Case ID: wis_198/html/0139-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Crownhart, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Integrity Savings Building & Loan Association, Plaintiff, vs. Nixdorf and another, Defendants and Appellants, and Federal Mortgage Company, imp., Respondent.
    
      January 10
    
    February 5, 1929.
    
    The cause was submitted for the appellants on the brief of Arthur H. Bartelt of San Antonio, Texas, and Fred D. Huber of Milwaukee, and for the respondent Federal Mortgage Company on that of Aaron B. Rosenthal of Milwaukee.
   Crownhart, J.

The defendants re-allege the fifth paragraph of their second defense, which, together with the balance of the third defense, among other things, contains a general denial of the giving of the mortgage by Mary Nix-dorf, or the note secured thereby.

In the third defense it is also alleged that the giving of the mortgage and note was done through a corrupt agreement between the plaintiff and one J. Murray O’Brien, to secure usury.

The answer as a whole is not a model pleading, and may be subject to motions to make more accurate, definite, or certain, but on demurrer each defense must stand on its own allegations, and we deem the third defense good within the rule of liberality of construction now prevailing. As is said in McIntyre v. Carroll, 193 Wis. 382, 387, 214 N. W. 366:

“The present-day Code permits of speedy methods of requiring pleadings to be made more accurate, definite, or certain when they appear to the opposite party to be too diffuse, discursive, covering too much territory, or aiming in too many directions. All these possible defects may be and should be cured by appropriate motions under such provisions as are embodied in secs. 263.43 and 263.44, Stats.”

By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is reversed, with costs to the appellant.