Lichty v. Moore

56 N.W. 965, 38 Neb. 269, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 343
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1893
DocketNo. 4715
StatusPublished

This text of 56 N.W. 965 (Lichty v. Moore) 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
Lichty v. Moore, 56 N.W. 965, 38 Neb. 269, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 343 (Neb. 1893).

Opinion

Ryan, C.

In the district court of Thayer county, Nebraska, J.. R. Lichty brought suit against J. C. Moore, James M. Moore, John Kinney, and G. Heinrichson, alleging as his cause of action that upon the request of the defendants he had guarantied, and been compelled to pay about eighty-seven per cent of the amount of a promissory note of which the defendants were the makers. The note in respect of which suit was brought was in the words and figures following:

“$285. Davenport, Neb., January 1, 1886.
“Six months after date, I, we, or either of ns, promise to-pay to Jacob E. Walker, or order, two hundred and eigbtyfive dollars, for value received, negotiable and payable-[271]*271without defalcation or discount, with interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum from date until paid.
“If suit is instituted on this note we agree to pay ten per cent of the amount thep due, as agreed, assessed, and liquidated damages for non-fulfillment of contract, the same to be allowed by the court and included in the judgment. J. C. Moore.
“ James Moore.
“John Kinney.
“G. Heinriohson.”

The defendants John Kinuey and G. Ileinrichson answered, first, admitting their signatures upon the note sued on, but alleging that they signed as sureties only, and that Walker, the payee, was well aware of that fact at the time the note was signed, and that plaintiff well knew it long before he paid said note, if he ever paid the same. There was also a denial by these two defendants of each averment in the petition not admitted by the answer. There were other defenses pleaded, but as there were only two in support of which evidence was adduced, they alone will be considered. In passing, it may be remarked that there was a reply which put in issue each averment of these matters, to which attention will now be directed.

In the answer the two defendants above named made the following averments: “ Thaton March 25, 1886, James-Moore and J. C. Moore, who are the principal makers of said note, made an assignment of all their property for the benefit of their creditors in accordance with law ; that within ten days after said date the said Jacob Walker was appointed assignee of said estate and took possession of the property belonging thereto: The assets of said estate amounted to the sum of $20,000, and the debts to the sum of $11,000, at the time the said Walker took possession of the same as aforesaid; that within the time provided by law the said Jacob Walker, without the consent [272]*272of these defendants, filed said note as a claim against the said estate, and has paid to himself from the assets of said estate two dividends upon the note aforesaid, and at the time said note became due and payable the said Jacob Walker had in his possession money and property largely in excess of the debts of the said principal makers of said note; that said estate yet remains unsettled, and a large amount of assets are in the hands of said Jacob Walker, the amount of which is unknown to these defendants.

“The defendants further allege that they are informed and believe that the said Jacob Walker has so managed the estate of the principal makers of said note that the district court of Nuckolls county refused to confirm the sale of the real estate belonging thereto, and that said Jacob Walker has charged excessive fees, and that while said estate, if properly managed, would have paid the debts of said James Moore and J. C. Moore in full, through the mismanagement of said Jacob Walker, the said estate has paid the creditors only thirteen cents on the dollar, and not to exceed ten cents more on the dollar will be realized therefrom. Defendants were led to believe that when said Walker filed said note against said estate it would be paid in full, and they had no means of knowing the condition of said estate, and that all knowledge of the same was kept from them by the payee of the note, who was the assignee of said estate; that said Walker made no attempt to collect said note from the plaintiff, or any one else, until he had, by mismanagement as aforesaid, exhausted the property of the principal makers of said note.”

Perhaps it is unnecessary to remark that the Jacob Walker above referred to was the payee of the original note. The evidence discloses on this head that sáid Walker was constituted the assignee of the estate of J. C. Moore and James Moore, and that the assets consisted of a large amount of property, both real and personal. There were in evidence certified copies of the reports filed by the assignee [273]*273during the progress of the administration of the estate of said insolvent parties, followed by his final report and the approval of the same, together with an order of discharge of the said Walker as such assignee. During the administration of said estate there were two dividends declared, amounting in the aggregate to about thirteen per cent of the claims filed; and for this thirteen per cent due credit was given by plaintiff in his petition, as he only sued for the balance of about eighty-seven per cent due on said note. In this condition of the pleadings we are at a loss to conjecture what defense the averments constituted, in an action brought by Liehty upon a note which he had guarantied at the request of at least one of the makers, though without the express assent of the others, and which, by reason of the failure of the makers so to do, he had been compelled to pay. If Walker mismanaged the estate of the insolvents Moore and Moore, that fact should have appeared in some manner in the county court. In this action there was no malfeasance shown. The testimony simply was that the Mill property, for instance, was of a certain large value, about $14,000; that thereon was a mortgage of $2,000; that the property afterwards sold on a foreclosure in the federal court for about $2,600. If there was any element of misfeasance or malfeasance with respect to this, the great bulk of the property of the Moores, it must have occurred in allowing the foreclosure and sale upon the mortgage. But this was a matter that was within the jurisdiction of the federal court; and if the property was unfairly sold, or had been unnecessarily sacrificed, the proper forum in which to present that matter would have been the circuit court of the United States for the district of Nebraska.

Another defense pleaded by Kinney and Heinriehson was in the following language:

13. That the plaintiff did not write his alleged guaranty upon said note at the request of either of the makers of the same, nor of the sureties thereto, but the name of the [274]*274plaintiff was thereon placed by the plaintiff in order that the plaintiff could procure the money advanced on said note to use for his own benefit; and the plaintiff did use said money, and the same was used to pay off a lien on said property of the principal makers of said note in order that the plaintiff should have the first lien upon the property aforesaid, and the indorsement was made on said note by the plaintiff for the benefit which he.was to receive, and which he did receive therefrom.”

J. E; Walker testified that Mr. Lichty signed the* guaranty in his presence at the request of Mr. Moore. His language is as follows: “ Mr. Moore came down twice, and had this note signed with these sureties on.

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.W. 965, 38 Neb. 269, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lichty-v-moore-neb-1893.