Bigelow v. Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America

221 N.W. 661, 206 Iowa 884
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 N.W. 661 (Bigelow v. Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigelow v. Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America, 221 N.W. 661, 206 Iowa 884 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

During the May, 1924, term, the Woodbury County district court, in a previous' action, entered a judgment quieting title to certain real estate located along the Missouri' River. In that case, one A. T. Bigelow was plaintiff, and W. W.- Stevens, A. M. Holman Investment Company, a corporation, Ellen E. Nelson, Isaac Stekelenberg, Marie Louise Pepin, Eva Linksweiler, Hubert A. Pepin, Evaline Pepin Small, Alfred E. Pepin, Otis E. Wick, Daisy H. Wick, N. J. Hubert, R. F. Choquette, F. J. Jauron, E. J. Jauron, Earnest Lanott, Albert Jauron, Frank Sheets, John Herrink, Charles Edmundson,' and certain unknown claimants were defendants.

The effect of that former decree, so far as' the present controversy is concerned, was to declare the said A. T. Bigelow, Hubert A. Pepin, Evaline Pepin Small, Alfred E. Pepin, Otis E. Wick, Daisy H. Wick, W. W. Stevens, A. M. Holman Investment Company, and Ellen E. Nelson the' holders of certain portions of the land before mentioned, as against the claims óf F. M. Cássady, John Herrink, and C. W. Marsh! Accordingly, an appeal by the above named Cássady, Herrink, and Marsh was taken from that judgment of the district court to the' Supreme Court.

To avoid the issuance of execution during the pendency thereof, a supersedeas bond was given by those three disappointed litigants. That instrument was in the penal sum of *886 $5,000, and was conditioned to pay to the said A. T. Bigelow, Hubert A. Pepin, Evaline Pepin Small, Alfred E. Pepin, Otis E. Wick,. Daisy H. Wick, W- W- Stevens, A. M. Holman Investment Company, and Ellen E.-Nelson: First, “all-costs and damages, that shall be-adjudged against said appellants on .said appeal; ” and second, ‘ all rents and damages to property .during the-pendency of .the appeal-out of .the possession of which the appellee is kept by reason of the appeal. ’ ’: Upon this bond. the appellant Indemnity Insurance Company of North America was surety. This appeal resulted in an affirmance. Bigelow v. Herrink, 200 Iowa 830.

Then a rehearing was sought, and therefore the issuance of the procedendo was delayed until February 3, 1926, when it was filed in the district court. From the date the supersedeas bond was given until April 1,. 1926;, the appellant- John Herrink was in possession of the premises in controversy. So, on the 25th;.day; of February, 19.26, the appellees, in the case at . bar, as plaintiffs, brought an action against, the- appellants, Indemnity Insurance Company of North America and. John-Herrink, as defendants, to recover.: First, the costs of the former quieting title.proceeding; and.second, the:rents from the.land during the interim.

After trial to a jury, there was a verdict for appellees, and because, of alleged errors during the hearing appellants have appealed.

I. There, are 15 assignments of error, but under. Rule .30 of this court, it is necessary to, consider, but four of them. Any error relied.upon for. reversal, not argued, shall be deemed to haye been waived. Winsor & Son v. Mutual Fire Tornado Assn., 170 Iowa 521; Thompson v. Romak, 174 Iowa 155; Miller v. Swartzlender, & Holman, 192 Iowa 153; Minneapolis & St. L. R. Co. v. Pugh, 201 Iowa 208; State v. Derry, 202 Iowa 352.

Such- assignments, as were, argued now. will- be considered,

ll.. Complaint is made by appellants because the district court did not sustain their motion to strike all the plaintiffs from the ease except A.- T. Bigelow, or require an election as, to which of them should proceed with the action, , on the theory that certain causes are misjoined. Basis for this contení *887 tion is that appellee Bigelow owned one part of the real estate involved, while a different and distinct portion thereof belonged to Hubert A. Pepin e't al. Consequently, it is insisted thát appellees’ ownership of the rents involved must necessarily be several, and not joint,- due to the separate and independent proprietorship of the realty, as above explained. Their idea is that the bond is several, and not joint, and that each beneficiary thereof must bring a separate action for his respective claim.

On its- face; the security contract appears joint. - No indication is made therein that the surety is not willing to be thus sued. " Section 10981, Code of 1924, provides:

“The court may determine any controversy between parties before it, when it can be done without prejudice to the rights of others, or by saving their rights; but when a determination of the controversy between the parties before the court cannot be made, without the presence of other parties, it must order them to be brought in.”

If, then, under, the foregoing legislation, the court, in the event -that. appellee Bigelow alone .had commenced the action, should have -ordered the other appellees “brought-in,” there does not seem to be any good reason here why it could not approve their voluntary appearance in the first instance. Primarily, the purpose is to accomplish a full -adjudication of -the subjechmatter as it relates to all interested parties. Accomplishment of this will result either- through the voluntary appearance or the court’s order under Section 10981, supra. We said-in King v. Kehoe, 91 Iowa 91:

“The bond is in the pénal sum of three' thousand dollars, and is to M. M. Carville and Daniel King, jointly [their interests were several]. It is clear that no recovery can be had upon this bond in excess of its penalty. * * * As Carville’s rights under' the bond are jointly with appellant, Carvillé is a necessary party to the action thereon, as the amount to which each may be entitled must necessarily be ascertained before either’ can' recover. If each may separately recover, the' sureties may be charged’ above the' amount of the bond, or the one last recovering be limited to an amount less than he is entitled to iipon the bond. We conclude that the demurrer [to the defense] was properly sustained,”

*888 Likewise, in the case at bar, the penalty of appellants’ written undertaking was limited to $5,000, and if the appellee Bigelow alone had recovered that amount, or any other portion thereof not in the proper ratio which his loss bore to the damage of the other appellees, then, to that extent, there would be an injustice, either to appellants or to the other appellee beneficiaries thereunder. Said “limitation” exists whether the obligation is joint or several. It is true that the prayer for judgment was something less than $4,000, but- that' does not settle the dispute here, for the reason that it could not be known what the claim of each would be until and unless he- was brought into the action- Because, in the instant case, the aggregate of all claims did not exceed the penalty of the bond, proof is not thereby afforded that such fact could have been judicially known until all parties were before' the court. Therefore, under the facts and circumstances, had the appellee Bigelowalone appeared in this suit in the first instance, the court would have been justified, and undoubtedly required, to order the remaining appellees brought in for the purposes herein-before suggested.

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