Glissmann v. Grabow

53 N.W.2d 94, 155 Neb. 690, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 117
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1952
Docket33117
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 N.W.2d 94 (Glissmann v. Grabow) 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
Glissmann v. Grabow, 53 N.W.2d 94, 155 Neb. 690, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 117 (Neb. 1952).

Opinion

Boslaugh, J.

This is an action in equity by Henry C. Glissmann and Tena E. Glissmann against Serena E. Grabow and William H. Dorrance, sheriff of Douglas County, to vacate a judgment of the district court because as alleged it was obtained by fraud and false swearing of the judgment creditor, and to enjoin the enforcement and collection of the judgment. Harold W. Glissmann intervened in the case. The matters involved in the case last identified in the caption, not disposed of by agreement of the parties, will be concluded ipso facto by the decision of the appeal in the first case named in the caption. The contesting parties are Henry C. Glissmann, Tena E. Glissmann, and Harold W. Glissmann, appellants, and Serena E. Grabow, appellee.

The judgment sought to be set aside was rendered on the 6th day of October 1948. It was predicated on, and was required by, four opinions and decisions of this court in which the same parties interpleaded and the identical subject matter was involved. The opinions are reported in Glissmann v. Bauermeister, 139 Neb. 354, 297 N. W. 617; 139 Neb. 362, 299 N. W. 225; 141 Neb. 288, 3 N. W. 2d 555; and 149 Neb. 131, *692 30 N. W. 2d 649. There have been three other cases in which the parties to this contest were concerned and in which some of the same subject matter was in controversy. These are Glissmann v. Orchard, 139 Neb. 344, 297 N. W. 612; 152 Neb. 500, 41 N. W. 2d 756; and State ex rel. Grabow v. Dineen, General No. 32572. The decision of this court in the first of these cases was made and became final before the judgment assailed in the present case was. rendered. An extensive statement of the facts in the pending case is neither required nor justified because of the disclosure of the transactions of the parties affecting the subject matter to the minutest detail in the prior cases in this court.

The fraud charged . against appellee as a basis for relief from the judgment is that she represented and testified in court that she was entitled to her share and also the share of her brother Henry C. Glissmann, appellant, in the estate of their father, Hans C. Glissmann, deceased; that appellant transferred his share to her by an instrument absolutely and unconditionally in consideration of appellee having negotiated for and secured a certain lease and option contract from a Mr. Orchard and his wife for the benefit of her brother; and that she secured the performance of the obligations thereof by pledging to Orchard and his wife the share of appellee in the estate of her father. Appellants allege that no contract or transaction in reference thereto by the appellant and appellee was made or was had and her claims, representations, and testimony in that regard were false and induced and resulted in the judgment in- her favor. The district court found that appellants had not sustained their petition and it was by the court dismissed.

All of the claims made by the appellants in their favor in the petition in this case except the allegations thereof charging Serena E. Grabow with fraud and perjury'had been, as shown by the decisions of this *693 court cited herein, adjudicated against appellants before this case was commenced.

The instrument dated January 24, 1929, executed by Henry C. Glissmann and Serena E. Grabow and approved and confirmed by Tena E. Glissmann evidences that Henry C. Glissmann for a recited consideration “hereby sells, assigns and sets over unto said Serena E. Grabow, her heirs or assigns, all right title and interest in and to estate or any share therein of the late Hans C. Glissmann, which he, Henry C. Glissmann, second party herein, may now have or hereafter may accrue to him as heir or creditor of the late Hans C. Glissmann, his father now deceased. And the said second party hereby grants to first party, her heirs or assigns, full right and authority to receive, receipt for or acknowledge any or all necessary papers or matters in connection with or rights accruing in and to said share * * * which share is by these presents assigned herein to said first party, and that said first party in the settlement of said estate or receiving of said share may do the same as second party may have done in the premises * *

The claim was made by appellee- in a pleading filed by her on May 19, 1938, in the case of Glissmann v. Orchard, 139 Neb. 344, 297 N. W. 612, that her share in the estate of her father pledged by her to Orchard and his wife was her property and should be returned to her, and she asked the court to award it to her and require Orchard and his wife to surrender and deliver to her all property pledged by her and held by them as collateral on account of the option and the lease. In an answer and cross-petition made by appellee on November 9, 1938, in Glissmann v. Bauermeister, 139 Neb. 354, 297 N. W. 617, she alleged that she became the owner of the share of Henry C. Glissmann by the instrument dated January 24, 1929; that she was the owner thereof, and of any money realized or paid on account thereof; that she had served a copy of the instrument on each of the parties interested in the property con *694 stituting the subject matter thereof or of the proceeds therefrom; and that she gave them each notice that she was such owner. She asked the court to adjudge that she was the owner and she was awarded a judgment, to that effect. These cases were consolidated for trial, were heard and decided on the same evidence in the district court, and were appealed and decided on one record in this court. Appellants were parties to these cases and they knew that appellee was, when she made-her pleadings therein in 1938, claiming to be not only the owner and entitled to the benefit of the share of' her brother by virtue of his transfer of it to her but. also of her share in the estate of her father.

The final order of the court in Glissmann v. Bauermeister, 139 Neb. 354, 297 N. W. 617, on the first appeal thereof, was made on July 3, 1941, and a mandate-was issued on the 6th day of October 1941. Thereafter on the 4th day of November 1941, appellants made, in the district court, an “APPLICATION FOR STAY OF' PROCEEDINGS” because they were going to file their ’appeal to this court that its decision be clarified and a. petition to set aside the judgment rendered on the contention that it had been obtained on the fraud and misrepresentation of Serena E. Grabow; that it would be inequitable and unjust for her to retain her share and obtain the share of her brother which was the meaning and effect of the decision of this court; and that, if the-judgment of the court meant the total one-eighth interest of appellee, it included the amount due on the Happy Hollow contract, the Shuler & Cary contract, the balance of the interest in said estate held during the-lifetime of the widow of Hans C. Glissmann, deceased,, and all payments made to appellee by the trustees since March 28, 1929. They sought a stay until an application for a new trial based on fraud and misrepresentation by appellee could be made and acted on in the district court, and until a petition was made in the- *695 Supreme Court to set aside the judgment for fraud of the prevailing party.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W.2d 94, 155 Neb. 690, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glissmann-v-grabow-neb-1952.