Heese v. Wenke

73 N.W.2d 223, 161 Neb. 311, 1955 Neb. LEXIS 126
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1955
Docket33827
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 73 N.W.2d 223 (Heese v. Wenke) 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
Heese v. Wenke, 73 N.W.2d 223, 161 Neb. 311, 1955 Neb. LEXIS 126 (Neb. 1955).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

This is an action by Fred L. Heese, a resident and taxpayer of the village of Pender, Thurston County, Nebraska, plaintiff and appellee, against Sterling Wenke, Wenke Farm Store, and the village of Pender, Thurston County, Nebraska, defendants, to recover judgment against the defendants Sterling Wenke and Wenke Farm Store in the amount of $8,638.39 with interest and costs, and for injunction against the defendant village of Pender enjoining it from paying any funds to Sterling Wenke or the Wenke Farm Store upon any contract or transaction with it in which Sterling Wenke or the Wenke *312 Farm Store was interested directly or indirectly.

The case was tried to the court on that portion of the pleaded cause of action wherein it was claimed that the defendants Sterling Wenke and Wenke Farm Store were obligated to pay the sum of $8,638.39 with interest, at the conclusion of which judgment was rendered against the defendants Sterling Wenke and Wenke Farm Store for $9,890.84. This judgment included accrued interest. That portion of the pleaded cause of action which presented the issue of injunction against the village of Pender was not submitted for determination on the trial.

The defendants Sterling Wenke and Wenke Farm Store filed motion for new trial which motion was in due course overruled. From the judgment and the order overruling the motion for new trial these defendants have appealed. They will be hereinafter referred to as the appellants.

The action was by plaintiff and against the defendants Sterling Wenke and Wenke Farm Store for the benefit of the defendant village of Pender. The basis of the action was that during the period involved Sterling Wenke was a member of the board of trustees of the village of Pender and was also the owner of the Wenke Farm Store, and that during this period he received from the village of Pender by warrants on account of and as pay for services, materials, and labor, $8,638.39 the payment of which was illegal and therefore recoverable back by the village of Pender. The defense was, to the extent necessary to state it here, that the payments were not illegal and there was no right of recovery by the village of Pender.

Prior to the commencement of the action the plaintiff in due form requested the village of Pender to institute action to recover the amount claimed but the request was refused. In the light of this refusal the action was instituted by plaintiff in behalf of the village. No question of the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action is presented on this appeal.

*313 There is no material dispute as to facts. It appears clearly that during the period under inquiry Sterling Wenke was a member of the board of trustees of the village of Pender. It further appears that during this period there was paid to appellants out of the cash funds of the village of Pender $8,638.39 and that this amount was paid for material furnished and service performed for the village, except one warrant in the amount of $311.68 which was simply to correct an erroneous overcharge by the village to the appellants, the details of which are not made clear but concerning it there is no controversy. The trial court deducted this $311.68 from the total of the payments and rendered judgment accordingly. It appears that the proceedings whereby the payments by the village were allowed were with the knowledge of and participated in by the appellant Sterling Wenke.

The judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the benefit of the village and against the appellants was rendered on the theory that the payments made were violative of and void under section 17-611, R. R. S. 1943.

Numerous assignments of error are set out in the brief as grounds for reversal of the judgment but the only questions requiring consideration here are, first, the question of whether or not the transactions involved come within the prohibition of section 17-611, R. R. S. 1943; second, if it be found that they do come within the prohibition, then the question of whether or not appellants were and are entitled to receive for the material furnished and the service performed the reasonable value thereof; and third, the question of whether or not the action is barred by laches.

Section 17-611, R. R. S. 1943, is as follows: “No officer of any city or village shall be interested, directly or indirectly, in any contract to , which the corporation, or any one for its benefit, is a party. Any such interest in any such contract shall avoid the obligation thereof on the part of such corporation. No officer shall receive *314 any pay or perquisites from the city other than his salary. Neither the city council nor board of trustees shall pay or appropriate any money or other valuable thing to any person not an officer for the performance of any act, service or duty, the doing or performance of which shall come within the proper scope of the duties of any officer of such corporation.”

The first question must, in the light of a long line of authoritative decisions of this court, be decided adversely to the appellants. In Grand Island Gas Co. v West, 28 Neb. 852, 45 N. W. 242, a case wherein action was instituted to enjoin the enforcement of claims by the Grand Island Gas Company against the city of Grand Island under circumstances where an individual was an officer of the city and also an officer and stockholder of the Grand Island Gas Company, on the ground that the transactions which gave rise to the claims were prohibited by public policy and the statute involved here, this court said: “That an action cannot be maintained on such a contract is well sustained by the authorities.” Further in the opinion it is said: “This section is broad and sweeping in its terms. It is obvious that a contract entered into with a city in which any of its officers have directly or indirectly a pecuniary interest, cannot be enforced against the corporation.”

The opinion contains the citation of a number of decisions from other jurisdictions with quotations and a quotation from Dillon on Municipal Corporations supporting this conclusion. In it are found cogent and compelling reasons for the conclusion. The reasons set forth there will not be repeated here but they appear nonetheless cogent and compelling at this time.

In Village of Bellevue v. Sterba, 140 Neb. 744, 1 N. W. 2d 820, it was held that a contract falling within the category of the transactions involved here was void and unenforceable. The same was true in the following cases: Neisius v. Henry, 142 Neb. 29, 5 N. W. 2d 291; City of Lincoln v. First Nat. Bank, 146 Neb. 221, 19 N. *315 W. 2d 156; Warren v. County of Stanton, 147 Neb. 32, 22 N. W. 2d 287. See, also, Carlson v. City of Faith (S. D.), 67 N. W. 2d 149.

Having thus found that the transactions involved were void it becomes necessary to say whether or -not the appellants were entitled to receive, or under the facts of this case, to retain the reasonable value of that which they had furnished to the village.

On the basis of the ultimate conclusion arrived at in Grand Island Gas Co. v. West, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.W.2d 223, 161 Neb. 311, 1955 Neb. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heese-v-wenke-neb-1955.