Horton v. Tabitha Home

145 N.W. 1023, 95 Neb. 491, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 246
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1914
DocketNo. 17,438
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 145 N.W. 1023 (Horton v. Tabitha Home) 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
Horton v. Tabitha Home, 145 N.W. 1023, 95 Neb. 491, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 246 (Neb. 1914).

Opinions

Barnes, J.

This action was commenced by H. W. Horton in the district court for Lancaster county, for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien against an incorporated charitable institution known as “Tabitha Home,” situated near the city of Lincoln. The petition was in the usual form for materials furnished Tabitha Home under an alleged contract. Certain other persons claiming mechanics’, judgment and mortgage liens were made parties defendant, and filed answers and cross-petitions setting up their [493]*493claims, aggregating $22,280.32, exclusive of interest and costs. To the petition and cross-petitions the Home answered, admitting that it is a corporation, that it is the owner of the property in controversy, and denying the unadmitted allegations of the petition and cross-petitions. The minor children, inmates of the orphans’ department of the home, applied for and were given leave to file an answer and cross-petition, which consisted of a general denial of the averments of the petition and all cross-petitions. The names of said minors and orphans, some 13 in number, are given, with the averment that they are minors and orphans, inmates of and confined in said Tabitha Home, a charitable institution, and have an interest therein; “that the Home is a corporation under the laws of this state, existing as a charitable institution, the object and purpose of which is to maintain a home for orphan s and aged people; that it became incorporated many years ago, and ever since said date has been and is now maintained as an orphans’ home; * * * that its property and funds are controlled and handled by a board of trustees whose duty it is to use said funds and property for the purposes and objects for which the Home was incorporated, and that such board of trustees has no other interest or rights in the property of this Home; that the title to the property is held in trust by the corporation and its officers for the use and benefit of the inmates in furtherance of the object for which the home was created; that these answering minors have been inmates of the Home and were inmates thereof at the time when the alleged improvements were made, and that they are still inmates of this Home and being cared for in said institution ; that no part of the material or labor described in these petitions and answers of the lienholders was necessary for the completion, maintenance or furtherance of the trust for which the Home was incorporated, but if said material was in reality furnished it was for a different purpose; that these orphans have a right to and lien on all the funds and property of said institution until they arrive of age. And that the board of trustees could not [494]*494use tbe funds or property of tbe Home for any other purpose. Tbe minors pray that tbeir interest may be protected and tbe property preserved .for tbe original trust for wbicb it was intended.”

By leave of court an answer and cross-petition was also filed by tbe aged inmates of tbe Home, in wbicb it is alleged: “That Tabitba Home is a charitable institution duly incorporated, as appears from a copy of tbe articles attached to this cross-petition as exhibit A; that tbe Home was organized and is maintained as a charitable institution, and not for profit; that tbe corporation has no capital and has no funds or income outside of a few contributions, and that it has no property except that in controversy; that all of these answering inmates who bad any funds made a contract with said Home for tbeir support, board and lodging for tbe remainder of tbeir’ lives, and that they paid tbeir money to said Home for that purpose; * * * and before any of the alleged material was furnished or labor done, they entered said institution, in pursuance of tbeir contract and payment of tbeir money, and that they were in said Home long before and at tbe time when it .is claimed that these materials were furnished and this labor was done; that the alleged material was not furnished at tbe request of these inmates, nor for tbeir use and benefit, nor was it necessary to maintain tbe institution for its original charitable purpose.” Then follows a list of tbe aged inmates, 19 in number, with tbe dates of tbeir several entries, extending from November 21, 1887j to June 25, 1913, with tbe allegation “that they have each contributed all they had to tbe Home for their support, and that said sums of money so paid were accepted and are being retained by tbe Home under said contract for maintenance of these inmates; that they paid tbeir money in good faith, and relied upon tbe charitable purposes of said Home and tbe articles of incorporation, believing the same to be true; that tbe Home was incorporated so that no one person might bold, own or control its property or funds, and that tbe board of trustees and tbe officers have no right or interest in this prop[495]*495erty or funds as individuals, and have no authority to use the funds for other purposes than to support the inmates, and that they have no right or interest as individuals in the property of this institution; that' the corporation has elected these officers in order that some one might transact its business in a proper manner, and for no other purpose; that neither the officers nor trustees receive any compensation, and that the corporation has no capital, and is dependent for its support upon free contributions, and that it has no real estate except that in controversy; that the material described in the petition and cross-petition herein was not furnished * * * under the direction or request of the board of trustees of said Home, nor was it necessary for the continuance of the trust for which the Home was incorporated and continued; that these inmates, by reason of these facts, have a lien upon the property of the Home for the fulfilment of their said contract, and that the board of trustees or officers could not make any contract to divest these inmates of their said right.” The answer concluded-with a “prayer for protection of their rights, preservation of the property, and, in the event that the real estate be sold, the money paid in by these inmates may be refunded to -them.” The articles of incorporation of Tabitha Home were attached to the cross-petition, and show that they were filed for record April 4, 1890, and duly recorded in the proper records of Lancaster county; that the objects and business of the corporation are: “First. To erect and maintain an orphans’ home for the benefit of the orphans of our land. Second. To erect and maintain a place where the sick and needy and feeble may be cared for. Third. To educate and train parties for the purpose of becoming deaconesses, nurses and attendants on hospitals, orphan homes or similar institutions. Fourth. The transaction of the business of the corporation shall be vested in five trustees to be elected by the members of the corporation, and who shall hold their office during the term of their natural life, except they may be removed for cause, or by resignation. Fifth. The indebtedness [496]*496of the corporation shall at nd time exceed one-half of the value of such property as may at the time be owned by it.”

The answer of J. H. Humpe, trustee, and a mortgagee, consists of a general denial of the averments of the answers and cross-petitions of the alleged mechanics’ lien-holders, admits that the defendant Tabitha Home is and for many years has been duly incorporated as a charitable institution under the laws of this state; that it is the owner of the land described in the petition and cross-petitions.

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Related

Muller v. Nebraska Methodist Hospital
70 N.W.2d 86 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1955)
Steunenberg v. National Progressive Life Insurance
292 N.W. 737 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1940)
Hobbs v. Board of Education
253 N.W. 627 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1934)
Horton v. Tabitha Home
169 N.W. 2 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 N.W. 1023, 95 Neb. 491, 1914 Neb. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-tabitha-home-neb-1914.