Mead v. City National Bank of Clinton

8 N.W.2d 417, 232 Iowa 1276
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 9, 1943
DocketNo. 46123.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 N.W.2d 417 (Mead v. City National Bank of Clinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mead v. City National Bank of Clinton, 8 N.W.2d 417, 232 Iowa 1276 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

*1277 Hale, J.

R. B. Mead, plaintiff herein, at the time of trial had been a resident of Manchester, Iowa, for about thirty days and previous to that time lived at Whitewood, South Dakota. E. L. Mead, defendant, and a member of the firm of Mead and Rigby, interveners, is the son of R. B. Mead. 0. L. Rigby, or Charles L. Rigby, was the other member of the firm of Mead and Rigby and the husband of Jennie B. Rigby, who died after the transactions involved in this ease took place and for whom Charles L. Rigby, executor, has been substituted. Rigby and wife lived on a 640-acre farm which was carried in the wife’s name and was mortgaged for $53,000. Besides this, C. L. and Jennie Rigby were indebted to the City National Bank of Clinton and the Tipton State Bank and had given notes and mortgages securing such notes to the City National Bank of Clinton covering a large amount of hay and grain and growing crops and other personal property on the farm.

On August 27, 1934, C. L. Rigby and E. L. Mead executed a contract for the creation of what is called in the record a “partnership agreement,” for the purchase, feeding, and sale of lambs, and dealing in livestock. Under this contract Rigby was to sell to the firm of Mead and Rigby 200 tons of soybean hay at $7 per ton, approximately 10,000 bushels of corn growing on the Rigby place, and some fodder, together with the use of feeding yards and some equipment. Mead was to arrange for the financing, purchase the lambs, superintend the feeding, and buy and sell livestock for the firm. The profits were to be divided, the first $100 a month going to Mead, the balance to defray expenses or be divided equally between Mead and Rigby, and all net profits to go one third to Rigby,. one third to Mead, and one third to the company (Mead and Rigby) obligations.

Pursuant to this plan, and during the fall of 1934, the firm purchased about 2,700 head of lambs from plaintiff to be taken to the Rigby farm; some cattle were also purchased from plaintiff and others but were not taken to the farm. Drafts drawn by plaintiff accompanied each shipment of lambs and all drafts so drawn were paid by defendant C. L. Rigby, who, in order to finance such payments, made loans at the banks and paid part of such loans from his own personal account.

*1278 About September 15, 1934, in order to take care of tbe temporary loans made Rigby, he and his partner, Mead, agreed that they would negotiate a loan with the National Livestock Credit Corporation of St. Louis, Missouri, at their Chicago office, and it is claimed that it was agreed between them that this loan from the credit corporation should be made in the name of Jennie B. Rigby. In order to obtain such loan, the City National Bank, which held the mortgage on the feed on the premises, and the Tipton State Bank, had to execute subordination agreements, which placed the National Livestock Credit Corporation mortgage in first place; but the agreement, which was later carried out, provided that to protect the local banks a new mortgage would be executed by Mrs. Rigby and her husband in place of the original chattel mortgages to the City National Bank to secure the indebtedness of the Rigbys to both banks. E. L. Mead, one of the partners, stated that he knew of this additional mortgage before it was executed, receiving the information from Rigby and also from Anderson, president of the Tip-ton State Bank.

Plaintiff claims, and so testified, that a note for $3,043.20 given by C. L. Rigby and E. L. Mead to him was for the balance due' on the lambs. C. L. Rigby, however, testified that the sheep drafts were drawn against him and paid by him personally, and that said note was to take care of a shortage on a draft that had been drawn on the E. L. Mead cattle account in the Union Trust & Savings Bank, that there were no drafts drawn on C. L. Rigby, Mead and Rigby, or E. L. Mead for the sheep which were not paid in the fall of 1934, and that all the drafts for the 2,700 head of lambs fed on the Rigby farm were paid. We are inclined to this view. The note referred to, which one-alleges is a cattle note and the other for the balance on the lambs, was afterward, on April 5, 1937, put in judgment in the amount of $3,627.21 against E. L. Mead and C. L. Rigby individually and not against the partnership of Mead and Rigby. We refer to this action later.

Prior to April 10,1935, it is claimed by defendant banks that neither had any knowledge of any feeding agreement as to the lambs or that E. L. Mead had any interest in them, but on said April 10, 1935, under the mortgage of the City National Bank, *1279 which was executed following the subordination agreement and the then paid National Livestock Credit Corporation mortgage, the remaining 600 or 700 lambs were taken into possession by the sheriff for the City National Bank and sold. It was after that time that plaintiff obtained his judgment, which it is claimed was on the note said to be in payment of cattle.

On April 10, 1935, E. L. Mead brought a partnership-accounting suit against C. L. Rigby and Jennie Rigby. In that action the court found there were no profits, but instead, a loss of $1,200, and that there was nothing due E. L. Mead from the partnership of from Rigby. Practically all of the $1,200 loss, with the exception of about $110, was paid by Mr. and Mrs. Rigby.

The foregoing are the main facts concerning the transactions between the parties hereto.

In the petition in the present action the relief asked is that plaintiff be held entitled to an accounting, that he is entitled to the finding of a constructive trust for his benefit, and to a marshaling of assets, as well as for general equitable relief. All defendants (except E. L. Mead) deny any such rights under the facts of the case. E. L. Mead, on behalf of himself, and, as claimed by him, on behalf of Mead and Rigby, joined with plaintiff and asked that the relief prayed for by plaintiff be granted. On hearing, the district court found against plaintiff, referring in the opinion to the accounting suit between the partners, and held that the claim of a creditor of individual partners could not be greater than that of either partner, and since neither partner had any interest in the partnership, which operated at a loss, no partnership property remained with which a creditor could satisfy his claim against a partner. The court further held that the note in judgment was given for cattle, not for the lambs, and referred to the fact that the testimony of E. L. Mead, nominally a defendant but who actually joined with the plaintiff, was that of an impeached witness and improbable. This is an equity case and as such triable de novo; and an examination of the record inclines us to the court’s view of the evidence.

I. As to his claim for an accounting, plaintiff argues *1280 that partnership property should be applied to the payment of partnership debts, and an individual partner cannot, without his partner’s consent, apply partnership property to the payment of his individual debts. Defendants do not dispute this general rule. In applying it here, we find that R. B. Mead was not a judgment creditor of the partnership. In the action heretofore referred to, in which, on April 5, 1937, judgment was entered against Rigby and E. L.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W.2d 417, 232 Iowa 1276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mead-v-city-national-bank-of-clinton-iowa-1943.