Baxter v. National Mortgage Loan Co.

259 N.W. 630, 128 Neb. 537, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 76
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1935
DocketNo. 29132
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 259 N.W. 630 (Baxter v. National Mortgage Loan Co.) 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
Baxter v. National Mortgage Loan Co., 259 N.W. 630, 128 Neb. 537, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 76 (Neb. 1935).

Opinion

Eberly, J.

This is an appeal by the National Mortgage Loan Company, defendant in the district court for Lancaster county (and herein designated as “defendant” or “loan company”), from a judgment entered therein in favor of plaintiff, John W. Baxter, for the sum of $72,620.24. The procedure below was an action in equity, and the cause is here for trial de novo.

In summarizing the allegations of the pleadings, it may be said that plaintiff’s petition sets forth that the defendant on or about June 1, 1924, by fraud, secured the execution and delivery of a note for $55,000, secured by a real estate mortgage covering 4,000 acres, owned by plaintiff in Pawnee county, Nebraska; that at said time plaintiff was fraudulently induced to sign the note and mortgage in blank, with authority to defendant to fill out the same in an amount not in excess of $9,000; that, in violation of such instruction, the note and mortgage securing the same were filled out by defendant in the sum of $55,000, which money was not received by plaintiff, and which note and mortgage were void; that on or about April 1, 1925, by falsely and fraudulently representing to the Federal Trust Company that plaintiff was indebted to defendant in the sum of $55,000 on the note and mortgage aforesaid, defendant caused such Federal Trust Company to pay to it from the proceeds of a loan made by such trust company on plaintiff’s land more than $55,000 “in purported payment of the aforesaid note and mortgage and defendant has refused to account to plaintiff therefor;” and, further, that “defendant in the aforesaid transaction was represented by its secretary, one R. F. Ireland, and plaintiff dealt with said Ireland as an officer and representative of defendant.”

[540]*540The present action was commenced on June 24, 1932, but in the fifth paragraph of plaintiff’s petition the following is alleged: “During all of the aforesaid time and until 1931, plaintiff was a resident of Connecticut and New York and was not in Nebraska except on a few occasions for short times, and on such occasions he was not in Pawnee county, Nebraska. Plaintiff at all times herein mentioned has been inexperienced in business matters and has been in poor health. Plaintiff did not discover the facts alleged in paragraphs 3 and 4 hereof and the aforesaid fraud of defendant or any evidence thereof until a short time before the filing of this action.”

Defendant’s answer contained the following: “1st. Alleges that the present cause of action of the plaintiff is barred by the statute of limitations. 2d. That the plaintiff has been guilty of gross laches and negligence in the assertion of his pretended claim and by reason thereof has no cause of action. 3d. The defendant denies each and every allegation in said petition contained.”

By the fourth, fifth and sixth paragraphs of such answer it was alleged that the plaintiff employed Rolland F. Ireland “as his attorney-in-fact and as an attorney-at-law to represent the plaintiff in” obtaining “money by mortgage on the lands described in plaintiff’s petition and other landsthat pursuant to such employment by plaintiff there was obtained from defendant $55,000 on the mortgage signed by him on the lands described in plaintiff’s petition, which was delivered to plaintiff, and that plaintiff had full notice and knowledge of the said mortgage in the fall of 1924, and fully approved and acquiesced in the same by himself and his authorized agent, received the proceeds thereof, and is estopped to deny same.

To this answer plaintiff filed a reply in the nature of a general denial.

Though the transcript fails to disclose that the plaintiff in any manner challenged the sufficiency of the answer in the trial court, it is now contended that the defendant has failed to properly plead the facts claimed to show that the [541]*541cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations, and that mere conclusions are insufficient; that likewise the defendant failed to plead the facts claimed to show laches, and that mere conclusion is insufficient. In a proper case the rule contended for by plaintiff may be conceded. Thus, in Pinkham v. Pinkham, 61 Neb. 336, cited by plaintiff, this court announced the rule: “A reply alleging that the defendant’s counterclaim did not accrue within the period provided by law for asserting such claim, and containing no facts from which the conclusion is deduced, tenders no issue and such allegation may be entirely disregarded.”

However, it seems that in view of the doctrine announced in Scott v. De Graw, 90 Neb. 274, in the light of the facts presented by the present record, the principle announced in the Pinkham case is not controlling. In the instant case the first four paragraphs of plaintiff’s petition set forth a cause of action which accrued, if at all, “on or about April 1, 1925.” In this condition the petition obviously failed to state a cause of action at the time it was filed on June 24, 1932, and it was essential for this purpose that there be added thereto allegations of fact which would show affirmatively that the statute of limitations had not run. Evidently for this purpose the pleader added to his petition paragraph 5, already quoted. By the general denial defendant took issue with the facts alleged in this paragraph, and to this he added the allegation covering the defense of the statute of limitations. While the sufficiency of the latter standing alone might be subject to challenge in connection with the issue formed by the general denial, it seems invulnerable to the attack now made.

In Scott v. De Graw, supra, we find an action on a note due December 11, 1901. The controlling fact was an indorsement of a payment of $6 thereon alleged to have been made on February 7, 1905. The action was begun on December 31, 1909. The allegation of payment was denied in the answer with the allegation that the action was barred. This court, in an opinion by Sedgwick, J., an[542]*542nounced the rule, viz.: “In this state the statute of limitations is a statute of repose; it prevents recovery on stale demands. If the petition in an action upon a promissory note sets out the note which shows upon its face that it is barred by the statute, and partial payments are also alleged in the petition which would remove the bar of the statute, and such payments are denied in the answer, with the allegation that the note is barred, the plaintiff cannot recover without evidence of such payments.”

Unless the case last cited is now to be overruled, the fundamental reasoning approved therein is controlling on the question of the proper pleading of the statute of limitations in the instant case.

By parity of reasoning the question of the sufficiency of the pleading of the defense of laches must be resolved against the contention of the appellee. Paragraph 5 of his petition, in legal effect, performs a double function. So far as pleading is concerned, it tolls the statute of limitations, and, in addition, alleges facts which, if established by sufficient proof, excuse the pleader’s laches. This pleading was thus necessary and proper. As already set forth, the transaction upon which plaintiff’s demand was based occurred on or before May, 1924. This action was not commenced until June 24, 1932. Under these circumstances the applicable rule is: “If plaintiff’s claim appears to be barred by laches, the circumstances which excuse the apparent delay must be set forth.” 4 Standard Ency. of Procedure, 119.

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Bluebook (online)
259 N.W. 630, 128 Neb. 537, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-v-national-mortgage-loan-co-neb-1935.