Bank of Benson v. Gordon

167 N.W. 561, 102 Neb. 481, 1918 Neb. LEXIS 72
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1918
DocketNo. 19738
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 167 N.W. 561 (Bank of Benson v. Gordon) 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
Bank of Benson v. Gordon, 167 N.W. 561, 102 Neb. 481, 1918 Neb. LEXIS 72 (Neb. 1918).

Opinion

Cornish, J.

Motion of Brodegaard Jewelry Stores, Incorporated, to modify and correct judgment herein, in that it leaves as if undecided,the question of the. corporation’s liability .on- the note sued on.

The suit was upon a promissory note given by the defendant Gordon to the corporation and by it indorsed by one Brodegaard, its president, to the plaintiff. Brodegaard also indorsed the note as an individual. Gordon, maker of the note, the corporation, payee and indorser, and Brodegaard were made defendants. Brodegaard filed no pleadings. Gordon answered, setting. up that the note was obtained by fraud; that he supposed he was dealing with the corporation, getting its preferred stock as a consideration for the note; that the note was conditional, it being agreed iii writing that he could return the stock and take up his note within a limited period; that the plaintiff hank was not an innocent purchaser; and that the act of Brodegaard, [482]*482president of the corporation, in indorsing the note was ultra vires. Afterwards the corporation filed its answer, denying liability, and alleging that it was not the owner of the stock sold to Gordon; that it never received anything out of the transaction; that the bank was not an innocent purchaser and holder of the note; that the act of Brodegaard, as president, in indorsing the note was ultra vires and not binding upon the corporation. No issues were joined by the defendants as between each other. At the conclusion of .the trial separate motions were made by Gordon and the corporation, requesting directed verdicts in their favor, which motions were sustained and verdict directed. These rulings of the court were duly excepted to by plaintiff. Motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and the ease appealed to this court; the defendants being made parties to the appeal. ,

Because the defendant Gordon, neither in the trial court nor in this court, made any affirmative claim that, as between himself and the corporation, the corporation would be liable primarily upon the note, but always contended that neither of them was liable upon the note, and because, further, the judgment of the trial court was in its favor, from which judgment the defendant Gordon did not appeal, it is thought by the corporation that, as between it and Gordon, the judgment of the trial court is final, and that on retrial the defendant Gordon should not be permitted to plead that, as between himself and the corporation, the corporation is primarily liable upon the note. In furtherance of its contention, the corporation also quotes from Gordon’s brief in this court, in which he stated that the corporation had no interest in the note and did not accept or indorse it. But, as answered by Gordon in his brief on this motion, "this court, however, held the direct contrary, and because it did so Gordon is held liable on the note.” The opinion of this court in reversing the judgment entirely reversed the position of liability as established in the trial court, and the question is [483]*483whether, under such circumstances, the parties have a right to proceed to a final determination of the case in the light of this court’s interpretation of the rights of the parties to the controversy — whether in such case the order should not be for a trial de novo, entitling the parties, or any of them, to make such amendments of their pleadings and introduce such further evidence as to the trial judge would seem right and proper under the rules of law applicable. Y7e are of opinion that such is the rule. These defendants had the right in the first trial, if they thought the law and the facts sustained them in it, to make the common defense that the bank was not an innocent purchaser, and that the act of Brodegaard in indorsing the note was ultra vires. They did do this, and the trial court found with them. The fact that they were mistaken in their position, and did not, as codefendants, anticipate possible conflicting claims as between themselves, ought hot to prejudice either of them in asserting any rights that he may have under the law as announced by this court. No estoppel by pleading, judgment, or otherwise, has arisen to prevent this, so far as the record before us discloses.

The decisions of a court of justice are presumptively the law. A party to a lawsuit should always be privileged to assume that the judgment of the trial court in which he is willing to acquiesce is just. It would be a sort of contrariness in the law if the party submitting to the judgment, though possibly with doubt and reluctance, must anticipate error. He knows of course that the judgment to which he submits may be wrong. If wrong, however, he can assume a readjudication, and that he will be restored to the position he was in in his relation to all of the parties to the suit at the time the trial was had and the judgment entered. If, in the light of the law as finally determined, he could have asserted rights, as against other parties to the suit, which enter into the final judgment, he should, ordinarily, be permitted to do so. Or, even though he [484]*484did in the original trial assert his rights as against other parties to the suit, and the judgment to which he submits was erroneously against him upon such issue, yet upon a new trial he should, ordinarily, be permitted to reassert his rights in accordance with the law as finally announced. We are of opinion that this should be our judgment, even though the corporation had not been made a party to the proceedings in this court. It is no hardship upon the defendant corporation to hold that, when the trial court entered its judgment releasing it from liability on the note, the finality of the decision, as between any of the parties to the suit, is contingent upon whether or, not it was the correct decision. It must know that other defendants may not appeal solely'because they are. satisfied with the decision as it is. The trial should be de novo; no question of fact being determined.

It is to be understood that we are discussing only those estoppels which may arise by reason of the pleadings, trial, and judgment, and only those' cases where this court does not find it proper to decide the case upon its merits; nor are we discussing the rights of the parties as between each other, except as affected by the rules of pleading and' procedure. Such appears to be the rule of procedure as established by this court. In Badger Lumber Co. v. Holmes, 55 Neb. 473, the plaintiff was given a mechanic’s lien upon part only of the lots which were included in the lien. There were other defendants who had liens upon some of the several lots, all claiming priority of liens. One of the defendants appealed, making the plaintiff only a party to the appeal. This court found error in the trial court’s judgment, fixing the various liens. This affected the rights of the Badger Lumber Company, so that originally it would have been entitled to liens upon lots not included in the trial court’s decree. Those whose liens had been established upon such lots in the original decree contended that, inasmuch as they had not been made parties to the appeal, the original decree was [485]*485final in their favor. The trial court on retrial found against them and tried the case de novo, giving the various parties liens, in accordance with the’ law as finally announced. On reappeal to this court the final decree of the trial court was sustained; the court holding that, when a cause is “remanded to the trial court for further proceedings, the situation of the plaintiff is precisely the same as if his rights had never been tried.”

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Related

Bank of Benson v. Gordon
172 N.W. 367 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.W. 561, 102 Neb. 481, 1918 Neb. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-benson-v-gordon-neb-1918.