Blue Valley Lumber Co. v. Neuman

78 N.W. 374, 58 Neb. 80, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 111
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1899
DocketNo. 8678
StatusPublished

This text of 78 N.W. 374 (Blue Valley Lumber Co. v. Neuman) 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
Blue Valley Lumber Co. v. Neuman, 78 N.W. 374, 58 Neb. 80, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 111 (Neb. 1899).

Opinion

Ryan, C.

This action was brought in the district court of Gage county by Julius Neuman on a promissory note made by the Blue Yalley Lumber Company to plaintiff and indorsed by P. O. Jaynes and A. E. Winter, for a balance unpaid thereon of $377.13, with interest from its date, February 4, 1890. The "defendants, by their answer, admitted the execution of the note as alleged in the petition, and that there had been paid on it the sum of [81]*81«$793.56 on February 3, 1891, as plaintiff had. averred. For further answer the defendants alleged that the note sued on had been given pursuant to, and in fulfillment of, the conditions of a certain written contract, which was in the following language:

“These articles of agreement, made and entered into this 4th day of February, A. D. 1890, by and between Julius Neuman, of Wymore, party of the first part, and Fremont N. Jaynes, agent, of Omaha, Nebraska, party of the second part, witnesseth: Said first party agrees to sell, assign, and convey to second party, or his assigns, fifty shares of the capital stock of the Blue Valley Lumber Company, of Wymore, Nebraska (incorporated), and all of his interest in the profits accrued, and all accounts and bills receivable due or to become due said company, and to resign his position as manager of said company and to wholly sever his connection with said company. In consideration for which said second party hereby agrees to pay first party the sum of $4,150 in manner following, to-wit: $900 cash in hand at the time of signing this instrument and the transfer of said stock, which shall take place the 4th day of February, 1890; «$1,000 in one year from date hereof and .$1,000 in two years from date hereof; both sums to be put into promissory notes to be signed by the Blue Valley Lumber Company, Fremont N. Jaynes, and A. E. Winter; the balance of said consideration, to-wit, $1,250, to be paid by conveyance by quitclaim deed of an undivided one-half interest in a certain farm in Pawnee county, Nebraska, 160 acres, now jointly owned by said Julius Neuman and A. E. Winter; said deed to be signed.by A. E. Winter and his wife, Kittie Winter, and executed in due and legal form. Said Blue Valley Lumber Company assumes all the existing liabilities of said corporation, and said first party is released therefrom and shall be held harmless from said liabilities by said second party and said corporation.
[82]*82“In testimony of which we have hereunto set our hands this 4th day of February, A. D. 1890.
“Julius Neuman.
“F. A. Jaynes.
“Witness:
“H. C. Jaynes.
“Wymore, Neb., February 4, 1890.”

The defendants in their answer further alleged that said Blue Valley Lumber Company was a corporation and had a lumber yard and office at Wymore; that from its organization till the time of making said contract plaintiff had been its president and general manager and had had full charge of the management of all the affairs of said company, had kept its books and had full knowledge of its assets and liabilities, and was the only person who had such knowledge; that at the time of making said contract, and as an inducement to the defendant F. N. Jaynes to enter into said contract, plaintiff stated and represented to said defendant that the assets of the company, including its bills receivable,- exceeded its liabilities, inclusive of its capital stock, by the sum of $1,501.37; that the accounts and bills receivable of said company, at the time of making said contract, amounted to the sum of $8,820.62, all of which accounts plaintiff then stated to said defendant were due and unpaid to the company, and that the liabilities of said company at said time amounted to $3,340.70, and no more, exclusive of the capital stock of said corporation, which was $10,000; that the books of said company were correct and represented the true condition of the accounts of said company, and that the net profits of said corporation for the time it had been in existence, and which were then on hand, amounted to said sum of $1,501.37, one-half of which said defendant was to get under said contract. It was further alleged in the answer that the defendant F. N. Jaynes, in reliance upon the representations of the plaintiff, entered into the contract herein-before set out by a copy thereof, and caused to be exe[83]*83cuted the notes and quitclaim deed in said contract provided for, and performed all the undertakings on his part assumed. It was further alleged in the answer that plaintiff assigned and transferred to said defendant, or to the persons whom he represented in said transaction, A. E. Winter, H. C. Jaynes, and O. F. Jaynes, fifty shares of the capital stock of said Blue Valley Lumber Company, together with the assets of said company which were then actually in the possession of plaintiff, except as in the answer stated; that after the transfer of said fifty shares of stock and the assets, including the bills receivable of said company, to defendant F. N. Jaynes and those for whom he was acting, defendants discovered that said statements and representations made to F. N. Jaynes by plaintiff with reference to the assets and liabilities of said company were untrue, and that plaintiff, Avith the fraudulent intent to cheat and defraud said defendant and those for Avhom he was acting, had misrepresented the true condition of said company; that a part of the accounts and bills receivable transferred and turned over to defendant by plaintiff pursuant to said contract as being still due and payable to said company had, in fact, been paid to plaintiff long prior to the time of making the contract, as plaintiff well kneAV, and that said defendant and those for whom he was acting thereby lost one-half of all such accounts and bills receivable to which they were entitled by virtue of said contract with plaintiff. There were further errors alleged in the books in general terms, followed by the special averment that the profits of said company did not amount to $1,501, the amount of them as represented by plaintiff, but that such profits only amounted to $901.85. The answer concluded with this language: “That by reason of the said false and fraudulent representations of plain- • tiff and the mistakes and errors contained in the books of said company as kept by plaintiff and turned over to the defendant F. C. Jaynes, said defendant and those for whom he was acting Avere cheated and defrauded in [84]*84the sum of $318.92, aud failed, for said reason, to get under the said contract as much as they would have got had the statements and representations been true, by the sum of $318.92, and that to said extent the consideration of the note herein sued upon has failed, and the makers of said note are' entitled to a credit thereon of the full amount which would otherwise be due thereon, and defendants ask that they may have such credit in this action, and that they be allowed to go hence with their costs.” The above averments of affirmative matter were denied in the reply. There was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff Neuman, and the judgment defendants, by a joint petition in error, ask the reversal of the judgment thereon. This circumstance requires that we shall not consider separately the errors which might otherwise have been presented by an individual plaintiff in error.

The evidence disclosed that on the contract, of which a copy is above given, there was indorsed the following assignment:

“Wyiiom, Neb., February 4, 1890.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.W. 374, 58 Neb. 80, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-valley-lumber-co-v-neuman-neb-1899.