Jefferson County Bank v. Robbins

29 N.W. 209, 67 Wis. 68, 1886 Wisc. LEXIS 90
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 N.W. 209 (Jefferson County Bank v. Robbins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson County Bank v. Robbins, 29 N.W. 209, 67 Wis. 68, 1886 Wisc. LEXIS 90 (Wis. 1886).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed September 21, 1886:

By the Oouet.

There can be no question of the right of the special administratrix to intervene in the action against her intestate, for the purpose of - avoiding the judgment against him, and thus procuring the release of the property belonging to the estate which the. sheriff had seized under the execution and was about to sell. -This was necessary [70]*70in order to preserve the property of the deceased for the administrator thereafter to be appointed, which is one of the chief functions of a special administrator. E. S. sec. 3811.

The appeal herein is by Jennet Robbins, who, when it was taken, was the administratrix of the estate of the deceased judgment and execution debtor, and the proper person to take the appeal in the interest of the estate. Resides, the order appealed from imposed costs upon her individually, and she had an individual right to appeal therefrom, no matter who might be the administrator. The mere circumstance that, in the notice of appeal signed by her attorneys, she is erroneously described as special administratrix, has no significance. The error is too trifling- and inconsequential to work so serious a result as a dismissal of the appeal. It is sufficient that an authorized person has appealed, and the failure of her attorneys to state correctly in the notice her relation to the estate of the deceased debtor does not and should not affect the validity of her appeal.

Motion denied, with $10 costs and clerk’s fees.

After the denial of the motion the cause was argued upon its merits. The following are the material facts, in addition to those stated in the opinion:

October 16, 1885, the plaintiff bank brought an action against A. Robbins and G. H. Robbins on two promissory notes purporting to have been executed by them to George W. Bird, and by him indorsed to the plaintiff. November 18, 1885, judgment by default was recovered against the defendants for the amount of the notes, and execution thereon was duly issued and levied upon the property of the defendant A. Robbins. On the 10th of the same month, A. Robbins died, and on the 27th his widow, Jennet Robbins, was appointed special, and later general, administratrix of bis estate. December 7, 1885, the administratrix applied [71]*71to the circuit court to open tbe judgment against her intestate, and to admit her in his place to defend the action. The motion was made upon affidavits, and upon a proposed answer denying the execution by A. Robbins of the notes in suit, and affidavits on behalf of plaintiff were read in opposition thereto. The substance of the affidavits is stated in the opinion. The court denied the motion. The admin-istratrix appeals from the order denying the same.

Eor the appellant there was a brief by Rogers dk Hall, and oral argument by Mr. Hall.

Geo. W. Bird, for the respondent.

The following opinion was filed November 3, 1886:

Lyon, J.

The affidavits upon which the motion was made and resisted, to open the judgment and for leave to the ad-ministratrix to interpose a defense to the action, are too voluminous to insert at length in the report of the case. • It is sufficient to state the facts which these affidavits tend to prove in addition to those already detailed in the foregoing .statement of the case.

In November, 1883, the defendant G. H. Robbins applied to George W. Bird for a loan of $200. He offered his father (the defendant A. Robbins) as security therefor, and referred Mr. Bird to the plaintiff bank and to one Armstrong as to the sufficiency of the security. On inquiry at the bank, Mr. Bird learned that A. Robbins was perfectly responsible, and was in the habit of signing notes for his son. The bank showed Mr. Bird a note held by it, signed by G. H. and A. Robbins, and a letter from Armstrong certifying to the pecuniary responsibility of A. Robbins. Thereupon Mr. Bird loaned the $200 to G. H. Robbins, and received therefor a note purporting to be signed by him and his father. A few weeks later he loaned G. IT. an additional $100, and received a note therefor signed in like manner. These are the notes in suit.

[72]*72In January, 1884, Mr. Bird sold these notes to the plaintiff' bank, guarantied the payment of them, and received therefor the whole amount thereof, principal and interest. The interest was paid to July, 1885. -In February, 1885, the plaintiff extended the time of payment of the notes. This was done pursuant to the verbal application of Gr. H. Robbins, accompanied by a written consent thereto purporting to be signed by A. Robbins. Between September, 1883, and September, 1884, the plaintiff bank held seven notes against Gr. H. and A. Robbins, amounting to about $1,300,. all of which were duly paid.

In September, 1885, Gr. H. Robbins was convicted of the crime of forgery, and duly sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison for a term of four years. ' The forgeiúes were of instruments, notes, and mortgages to different parties,, but it does not appear what the instruments were, or whose names were forged thereto. The genuineness of the signatures of A. Robbins to the seven notes held by the bank, and to the consent to extend time for payment of the notes in suit, is not directly attacked in the affidavits. While inferences to the contrary may be extracted from the affidavits, we think the circuit court might properly have found that all those signatures were made or authorized by the appellant’s intestate; also that the name of A. Robbins signed to such notes and instrument and his name to the notes in suit were in the same handwriting.

The summons and complaint in this action were personally served on the defendant A. Robbins, October 16, 1885. On the next day, accompanied by his son Clarence, he had an interview with Mr. Bird, the attorney for the plaintiff and the payee and guarantor of the notes in suit. In that interview, as appears by the affidavit of Mr. Bird, he scarcely disclaimed the execution of the notes, although his son did so, in his presence, with great vehemence. Mr. Bird offered to pay half the amount of the notes to avoid litiga[73]*73tion, and the offer would probably have been accepted but for the opposition and violent manner of Clarence. Mr. Bird then informed both father and son that if they elected to defend the action they must retain an attorney, and do so before the expiration of twenty days, or judgment would be taken against A. Bobbins on the notes.

Mr. Bobbins was in somewhat feeble health when he had the interview with Mr. Bird, and seems to have been taken worse afterwards, on that day. An effort is made in the affidavits in support of the motion to show that he was thereafter incapacitated from doing business the most of the time until he died; but there is enough in the affidavits to satisfy us (as it manifestly did the circuit judge) that during nearly the whole time the case was open for his answer he was abundantly able to state his alleged defense to the note, which was well known to his family, and to verify an answer.

Ten days after his interview with Mr. Bird he directed his son Alvah, a young man, living with his father, to send the papers in the case to Messrs. Bogers & Hall, of Madison, attorneys at law. Alvah did so, by mail, but neglected to inform the attorneys what the defense was to the notes. This made necessary further correspondence.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W. 209, 67 Wis. 68, 1886 Wisc. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-county-bank-v-robbins-wis-1886.