Allendorph v. Ogden

44 N.W. 220, 28 Neb. 201, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 342
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 44 N.W. 220 (Allendorph v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allendorph v. Ogden, 44 N.W. 220, 28 Neb. 201, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 342 (Neb. 1889).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This cause was appealed from the decision of the district court of Johnson county.

On July 21,1887, the plaintiff filed a petition in the court below stating her cause of action to be:

That on August 14, 1876, the defendant, David Ogden? made and delivered to one Jacob K. Stelle, now deceased, his six promissory notes of that date. One note for $450 due five years after date, and five interest notes for $45 each, due in one, two, three, four, and five years after date.

That on the same date defendant Ogden made and delivered to said Stelle a mortgage on S. W. J N. E. J, and S. E. £ N. W. i, and W. J S. E. J N. E. £, 5, 6, 10, in Johnson county, to secure said six notes. Said mortgage provided for an attorney’s fee of ten per cent on recovery. Said mortgage was recorded on August 22, 1876, a copy thereof attached to petition as Exhibit A.

Defendant has paid four interest notes due in 1877-8-9, and 1880.

No proceedings at law have been had. On March 7, 1878, J. K. Stelle died. The plaintiff is his daughter and heir at law, and by will of deceased the plaintiff became [203]*203the owner of the notes and mortgage sued on, the executor having delivered same to the plaintiff ; she has ever since been owner thereof.

That on or about September 1, 1881, after they became due, the note for $450, and last interest note for $45, with the mortgage, was lost, and plaintiff has been unable to gain possession of them or find them since, although she has made diligent search at the place where they were last known to be; that the same, have never been paid.

That Rebecca Nelson, Rosey Earlow, Gustave H. Straube, and Prentiss D. Cheney claim to have an interest in said land, but such interest is subject to the mortgage now sued on. Plaintiff prays that the mortgage may be foreclosed, land sold, proceeds applied to payment of indebtedness, costs, and attorney’s fees.

On November 23, 1887, B. E. Perkins, guardian ad litem, filed an answer for Rosey Farlow and--Earlow, denying all allegations that can prejudice minors.

On November 25, 1887, defendant P. D. Cheney filed an answer denying each and every allegation in petition.

On May 21, 1888, defendant G. H. Straube filed an amended answer denying each and every allegation in petition; that the notes described were transferred to one Richardson ; that plaintiff is not owner thereof.

On November 26, 1887 the plaintiff filed her reply to the answer of defendant Cheney, denying each and every allegation therein.

On November 15, 1888, the plaintiff filed her reply to the answer of defendant Straube, denying each and every allegation therein.

At the November term, 1888, a trial was had to the court, a jury being waived, and on November 16 the court found for the plaintiff*, and further found that the defendant Ogden executed the mortgage as set forth ; that said mortgage was duly recorded; that the plaintiff became the owner thereof through the will of her deceased father, [204]*204and is the legal owner thereof; and that there is due the plaintiff thereon the sum of $925.65 ; that said mortgage be foreclosed and the premises sold to pay the amount thereof, together with the sum of $90 attorney’s fee, and that $10 be allowed the guardian ad litem of the minor defendants, to which the defendants except and assign for errors:

1. That the court erred in finding for the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff is the owner of the mortgage debt sued on.

2. In sustaining the cause of action that the notes and mortgage sued on are lost, and decreeing a foreclosure of the mortgage.

On the trial in the court below it was proved by the testimony of Moore C. Stelle, of Jerseyville, Illinois, that he and his mother were the executors of the will and estate of his father, Jacob K. Stelle, who died March 7, 1878; that the estate was settled under the will; that his sister, the plaintiff, became the owner of the notes and mortgage in controversy under the will; that she selected the notes and mortgage, and took possession of them as a part of her share, in 1879; that he endorsed the notes, and that she receipted to him for them.

The plaintiff’s deposition stated that she was forty-two years of age, that she resided in Lawrence, Kansas, and is the daughter of Jacob K. Stelle, late of Jerseyville, Illinois, deceased; that she is the owner of the claim in controversy in this suit; that she came by the notes and mortgage from her father’s estate; that he bequeathed to her $4,000, by his will, to be paid to her in securities which he owned at his death; that the notes sued on were amongst those she selected and received from the executor of the estate, who sent to her at Lawrence, Kansas, a list of the notes which ■she selected from to make up her $4,000; that in May 1879, her brother wrote to her that he would send the notes which she had selected, and shortly afterwards she received from him the notes, and among others the Ogden notes, the [205]*205third and fourth of which, of $45 each, due August 14, 1879, and 1880, have been paid; the principal note of $450 and the last interest note of $45, are unpaid; that she turned them over to her husband, C. W. Allendorph, who managed her business, for keeping, and has not seen them since, and' does not, of her own knowledge, know what became of them or of the mortgage security which she also received- and delivered to her husband at the same time. These notes were (1) of $450 and (2) interest note of $45, signed by Daniel Ogden and payable to J. K. Stelle; that her recollection does not enable her to state the exact date of the notes, or just when they became due, but from data in her possession the notes were dated about August 14, 1876, and bore twelve percent interest after maturity; that neither of them has ever been paid, and there is still due the principal and interest of both from August 14, 1881, the date she thinks they matured; that the notes and mortgage are lost; that she had her husband mail them for collection to the First National Bank of Jersey ville^ Illinois, a short time after they were due, and has not seen them since; that she has had her husband write to the bank for them, but has not been able to trace or find either the notes or mortgage by this means, and refers to letters from the officers of the bank, and from P. D. Cheney, attached to her deposition.

C. W. Allendorph’s deposition stated that he resided at Lawrence, Kansas, and was the husband of the plaintiff; that by her direction, ever since their marriage, he has attended to her business affairs; that she was the owner of the claim involved in this suit; that she was such owner by and through the will of her father, Jacob K. Stelle, of Jersey-ville, Illinois; that under the terms of said will she selected the notes and mortgage sued upon as a part of her share of his estate, and that they were delivered to her by the executor May 25, 1879; that the third and fourth interest notes, of $45 each, of David Ogden, due August 14, [206]*2061879, and 1880, respectively, have been paid — and were paid shortly after coming due; that the fifth interest note of $45, due August 14, 1881, and the principal note of $450, due at the same date, are still unpaid, and that he does not know where those notes now.

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Related

Bashus v. Abboud
298 N.W. 153 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1941)
Cheney v. Straube
53 N.W. 479 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1892)

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W. 220, 28 Neb. 201, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allendorph-v-ogden-neb-1889.