Furbush v. Barker

56 N.W. 996, 38 Neb. 1, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 365
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1893
DocketNo. 4542
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 N.W. 996 (Furbush v. Barker) 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
Furbush v. Barker, 56 N.W. 996, 38 Neb. 1, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 365 (Neb. 1893).

Opinion

Ryan, C.

On the 3d day of May, 1879, William Bensehoter and Eugenie E. Bensclioter,his wife, for the expressed consideration of $700, conveyed by warranty deed to David Furbush certain real estate situated in Loup City, Sherman county, Nebraska, to-wit: all of block 8; all of block 9; all of block 10 except lots 13, 14, 15, and 16; all of blocks 11, 12, 13, and 14 except lots 5, 6, 7, and 8 in the last named block; all of block 15 except lots 4 and 5; all of blocks 30 and 31, and all of block 32 except lots 4, 5, 7, and 8 ; all of block 33, and all of lots numbered from 44 to 93, inclusive, in block 34. On the same day Eugenie E. Benschoter aforesaid, for the expressed consideration of $800, conveyed by warranty deed to the said David Furbush all of block 27 except lots 7 and 8. On the same day Will* [3]*3iam Benschoter and Eugenie E. Benschoter, his wife, for the expressed consideration of $500, conveyed by warranty deed to David Furbush the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 18, township 15 north, range 14. These deeds were filed for record in the office of the clerk of said county on the same day and were therein duly recorded. Contemporaneously with the execution of the above deeds David Furbush and wife executed to William Benschoter a mortgage on said lands to secure the payment of the entire consideration recited, one-fourth of which was payable on July 3, 1879, one-fourth on November 3, 1879, and the other half one year from the date of said mortgage. On September 17, 1887, David Furbush commenced this action in the district court of Sherman county, Nebraska, against Pliram H. Barker, Ella M. Barker’, Clara Barker, James B. Edgerly, Charles W. Talpey, Hosea B. Edgerly, Charles W. Wingate, Henry R. Parker, Nathaniel Stevens as trustees of the last will and testament of Hiram Barker, deceased, Charles W. Talpey, Alonzo Ñute, and John F. Hall as special administrators of the estate of Hiram Barker, deceased. This petition set forth the above conveyances and mortgage, and alleged that on the 2d day of January, 1880, the plaintiff was the owner in fee-simple, and in possession of the lands heretofore described.

The petition alleged that before the purchase of said lands by the plaintiff one Hiram Barker, late of Farming-ton, New Hampshire, had promised and agreed to and with the plaintiff to loan to the plaintiff sufficient money to pay for said lands when the plaintiff should need the same for that purpose. The petition further alleged that on the 2d of January, 1880, the said Hiram Barker, deceased, by his authorized agent, Noah H. Roberts, with the said William Benschoter, conspiring together to obtain the title to said lands without any just or adequate consideration, and without the consent of plaintiff, demanded of plaintiff that he should deed said lands to said Hiram [4]*4Barker, and represented and promised to plaintiff that if he would deed said lands, that the said Barker would pay-said mortgage and hold said lands as security for the amount advanced, giving the plaintiff the right to redeem the same by payment of the sum so advanced, with ten per cent interest, at such further time as the plaintiff might be able to raise said sum of money; that plaintiff, desiring to keep said lands, and believing that he would be able to pay said mortgage before the whole became due, and that said land was worth a much greater sum than the amount required to be paid by said mortgage, refused to make said deed. The petition alleged that at that time Loup City had a population of only about 200, and was suffering commercial and industrial depression, which rendered the residents of said city anxious for public improvements to overcome such depression, and that they were peculiarly disposed to listen to any one who would promise such improvement, and that said William Benschoter, Hiram Barker, and Noah H. Roberts, for himself and as agent for Hiram Barker, conspiring against this plaintiff and intending and contriving to obtain the title to said lands without any just compensation, and without plaintiff’s consent, represented to the people of Loup City that the said Hiram Barker was a person of great wealth, who desired to purchase said land to construct a canal and develop the water power of the Loup river, and to build and establish factories and mills and thereby make the village of Loup City an important manufacturing town, and that said Fur-bush was, by refusing to deed said lands, standing in the way of the future prosperity of said town and its inhabitants and preventing the development of the water power and the establishing of the mills and factories aforesaid, and that said parties, by the aforesaid means, had created a great prejudice against the plaintiff in the minds of the citizens of Loup City, who thereupon, and under the direction and incitement of said Benschoter, [5]*5Barker, and Roberts, prepared an agreement to boycott the plaintiff, and did prepare and circulate a writing pledging the signers not to allow the plaintiff or his family to enter their homes or places of business, and not to hold any social or business intercourse with plaintiff, nor to sell or give plaintiff or his family any article of food, clothing, fuel, or other necessaries of life, unless he would sell said lauds, and that the writing, being so prepared and circulated, was signed by all but six of the citizens of Loup City, whereupon the boycott was established and enforced against this plaintiff; that plaintiff still refusing to make said deed, the said conspirators threatened personal violence and to tar and feather plaintiff, and that plaintiff’s wife, being in feeble health by reason of the fear of injury and the hardships undergone under said boycott, became sick and feeble, and that while plaintiff’s said wife was so sick and feeble, some of the said conspirators, to plaintiff unknown, attacked plaintiff’s house and smashed in the windows; that said Benschoter, Barker, and Roberts, and others in collusion with them, by reason of the means aforesaid did put plaintiff and his family in great fear, and that plaintiff, through force and restraint of said wrongful acts, and not otherwise, did, on the 2d day of January, 1880, execute and deliver to said William Benschoter and Noah H. Roberts, as agent of said Hiram Barker, a quitclaim deed for said property, which was duly filed in the county clerk’s office of said Sherman county, Nebraska; that at the time of the signing of said deed the said Benschoter and Roberts represented that the grantee named in said deed was the said Hiram Barker, who it was promised would hold the same as security for the amount necessary to pay said mortgage, but that said Benschoter and Roberts wrongfully and fraudulently inserted in said deed the name of William Benschoter instead of the name of Hiram Barker; that the substitution of the name of said Bensehoter for that of Barker was without the knowledge or [6]*6consent of the plaintiff, which plaintiff did not discover until long afterwards; that during the time aforesaid, Noah H. Roberts was the agent of said Hiram Barker and acting under his authority and direction in each of the steps by him taken to acquire the title to said lands; that William Benschoter, about January 3, 1880, executed a certain deed whereby he pretended to convey said lands to said Noah H.

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Related

Furbush v. Barker
58 N.W. 707 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.W. 996, 38 Neb. 1, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furbush-v-barker-neb-1893.