Farmers State Bank of Riverton v. Riverton Const. Co.

270 P. 1082, 39 Wyo. 238, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 96
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1928
Docket1423
StatusPublished

This text of 270 P. 1082 (Farmers State Bank of Riverton v. Riverton Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers State Bank of Riverton v. Riverton Const. Co., 270 P. 1082, 39 Wyo. 238, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 96 (Wyo. 1928).

Opinions

*243 Metz, District Judge.

Tbis case is in tbe Supreme Court on petition in error and is tbe outgrowth of a seven-cornered law suit tried in tbe District Court of Fremont County in 1925. Tbe pleadings are exceptionally voluminous, occupy two hundred pages of Volume 1 of tbe record on appeal, and each party in tbe ease filed numerous amended pleadings, answering and replying to each other’s charges and counter-charges. We will not attempt to analyze all these pleadings. Tbis opinion would become entirely too extended. Suffice it to say, tbe real contentions of tbe parties are as follows:

Tbe plaintiff bank sued tbe Riverton Construction Company to recover upon three promissory notes executed and delivered by tbe construction-company to tbe bank for large sums of money borrowed from tbe bank to carry on their operations as general contractors. Two of these notes were for $5,000 each and tbe third for approximately $7,500. Tbe $7,500 note was endorsed by J. A. Del-felder, N. G-. Petry, W. J. McLaughlin and E. H. McLaughlin. Plaintiff also sued on a $10,000 guaranty signed by J. A. Delfelder, E. H. McLaughlin and N. G-. Petry. There was a half-hearted attempt on the part of tbe defendant, construction company and endorsers of tbe notes to defend against tbe bank’s claim, but tbe trial court did not think tbe defense sufficient and we quite agree with tbe lower court on that much of the case.

Plaintiff bank also alleged that Harry B. Henderson, trustee, bad in his possession certain moneys assigned and transferred to him in trust by tbe construction company *244 and Petry, and claimed that it was to be applied on the construction company’s and Petry’s indebtedness to the bank. Henderson was made a party because of his holding certain of the funds in trust. There was no attachment or other proceeding instituted against Henderson, or the funds in his possession. The action against the defendants Petry, W. J. McLaughlin, and the Executrix of the Delfelder estate was based upon the alleged guaranty by the defendants of the notes set forth in the plaintiff’s petition.

During the trial the plaintiff dismissed its second cause of action, which included one of the $5,000 notes sued upon.

M. F. Brothers was permitted to interplead in the ease because he claimed he was entitled to the funds in the hands of Henderson as trustee, because of the construction company entering into a contract with the government for the construction of a certain bridge on what is known as the Buffalo Fork of the Snake River, and that Petry had been employed to construct the bridge and furnish the material, and that the construction company was to collect the money from the government and pay all the money to Petry except $1,000 which was to be retained by the construction company from the final payment and estimate, and that subsequent to Petry’s entering into the contract with the construction company to build the bridge for them and before Petry commenced any work on the bridge or furnished any material therefor, that he, Brothers, entered into an agreement with Petry covering their joint construction of the bridge, and that it developed that Petry was unable to furnish his share of the expenses and capital necessary to construct the bridge and it was then orally agreed between Petry and Brothers that Brothers would proceed with the construction of the bridge and with his own money and.that to be paid by the government to the construction company, and that in consideration of his doing that he was to re *245 ceive $10 per day for Ms work on tbe bridge and to be reimbursed for all moneys furnished and expenses incurred by him, and in addition thereto he was to receive one-half of all net profits growing out of the contract for the construction of the bridge. Brothers further alleges in his amended and substituted answer that the construction company and Petry entered into a trust agreement subsequent to the construction of the bridge, whereby all moneys which the construction company then had on hand and all other moneys to be paid in the future by the government to the construction company on the bridge contract were assigned and transferred to Harry B. Hen-dérson as trustee, to be held by him pending the settlement of certain controversies and disputes between the construction company and Petry, and the money held by •the trustee was to be paid out by the trustee to the person designated by the judgment of a court of record, etc. That on the 18th of February, 1921, Petry sold and assigned to Brothers all moneys due or to become due him under the contracts referred to in the trust agreement; that $2,682.77 had been paid to the trustee pursuant to this trust agreement; that the last payment made by the government on the bridge contract in the sum of $3,-293.48 was paid to the construction company and the construction company failed and refused to pay the same to the trustee pursuant to the trust agreement.

The plaintiff bank and defendant construction company filed practically identical replies, in which the plaintiff and the construction company alleged an open running account between Petry and the construction company from January 1, 1920 to April 20, 1921, on which account it is alleged that Petry is indebted to the construction company in the sum of $3,547.12. The reply of plaintiff, filéd on May 11, 1922, alleges that the $3,293.48 was not paid to the trustee and that the trustee had never been entitled to the possession of that money. It is also alleged that Petry is not entitled to the money held by the *246 trustee. Brothers then filed an amended reply containing a general denial and also pleaded estoppel. We do not deem it necessary in the present ease to go into the question of estoppel and will not discuss it, notwithstanding his contention in that respect may be well taken.

The defendant Chatterton, Riverton Construction Company, and the Executrix of the Delfelder estate replied to the amended and substituted answer of Brothers and alleged that the trust agreement was enterd into between Petry and the Riverton Construction Company in which Harry B. Henderson was appointed trustee, and alleged that Petry was indebted to the construction company upon open account on the books of the company in the sum of $4,648.14; that on the 20th of April, 1921, final payment of $3,293.48 by the United States government on the Buffalo Fork bridge contract was made to the Riverton Construction Company, and by the construction company credited to the account of N. G. Petry, and that Petry, after said credit, was still indebted to the construction company on open account in the sum of $1, 354.66. The company further alleged that of the $2,-682.77 in the hands of Harry B. Henderson, trustee, -they were entitled to $1,000 due them on the Buffalo Fork bridge contract and the balance should be awarded to the construction company in payment of the indebtedness of Petry to the company. The construction company further alleges it had no notice of the agreement or co-partnership between Petry and Brothers, alleged that Brothers was present at the time the trust agreement was entered into between Petry and the Riverton Construction Company and was advised as to the nature and purpose of the agreement, and it alleged that Brothers was estopped from claiming any interest in the money in the trustee’s hands.

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270 P. 1082, 39 Wyo. 238, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-of-riverton-v-riverton-const-co-wyo-1928.