Lyhane v. Durtschi

13 N.W.2d 130, 144 Neb. 256, 1944 Neb. LEXIS 26
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1944
DocketNo. 31701
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 13 N.W.2d 130 (Lyhane v. Durtschi) 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
Lyhane v. Durtschi, 13 N.W.2d 130, 144 Neb. 256, 1944 Neb. LEXIS 26 (Neb. 1944).

Opinion

Messmore, J.

Plaintiff in this action prays that an accounting be taken, and the amount of loss sustained by plaintiff and defendants and each of them, on notes purchased from the Farmers State Bank of Wood River, Nebraska, be ascertained and determined; that the liabilities of the parties be fixed [257]*257for their shares of such losses as provided by contract, and that judgment be entered against the defendants and each of them for the amount of their liability in excess of the loss sustained, and each of them be required to account for all money collected on the notes assigned to them for the use and benefit of plaintiff and defendants.

It will be necessary, in determining this case, to detail the substance of the amended petition which alleges: In November, 1929, for the purpose of building up the reserve of the Farmers State Bank, plaintiff and defendants orally agreed to purchase certain notes of the bank without recourse, in such amounts as they, or either, of them, may thereafter determine, and that, in the event of loss sustained by any of them, they would each contribute their proportionate shares of the total of such losses sustained, which agreement was reduced to writing. Pursuant to the agreement, plaintiff and defendants A. E. Hauke, Otha Oldfather and M. J. McDermott each purchased notes totaling $10,000, and defendant W. A. Francis $6,000, in all $46,000, which amounts were paid by said parties to the bank. Defendants Durtschi and Schooley purchased no notes. Since the commencement of the action Schooley has died, and the action was revived, so far as he was concerned, ag-ainst the executrix of his estate. All of such notes were left with the bank for payment.

On April 10, 1930, at a meeting of the board of directors of the bank, attended by all except plaintiff, a state bank examiner requested the elimination from the assets of the bank of doubtful notes, totaling- $29,580.28, and, in lieu thereof and without the knowledge or authority of the plaintiff, substituted notes of the plaintiff, totaling $4,610, of defendant A. E. Hauke totaling $4,600, of defendant Oldfather, $4,850, of defendant W. A. Francis, $4,400, all of which notes were purchased from the bank under the written agreement. On January 22, 1931, the bank paid the plaintiff $600; on August 5, 1931, $250, with interest, the amounts collected on plaintiff’s notes, leaving a balance due him of $3,750, with interest. Thereafter the bank became [258]*258insolvent, a receiver was appointed, and plaintiff filed claim for such amount. At this point; in the case of State v. Farmers State Bank, 127 Neb. 139, 254 N. W. 728, the plaintiff in the instant case appeared as intervener. The decision was rendered in 1934. The intervener filed a claim for a trust fund; the same contract was involved; the amount stated was $4,610, with credits of $850, leaving a balance of $3,750. The district court and this court disallowed the' claim.

To continue the allegations of the petition: The plaintiff makes claim for the same amounts and, in addition, the expenditure of $544.75 for presentation of his claim in the former action, thereby sustaining a total loss of $4,294.75. Defendant McDermott purchased a note secured by a real estate mortgage which was not paid but was foreclosed on January 23, 1937, and decree entered March 30, 1937, in the sum of $11,003.36. On March 10, 1938, the real estate was sold for $8,600 to satisfy the decree, and the sale was confirmed May 13, 1938. Defendant McDermott sustained a loss of $2,403.36. Plaintiff has been informed that defendants Hauke, Oldfather and Francis have sustained losses on such notes purchased from the bank, but said defendants have refused to inform the plaintiff of the amount of such losses.

In the eighth paragraph of the amended petition, plaintiff further alleges: At a meeting of the board of directors April 10, 1930, the eliminated notes were assigned to plaintiff and defendants Hauke, Oldfather and Francis, and left with the bank for collection, the proceeds to be distributed among them, with interest, proportionately to the notes taken from each of them, and placed in the bank in lieu thereof, and any amount collected in excess to be paid the bank (then the insolvency of the bank is pleaded). Defendants Hauke, Oldfather and Francis, without the knowledge and acquiescence of plaintiff, secured possession of said notes at a secret meeting held March 8, 1934, of which plaintiff had no notice, and wrongfully turned the notes over to Hauke for collection and distribution among them[259]*259selves. On February 22, 1936, Hauke had collected a total of $1,185.79, and wrongfully distributed the same as follows: $503 to himself, $529.79 to Oldfather, and $153 to Francis, and he has since that time collected the sum of $603.98, which he has wrongfully distributed, and, in addition, received payments in 1941 in amounts unknown. Defendants refused to pay plaintiff his proportionate share or furnish him with a statement or accounting. Included in the notes of defendant Francis, totaling $4,400, which were put in the bank in lieu of the notes eliminated, was the note of Francis for $2,100, now barred by the statute of limitations, and the amount Francis contributed towards the elimination of the doubtful paper was $2,300, all of which was known to the defendants some time prior to April 10, 1930. Defendants since that date have been hostile and noninformative and wrongfully promised plaintiff that, as soon as McDermott could ascertain his loss, a complete settlement would be made, in accordance with the written contract, at a directors’ meeting to be called. Defendants had no intention of making such settlement and wrongfully made such promise to induce the plaintiff to defer bringing suit until his cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. Plaintiff relied on such promise and did defer bringing action until the McDermott loss could be determined. Defendants refused to meet with plaintiff and make settlement, in accordance with the written contract, and the first knowledge plaintiff had with reference to the transactions, above stated, was February 2, 1943, when the deposition of defendant Hauke was taken in this action. The time for determining the loss of the parties to the written agreement was not fixed therein, was left to further agreement of the parties, and prior to November 1, 1934, plaintiff made a demand on defendants for a statement of their loss and a determination of the liability of the parties to the written agreement, and payment of his loss. Each of the parties orally requested him to defer settlement under the written agreement until the foreclosure proceedings by McDermott had been completed, and he could ascer[260]*260tain his loss and the loss of each of the parties, and the recovery on the $29,580.28 (notes assigned by the bank to defendants) could be ascertained and determined, and defendants so agreed and promised. Plaintiff again recites the McDermott matter, and pleads an estoppel precluding the defendants from claiming- that this action is barred by the statute of limitations and that plaintiff has been guilty of laches in bringing this action; that plaintiff sustained a loss of $4,294.75, with interest at 7 per cent from August 5, 1931, no part of which has been paid; prays for an accounting in accordance with the facts pleaded, as heretofore noted, as to the nature of the action.

The contract, made a part of the petition and the basis of this action, after naming the parties thereto, reads as> follows :

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.W.2d 130, 144 Neb. 256, 1944 Neb. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyhane-v-durtschi-neb-1944.