Michigan Trust Co. v. City of Red Cloud

96 N.W. 140, 69 Neb. 585, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 78
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1903
DocketNo. 12,272
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 N.W. 140 (Michigan Trust Co. v. City of Red Cloud) 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
Michigan Trust Co. v. City of Red Cloud, 96 N.W. 140, 69 Neb. 585, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 78 (Neb. 1903).

Opinions

Albert, C.

This case is before us a second timé. The former opinion is reported in 3 Neb. (Unof.) 722, where the facts are set forth at length.

1. As on the former hearing, the sufficiency of the petition is assailed on the ground, among others, that it fails to comply with sections 850 and 851 of the code, which require a petition for the foreclosure of a mortgage to state whether any proceedings at law have been had for the recovery of the debt secured by the mortgage sought to be foreclosed. The petition in this case deals with the trust deed as a mortgage, and the decree is an ordinary decree of foreclosure, hence, the sufficiency of the petition is to be tested by the rules governing pleadings in actions brought for the foreclosure of mortgages.

The sections above referred .to are as follows:

Section 850. “Upon filing a petition for the foreclosure or satisfaction of a mortgage, the complainant shall state therein whether any proceedings have been had at law for the recovery of the debt secured thereby, or any part [587]*587thereof, and whether such debt, or any part thereof, has been collected and paid.”

Section 851. “If it appear that any judgment has been obtained in a suit at law for the money demanded by such petition, or any part thereof, no proceedings shall.be/had in such case, unless, to an execution against the property of the defendant in such judgment, the sheriff or other proper officer shall have returned that the execution is unsatisfied in whole or in part, and that the defendant has no property whereof to satisfy such execution except the mortgaged premises.”

The petition is wholly silent as to the matters mentioned in the sections just quoted. 1‡ does, however, allege,the recovery of a judgment against the banking company on the indebtedness sought to be-enforced in this action, and the return unsatisfied of an execution issued thereon. In the former opinion it was held that such allegation was a sufficient compliance with said sections. A reexamination of the question satisfies us that our former conclusion on that question is wrong. The banking company was the principal debtor and four of the grantors under the trust deeds guarantors on the certificates. The plaintiff had a remedy at law, not only against the principal debtor, but against the grantors. It also had its remedy in equity against the, trust property. The object of section 850 is to prevent a creditor from pursuing its remedy at law and in equity concurrently. Hargreaves v. Menken, 45 Neb. 668. Hence, the allegation showing the extent to which the plaintiff had pursued its remedy at law against the principal debtor, falls far short of showing that when this action was brought, the plaintiff was not proceeding by concurrent actions at law against the guarantors of the certificates, secured by the trust deed sought to be foreclosed in this action; for that reason the petition fails to comply with the requirements of that section. That a petition for the foreclosure of a mortgage, which fails to comply with such requirements, is insufficient to support the decree is settled by numerous authorities, among which [588]*588are the following: Jones v. Burtis, 57 Neb. 604; Kirby v. Shrader, 58 Neb. 316; Miller v. Nicodemus, 58 Neb. 352.

2. But there-is another question in this case which goes more to the merits of the controversy, and that is: Whether the written directions, prescribing the order in which the trust property was to he sold, and which accompanied the trust deeds at the time of their delivery, are binding on the beneficiaries; because, if they are, it necessarily follows that the property of the banking company and of the resident stockholders should be exhausted, before the plaintiff in this case should be permitted to resort to that covered by the trust deed sought to be foreclosed. On the former hearing, we resolved this question against the appellant, on the ground that there was sufficient evidence to support a finding that such directions were merely the result of an agreement between the grantors, to which the beneficiaries were not parties. The evidence which we held sufficient to that end is set out in the former opinion; an examination of it will disclose that, so far as it touches the precise question before us, it is more in the nature of a conclusion or an opinion of the witness, as to the legal effect of the transaction, than of what actually occurred.

Besides, its force is somewhat weakened by some inaccuracies in the testimony of the witness taken as a whole, which go to show that his recollection of the transaction is not entirely clear. For example, he testifies that the trust deeds were all alike, and in no manner different as to their terms and conditions. The record discloses a substantial difference between the trust deed involved in this case, and those given by the other grantors. Again, he testifies that the grantor under this deed was a director as well as a stockholder of the banking company. Such is not the case; he was merely a stockholder. Standing opposed to the testimony of that witness, is that of two other witnesses, to the effect, that the written directions accompanied the trust deeds at the time of their delivery in escrow, and as part of the same transaction. One of these witnesses was the mayor of the defendant city at the [589]*589time, and the custodian selected to hold the deeds in escrow. The testimony on this point is all in the form of depositions, so that the trial court was in no better position to weigh it accurately than this court. That being true, and the case being here for trial do novo, we cannot give full force to the usual presumptions indulged in favor of the finding's of a trial court on conflicting evidence. Gibson v. Hammang, 63 Neb. 349. While the testimony of none of the witnesses on this point is entirely clear, as to all the details, it conclusively shows that the written directions, as to the order in which this property was to he sold, were delivered to the custodian, mayor of the defendant city, with the trust deeds and as part of the same transaction, to be delivered to the trustee. The fact, standing alone and without explanation, would show, prima facie, that such transaction entered into was a part of the contract, -and that all prior negotiations between the parties had been included in the written documents, namely, the trust deeds and the written directions, which the parties had settled upon as containing the final propositions, to which they had given their assent. Whatever may have been the prior negotiations of the parties, it is the written contract actually delivered, which the plaintiff seeks to enforce in this action, and it must accept it as an entirety, or not at all. Assuming, then, that the plaintiff should be permitted to show by parol testimony that it was not intended that the written directions accompanying the deeds were to be binding on it and the other beneficiaries, it should he required to establish that proposition by a preponderance of the evidence. This, in our opinion, it has failed to do. On the contrary, the evidence on that question preponderates in favor of the appellants. We are forced to the conclusion, therefore, that the written directions, for the sale of the property in the order therein prescribed, were a part of the contract whereby the trust Avas created.

The legal effect, then, of the poAver of sale contained in the trust deed in question, taken in connection with those [590]

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Related

Dier v. Dier
4 N.W.2d 731 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1942)
Colby v. Foxworthy
114 N.W. 174 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1907)
Michigan Trust Co. v. City of Red Cloud
107 N.W. 760 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 N.W. 140, 69 Neb. 585, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-trust-co-v-city-of-red-cloud-neb-1903.