylvester Johnson in any sum for said land. Wherefore the said- Reagans said, that the appellee was estopped from foreclosing said mortgage., etc.
■ To this answer of the appellants Jesse and John W. Reagan, the appellee replied in three paragraphs, as follows :
1. A general denial
2. Appellee admitted the execution of the release of the mortgage set out in said answer, and dated April 8th, 1872, but alleged, that said release was procured by the fraud of said Sylvester Johnson, as averred in the complaint, Appellee also admitted the execution of the further release of said mortgage, dated April 11th, 1873, and set out in said answer, but alleged, that said release was procured by the fraud and deceit of said Sylvester Johnson, in the manner following, to wit: That on said April 11th, 1873, said Sylvester Johnson, contriving and intending to cheat and defraud appellee, falsely represented to appellee, that he, said Sylvester, had arranged to procure a loan with a certain insurance company, with which to pay off and discharge appellee’s debt, and that all that remained to enable him to consummate said loan was, that the appellee should release said mortgage on said land; that the release theretofore executed by appellee had never been recorded, and had been theretofore lost and destroyed, and said loan of said money had never been procured or received by him, and said mortgage yet remained, and was, unsatisfied of record, and that he could *515only procure said loan by appellee’s releasing his said mortgage; and that he thereupon agreed and pledged himself, that, if appellee would make and execute said release of said mortgage, he could and would thereby procure said loan, and wholly pay off and discharge appellee’s said debt; that appellee relied upon said false and fraudulent representations, and thereupon made and executed said release of said mortgage, and recited therein, that said debt was paid and satisfied; that he did so for the purpose aforesaid, and none-other, and was induced thereto by said representations, and by none other; and appellee alleged, that said Sylvester Johnson was not then arranging, and had not then made any arrangement, to procure or negotiate any loan from any insurance company, and was not intending thereby to procure any money, wherewith to pay off appellee’s said debt, but that he had theretofore contracted to sell and convey said lands so mortgaged to his codefendant Reagan, to whom he afterward, in pursuance of said contract, sold and conveyed the same, who took and accepted said conveyance with full knowledge of all the facts, and of said representations. Wherefore, etc.
3. And for a further reply to said answer, and to so much thereof as alleged the assignment of the notes evidencing the balance of unpaid purchase-money, appellee said, that he admitted said notes were assigned, but that said assignees took them voluntarily and without consideration passing at the time, but in discharge and payment of a debt or debts theretofore contracted and then unpaid. Wherefore, etc.
■ And the appellants demurred separately and severally to the second and third paragraphs of said reply, for an alleged want of sufficient facts therein to constitute a reply to appellants’ said answer, which demurrer was overruled, and to this.decision the appellants excepted.
The action was tried by a jury in the court below, and a verdict was returned, finding for the appellee and against *516the appellant Sylvester Johnson, and assessing appellee’s damages in the sum of two thousand and thirty-three dollars and fifty-three cents, and finding pgainst the appellants “Jesse Reagan and John W. Reagan, for three notes in the hands of J. C. Burton & Co., for five hundred dollars each.”
The appellants Jesse and John W. Reagan moved the court below, on written causes filed, for a new trial, which motion was overruled, and said appellants excepted. And a judgment was then rendered upon the verdict, from which judgment this appeal is here prosecuted.
In this court, the appellants have assigned the following alleged errors of the court below:'
1st. In overruling the appellants’ demurrers to the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint;
2d. In sustaining appellee’s motion to strike out a part of the appellants’, the Reagans’, answer;
8d. In overruling the appellants’, the Reagans’, demurrers to the second and third paragraphs of appellee’s reply;
4th. In misdirecting the jury, in and by instructions given, numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, and each of them;
5th. In refusing to instruct the jury as asked in writing by the appellants, and numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9- and 10, and each of them;
6th. In overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial; and,
7th. In rendering judgment against the appellants, as to the three notes held by Burton & Co.
We will consider and decide the various questions presented by these alleged errors, in the order in which the errors, if they exist, were committed by the court below.
The appellants, not alone the Reagans, but also the Johnsons, earnestly insist that the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint “ was bad on demurrer, would be bad, because not setting forth facts sufficient to constitute *517a cause of action, under the statute, without demurrer, and that, for both reasons, the court below erred in overruling the demurrer to it.”
Our view of this second paragraph differs, tato calo, from that thus expressed by appellants’ counsel. If the facts alleged in this second paragraph were true as stated, and the appellants’ demurrers concede them to be true, and if such facts were not controlled or modified by other intervening equities, in our opinion, the appellee would be clearly entitled to all the relief asked for in his said second paragraph. The question presented by appellants’ demurrers is one that must be determined upon the facts stated in the paragraph demurred to; and it will not do to argue that the paragraph is bad on demurrer, because “ the rights of innocent parties had become involved in the matter,” when it does not appear from any averment in the paragraph, that there were any innocent parties. It is insisted by appellants’ counsel, that the fraudulent representations of the appellant Sylvester Johnson, as stated by appellee in the second paragraph of his complaint, consisted only in Johnson’s promise to pay his debt to appellee in the future. We think that counsel misapprehend the force and effect of the averments in this paragraph of the complaint. We recognize the doctrine that a mere promise to pay a debt in the future, however false and fraudulent it may be in fact, is not in law a representation upon which fraud can be predicated, with a view to the rescission of a contract or the recovery of damages. “ Representations upon which fraud can be predicated must be of an existing fact, or of a fact alleged to exist, and not a mere promise to do something afterwards.” That is the law of this State, as the same has been stated by this court in a number of case's. Fouty v. Fouty, 34 Ind. 433. See, also, Adkins v. Adkins, 48 Ind. 12.
But, in the case at bar, the false representations of said Sylvester Johnson, upon which the charge of fraud was *518predicated, related not only to his promise to pay appellee’s debt, but also to the fact alleged by him to exist, that he had an arrangement with a certain insurance company for a loan of money, wherewith to pay appellee’s debt, and all that remained to enable him to consum- • mate said arrangement and negotiate said loan was, that appellee should release his said mortgage on said land, so that he, Johnson, could mortgage said land to said company to secure said loan.
In our opinion, the facts stated in the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint were sufficient to constitute a cause of action against each and all of the appellants, and their demurrers thereto were correctly overruled.
The second alleged error, assigned by the appellants, calls in question the decision of the court below, in sustaining the appellee’s motion to strike out a part of the appellants’ answer. Appellee’s motion, the decision of the court thereon, and the part of the answer which was so struck out were made part of the record by a proper hill of exceptions. The part of the answer so struck out was in these words: “And they especially pray that said Samuel M. Mitchell and said John C. Burton & Co., which firm is composed of the following persons, to wit: John C. Burton, William A. Pfaff and John W. Pfaff', he made parties herein, that the ultimate rights of said plaintiff, and said Mitchell, and said John C. Burton & Co. to the residue of the purchase-money of said land may be determined.”
It will be observed-, that the language just recited was a part of the answer of the appellants Jesse and John W. Reagan to appellee’s complaint. The appellants, the Reagans, had filed no counter-claim nor cross-complaint in this action; nor were they seeking any affirmative relief against any of the parties to the action. The only pleading filed by said appellants in response to. the second paragraph of the appellee’s complaint was denominated by them, and was in fact, an “ answer to the second paragraph ' *519of said complaint.” In such a pleading, it seems to us, that the language above recited was wholly out of place. It was neither matter of defence, counter-claim, nor set-off. It was mere surplusage in said answer, and was properly struck out by the court below, on appellee’s motion. It does not appear from the record, that Mitchell or any member of the firm of John C. Burton & Co. made any application to the court below to be made parties to this action. Nor does it appear from any showing made in the court below, or apparent in the record, that a complete determination of the controversy in this action, could not be had without the presence of either Mitchell or the members of the firm of John C. Burton & Co., as .parties to the action; and, in such a case, they were not necessary parties to the suit. Our conclusion is, that the court below committed no error in sustaining appellee’s motion to strike out the said part, before recited, of said answer.
The third alleged error of the court below, complained of by the appellants, was its decision in overruling their demurrers to the second and third paragraphs of appellee’s reply.
The ruling of the court below upon the second paragraph of the reply, and the assignment of such ruling as error, present substantially the same' questions for our consideration as those we have already considered and decided, in passing upon the sufficiency of the facts stated in the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint to constitute a cause of action. We need not consider those questions further, but, for the reasons there given, we hold, that no error was committed by the court below in overruling appellants’ demurrer to the second paragraph of appellee’s reply.
The third paragraph of the reply was applicable, by its terms, to so much of the appellants’ answer as alleged that the notes given by the Reagans for the unpaid balance of the purchase-money had been assigned by said *520Sylvester Johnson, and notice of such assignment given to said Reagans, before they had notice that appellee’s mortgage had not been fully paid and satisfied, or that the appellee had or held any claim on said land. In reply, particularly to this part of appellants’ answer, the appellee said, that he admitted, that said notes were assigned, but alleged, that said assignees took them voluntarily, and without consideration passing at the time, but in discharge and payment of a debt or debts theretofore contracted and then unpaid.
It is reasonably certain, we think, that the court below erred in overruling appellants’ demurrer to this third paragraph of appellee’s reply ; but it is equally true, in our opinion, that the error was an entirely harmless one. The evidence adduced upon the trial, in the court below, is properly in the record, and it clearly appears, from a close and thorough examination of this evidence, that no-evidence was offered or admitted on the trial which was not admissible under the other pleadings in the action. This court has repeatedly held, that it would not reverse a judgment for an erroneous decision, where it clearly appeared, from the entire record, that the party complaining .of such decision was not injured thereby. The Indianapolis, etc., R. R. Co. v. Smythe, 45 Ind. 322; The Evansville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Baum, 26 Ind. 70; and Buskirk Prac. 284.
The fourth and fifth alleged errors, assigned by appellants, are both proper causes for a new trial, in a motion therefor addressed to the court below. If not assigned as causes for a new trial, in appellants’ motion therefor, their assignment as errors in this court would present no question for our consideration. And when they are assigned as causes for a new trial in the court below, the only error properly assignable in this court is the overruling of the motion for such new trial.
The overruling of their motion for a new trial, by the court below, is the sixth alleged error complained of by *521the appellants in this court. Several causes for such new trial were assigned by the appellants, in their motion therefor, but we will consider only such of these causes as appellants’ counsel have discussed in their argument of this case in this court, deeming the others as virtually waived.
It is insisted by counsel, that the court below erred, in giving to the jury, of its own motion, instructions numbered 3 and 4. These instructions were as follows:
“ 3. Under these issues and the admissions of the parties, the questions you are to decide are,
“1st. Did Johnson fraudulently procure the release of the mortgage ?
“ 4. If you find he did not, then that will be the end of the case against the Reagans, and you could only find against Johnson the amount of the plaintiff’s note.
“But if you find, that Johnson did procure the release of the mortgage by fraud, then the next question for you to decide is, did the Reagans, before they had notice of the fraud, and before their notes were sold and transferred by Johnson, induce the purchasers thereof to buy the same?”
We are much at a loss to understand, from the argument of appellants’ counsel, the nature and force of their objections to these two instructions of the court to the jury. Apparently, these instructions were framed by the court upon the pleadings, to inform the jury, in succinct and clear terms, of the exact questions which the parties had submitted to them for trial, and which they must decide.
We think that these questions were fairly stated to the jury by the court in the two instructions complained of, and it would seem, from the comments of counsel thereon, that they complained of these instructions, not because of any error in them, but because they were apparently introductory to another instruction, which, they *522insist, was erroneous. This .other instruction was as follows:
“6. If you find that Johnson committed a fraud in procuring the release of the mortgage, then your next inquiry is, did the Reagans, before they had notice of the fraud, and before J ohnson had parted with their notes to Burton & Co., tell Burton & Co., that they had no defence . to their notes, and that they would be paid at maturity ?
“ If you find both of these facts in the affirmative, then . the Reagans have innocently estopped themselves from defending against the notes in the hands of Burton & Co., and the money can not be reached by the plaintiff, and you must find for the Reagans. But if you find no representations, promises or inducements were made to Burton & Co., by the Reagans, before Burton & Co. purchased the notes from Johnson, no matter what was done after Burton & Co. had purchased the notes, then the Reagans have not estopped themselves from defending against the payment of said notes to Burton & Co., should they be required to pay the same to plaintiff; and, in that event, plaintiff has a right to have the money, when due, paid upon his debt, although it may have been shown that the notes .held by John C. Burton & Co. were in good faith transferred to, and received by, them, before they or the Rea,gans had received notice of any fraud on the part of .Johnson in procuring the release of the mortgage from plaintiff.”
~We have set out this instruction in full, because in it will be found, we think, a clear exposition of the precise questions at issue in this action between the appellants, the Reagans, and the appellee.
It would seem from the record, that Johnson virtually confessed the gross fraud wherewith he was charged by appellee, in the second paragraph of his complaint; for, although J ohnson appeared in the action and was' represented therein by the able attorneys of the Reagans, yet apparently it was not deemed advisable or necessary that *523any answer, not even a general denial, should he pleaded in his name or behalf, to the second paragraph of appellee’s complaint.
The Reagans answered this paragraph of the complaint, however, and the gist of their defence was, as to the unpaid balance of tbe purchase-money for tbe land, that before they bad any notice of Johnson’s fraud in procuring tbe release of appellee’s mortgage, or of tbe fact that appellee asserted any claim against said land, their notes for said purchase-money bad been assigned by said Johnson, for value, to innocent parties, without notice of fraud, and were then held by tbe assignees thereof, under such circumstances that they, tbe Reagans, as tbe makers of said notes, would be estopped from making any defence to said notes, in tbe bands of tbe said holders thereof.
. This defence, and tbe issues joined thereon, made it tbe duty of tbe court below to instruct tbe jury trying tbe cause upon tbe doctrine of estoppel, as the same was applicable to tbe facts of this case, as stated in tbe pleadings and shown by tbe evidence.
In our opinion, this instruction number 6 contains a full and fair statement of tbe law of this State on tbe subject of estoppel, as applicable to tbe case made by tbe pleadings and evidence in this cause.
It has been repeatedly held by this court, that tbe declarations or representations of the maker of a note, made to tbe assignee of such note after bis purchase thereof, .and which did not induce tbe assignee to make such purchase, will not estop such maker from setting up any defence, legal or equitable, be «may have to such note, in tbe bands of such assignee. Jones v. Dorr, 19 Ind.. 384; Ray y. McMurtry, 20 Ind. 307; Patrick v. Jones, 21 Ind. 249; Stutsman v. Thomas, 39 Ind. 384.
Ve have been asked by appellants’ counsel to consider, in this connection, tbe instructions numbered 1, 2, 3, 8 and 9, which the Reagans asked the. court below to give, *524but which the court refused to give, to the jury trying the cause, and we have complied with this request.
Opinion filed at May term, 1877, Petition for a rehearing overruled at November term, 1877.We need not set out any of these instructions. As abstract propositions, we are inclined to think that but little, if any, fault could be found with either the manner or the matter of any of the instructions asked for by the appellants. The chief objection to these instructions, and the one, we apprehend, which led the court below to refuse to give them to the jury, was, that they were not applicable to the case made by the pleadings and evidence in this action. The instructions asked were, in our opinion, properly refused.
We have carefully examined and considered the entire record of this cause, the alleged errors assigned thereon, and the arguments of counsel in this court, and our conclusion is, that the cause has been fairly tried and correctly decided, that no error was committed by the court below, in overruling the appellants’ motion for a new trial, and that the judgment of that court in this action is in strict accordance with law and the equities of the case, and ought not to be disturbed.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed, at the costs .of the appellants.