Ericson v. Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Co.

278 N.W. 841, 134 Neb. 391, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 56
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1938
DocketNo. 30154
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 278 N.W. 841 (Ericson v. Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment 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
Ericson v. Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Co., 278 N.W. 841, 134 Neb. 391, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 56 (Neb. 1938).

Opinion

Eberly, J.

This is a suit in equity for the rescission of a contract in writing, dated January 24, 1935, between Oliver Ericson of Oakland, Nebraska, and the Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Company;.for an accounting for certain specific property owned by plaintiff and delivered to and received [393]*393by defendants named, pursuant to the terms' of the above contract, in trust and as agents of plaintiff; and also to recover certain secret and concealed profits made by defendants in handling plaintiff’s property as his agents and trustees.

Without attempting to detail the niceties of the defendants’ technical pleadings by which each material allegation of plaintiff’s petition was controverted, it may be said that defendants assume the position that by the transactions in suit the property here in litigation was sold by plaintiff to defendants in consideration of the agreed delivery to him (by defendants) of 245 shares of the capital stock of the Western Union Life Insurance Company of Lincoln, Nebraska. While the execution of the contract in writing of January 24, 1935, by the Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Company and the receipt of plaintiff’s property therein described are admitted, defendants expressly deny that by virtue thereof any fiduciary relation was thereby constituted between plaintiff and any of the defendants, and further by their pleading insist that, if said contract appears to provide for á fiduciary relationship, the same is a mutual mistake of fact, and “should be so construed, corrected and reformed as intended by the parties as a final, conclusive and binding contract of sale between these parties.”

Plaintiff joined issue with defendants’ pleading by a reply denying generally the allegations thereof.

A trial in the district court resulted in a judgment and decree for defendants. From the order of the trial court overruling his motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.

This case comes to this tribunal as an “appeal in equity,” and involves a trial de novo in this court. 'Upon this record, we are, by statute, required to “reach an independent conclusion- as to what finding or findin’gs áre required under the pleadings and all the evidence, • without reference' to the -c'o'nclusion reached in the district ■ court or the’ fact that there ■may- he some evidence, in support thereof.” (Italics supplied:) - Comp.- St.-1929, sec:-20-1925:

[394]*394The transaction forming the basis of this litigation, at least at its inception, was an attempt to secure an exchange of certain real estate mortgages for common stock of the Western Union Life Insurance Company of Lincoln, Nebraska. It clearly was not a sale. The parties to this deal were Oliver Ericson, a tenant farmer living at Oakland, Nebraska, who owned the mortgages, and the Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Company, a corporation, of which Vivian L. Maynes, wife of J. V. Maynes, was president and J. V. Maynes was manager, and as to which the latter testified: “Q. You testified that the Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Company is a Nebraska corporation? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you are the general manager? A. Yes, sir. Q. And what is this, a real estate concern? A. Yes, sir. Q. Consisting of yourself and your wife ? A. I think there are two outside, or three outside stockholders. Q. Mostly nominal stockholders? A. Yes; there is one $1,500 stockholder outside. Q. Is it a trade-name for the real estate business? A. Possibly.”

The Western Union Life Insurance Company, of Lincoln, Nebraska, some five years prior to this transaction, had been organized with the par value of its common stock at $10 a share, but by resolution of its board of directors the. sale value was then fixed at $22.50; but it never succeeded in selling any of this stock at the selling price so fixed. About “the 12th, 13th or 14th of February,” 1935, the board of directors reduced the selling price to $11.50 a share. No dividends had ever been paid by this insurance company, and none of its stock had ever been sold for as high as $30 a share; and its book value, as computed by its own officers, was $11.58 a share. It had no established market value.

This insurance company had had an agreement with the Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Company as early as 1934, whereby the investment company should have a commission on all of the common stock of the insurance company sold' by it. As to this agreement, the testimony in the record is that the insurance company had no objection' [395]*395to Maynes buying stock for himself outright and paying for it, and the insurance company would, in that event, sell it on the same terms and allow him the same commission. J. V. Maynes testifies, in part, viz.: “I had always been told by Mr.'Herbert (secretary of the insurance company) that if any deal came up that we could work out on some stock, not to pay too much attention to the quoted price; to get a proposition and come down to see him.”

The plaintiff Ericson, prior to the transaction in suit, was the owner and in possession of the following real estate mortgages, viz.: The Vogt mortgage of $1,000; the Kreider mortgage of $1,000; the Benedict mortgage of $2,300; and a 5/8 interest in a decree of foreclosure, then pending on moratory stay, of a mortgage executed by G. G. Griffin on an 80-acre tract situated some two miles from Pender, Nebraska. For these mortgages and the obligations secured thereby, he had paid par. But there had been defaults in certain interest payments accrued thereon, and certain taxes thereon and on the premises mortgaged had not been paid.

It appears without question that on or about January 24, 1935, the plaintiff was brought to the office of the Nebraska-Iowa Farm Investment Company by one Frank Hoagland, and introduced to J. V. Maynes, the manager thereof. Hoagland is an associate with Maynes in the deal now under consideration, and was by the latter paid $150 for his services therein. Epitomizing the discussion that followed, J. V. Maynes was represented to plaintiff as the man engaged in selling the stock of the Western Union Life Insurance Company. Ericson’s testimony is that Maynes stated to him that this stock was then worth $30 a share, and that dividends thereon were being paid; that Maynes told him that his real estate mortgage interests could be revamped and reformed and traded to the insurance company at a valuation of $7,350, which would secure him 245 shares of stock; that Maynes would revamp these securities without charge to Ericson as he would get his compensation by the sale of the stock. Ericson [396]*396further testifies: “He (Maynes) told me. that, if the company refused to make the deal — if they would not allow me as much as 245 shares of stock for my securities — I would, .get my securities back and .there would be no deal; and he also .stated that, if the company would allow more than that, he had estimated that that, would be mine and I would get all- that there was for my securities, and all the company would allow me for my securities; that I would get it all.” , ■ ,

At the conclusion of this discussion, J. Y. Maynes dictated a contract to- his stenographer., Though this occurred when Ericson. was present, he did not participate. The contract thus prepared, purports to be between the plaintiff, as party of the first part, and the Nebraska-low^ Farm Investment Company, as party, of the second part. It was not signed when the typing was completed, but some .hours later the signatures were affixed thereto at the home of J. V. Maynes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 N.W. 841, 134 Neb. 391, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ericson-v-nebraska-iowa-farm-investment-co-neb-1938.