Lautenschlager v. Lautenschlager

279 N.W. 200, 134 Neb. 577, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 81
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1938
DocketNo. 30142
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 279 N.W. 200 (Lautenschlager v. Lautenschlager) 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
Lautenschlager v. Lautenschlager, 279 N.W. 200, 134 Neb. 577, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 81 (Neb. 1938).

Opinion

Yeager, District Judge.

This is an action which was originally instituted in the district court for Saline county, Nebraska, by John L. Lautenschlager, plaintiff and appellee herein, against George W. Lautenschlager, defendant and appellant herein. The action was to set aside a release of mortgage given by plaintiff to defendant and to foreclose the mortgage which had been released.

That portion of the petition relating to foreclosure was in the usual form. The portion relating to the vacation of the release set forth that the plaintiff had executed the release in question, but that he had never made delivery to the defendant and that defendant had obtained its possession by extracting it from the papers of plaintiff without the plaintiff’s consent, and that defendant thereafter filed it for record in the office of the register of deeds of Saline county, Nebraska. The amended answer contained a general denial and the further allegation that plaintiff executed and delivered to defendant the release of the mortgage and that the said mortgage was therefore canceled.

No question is raised as to the validity of the mortgage [579]*579and none that it was in default. The sole question on the issues is as to whether or not there was a delivery of the release. In addition to this question on the issues, a question is raised as to the propriety of the rejection of certain offered testimony of a witness on the ground that it was privileged, being conversations between attorney and client. The district court canceled and held for naught the release and decreed foreclosure of the mortgage.

We will discuss the matter of the rejection of the offered testimony first, since if this point is decided favorably to appellant the other one need not be considered at this time, because in such case a reversal of the judgment herein and a new trial would be required.

Plaintiff and defendant went to the office of Stanley Bartos, an attorney, in -Wilber, Nebraska, for the purpose of discussing the necessity and legal effect of the release in question, and other matters pertaining to the estate of the plaintiff. These matters were discussed among all three of them. Mr. Bartos was called as a witness for the defendant to testify in relation to the matters discussed. He was asked to state the conversation, and so that there may be no mistake the record thereon is quoted: “Q. State that conversation. Plaintiff objects as calling for a privileged communication.” The objection was sustained. The following offer was made, to which objection was made and sustained: “Q. We offer to prove that in a conversation which was taken part in by the plaintiff in this action and the witness on the stand, in the presence of the defendant, George W. Lautenschlager, in the latter part of February or the fore part of March, 1935, at the- office of the witness in Wilber, Nebraska, the plaintiff inquired of the witness about transferring his securities, including the release of the mortgage involved in this action, to his son, George Lautenschlager, and was told of the necessity of a delivery to make a valid and binding transfer.” There were other offers made and rejected, but they have no direct bearing on the particular subject-matter of this action.

If nothing further appeared in the bill of exceptions, [580]*580it would be necessary to determine whether or not under the law this evidence was properly excluded. This necessity has not arisen since, if its exclusion were erroneous, it is cured further on in the direct testimony of the same witness. Subsequently in his testimony, the same witness testified without objection to a conversation with plaintiff and his daughters which occurred in May or June, 1936, wherein in much more detail than the quoted offer contemplates, the identical conversation called for by the question to which objection was sustained was related. The conversation testified to without objection is as follows: “Q. Tell us what that question was. A. They came into the office ■ and Mr. Lautenschlager introduced them, says that those were his daughters. He made a remark then how 'fleshy they were, and we passed the time of the day. And Mr. Lautenschlager says to me, he says, ‘Now, what did you do to me, Stanley?’ He always called me by my first name. I says, ‘Why?’ He says, ‘Why,’ he says, T didn’t intend that George should have all that property, all of my property.’ I says, ‘Yes, you did, Mr. Lautenschlager,’ I says, ‘You and I have gone over that very fully.’ Then the ladies interrupted and they wanted to know the condition, mental condition. One of them, I don’t know which one, says, ‘My father at that time when he was down here didn’t know what he was doing.’ I says, ‘Yes, he did, he had his mind pretty well made up.’ I says, ‘As a matter of fact I sent him home the first time and told him not to do anything until he has plenty of time to think matters over.’ They says, ‘Well, he was suffering.’ I says, ‘Yes; he had or thought he had at that time what was going to be a fatal disease; he didn’t look very good to me, but so far as mental condition is concerned, that was all right.’ And then Mr. Lautenschlager says, ‘Well,’ he says, ‘Stanley, I didn’t intend that George should have that only after I die.’ I says, ‘Mr. Lautenschlager, you know that you told me that on account of Bill’s estate having' been so much trouble in its probate that you did not want your estate to be probated.’ I says, ‘You remember when I told you that [581]*581there was two ways of fixing these papers, one was by making a will and á second one was by' absolute delivery in your lifetime. I went over all that matter with you. Don’t you remember when I told you you couldn’t be like an Indian giver, or you can’t keep something and give it at the same time.’ I says, ‘Now, didn’t I make that .statement to you?’ And Mr. Lautensehlager says, ‘Yes; you did.’ I says, ‘You know just as well as you are sitting before me that all these papers were delivered by you to George and that you knew that you were giving the property away.’ And then the ladies spoke up and says, ‘Well, will you testify to Mr. Lautenschlager’s condition?’ I says, T will get up and testify to the truth, if you want me to.’ I says, T will not appear for Mr. Lautensehlager as a lawyer;’ and then they accused me of wanting to have a lawsuit about this. I says, ‘No, ladies, you are mistaken; if Mr. Lautensehlager brings a lawsuit I will not be his attorney, and I will get up and testify to the facts as they occurred.’ And with that they picked up and didn’t even say goodby, and left the office.”

Á comparison of the offer with the quoted lengthy answer of Mr. Bartos shows clearly and without question that, though the trial court excluded the testimony contemplated in the offer when the conversation was called for directly, yet the selfsame conversation was admitted without objection when the witness was called upon to relate it as he had previously related it on the occasion when the plaintiff and his daughters were in the office of the witness. The court had before it the rejected evidence in all of its details and doubtless considered it along with all the other evidence in the case.

It is but the statement of a truism to say that in a trial to the court where evidence is excluded erroneously, but where the same evidence is elicited from the same witness and admitted later on in the trial óf the case and is .fully and completely presented, error cannot be predicated on such erroneous rejection. The principle controlling this situation has been before this court on a number of occa[582]

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Bluebook (online)
279 N.W. 200, 134 Neb. 577, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lautenschlager-v-lautenschlager-neb-1938.