Miller v. Kettenbach

109 P. 505, 18 Idaho 253, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 26
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 109 P. 505 (Miller v. Kettenbach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Kettenbach, 109 P. 505, 18 Idaho 253, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 26 (Idaho 1910).

Opinions

STEWART, J.

This is a most comprehensive case, comprehensive in extent of record, in the extent of the briefs and in the manifold questions presented upon the argument. Counsel for appellant opens the discussion of this case with the following statement:

[255]*255“This action is brought to release a guarantor from the payment of certain promissory notes, on the ground that the payee of said notes participated in the fraudulent conveyance of the principal debtor’s property.
“It is neither an- action to set aside a conveyance, on the ground that it was made with intent to defraud creditors, nor an action to participate in the distribution of a fund with other creditors, on the ground that other particular creditors were preferred; and hence we do not attempt to presume that the plaintiff is a judgment creditor or a lienholder of the principal debtor, the Colby, Coryell & Howe Lumber Company, Ltd. (nor do we ask that the plaintiff, the estate of Cary A. Coryell, deceased, be allowed to participate in the distribution of the receipts of such conveyance with the other creditors), but we claim that the Lewiston National Bank, the payee of these promissory notes, is a party to this fraudulent transaction, and for that reason the estate of Cary A. Coryell, deceased is released from the contract of guaranty of the payment of said notes. ”

This statement of the purpose of the action is repeated in different parts of the brief and especially reiterated in the reply brief, and we shall treat the questions from this standpoint. The object and purpose of this action, then, is to cancel and. release the estate of Cary A. Coryell from liability upon a contract of guaranty, indorsed upon certain notes executed by the Colby, Coryell & Howe Lumber Co.

On December 29, 1905, the lumber company executed a note payable on demand to the Lewiston National Bank in the sum of $10,000. Indorsed upon said note was the following guaranty: “For value received I hereby guarantee the payment of the within note and waive protest, demand and notice of nonpayment thereof. C. W. Colby, J. Howard Howe, C. A. Coryell. ’ ’

On March 30, 1906, the lumber company executed a note payable on demand to the Lewiston National Bank in the sum of $10,000. Indorsed upon said note was the following guaranty: “For value received I hereby guarantee the payment of the within note and waive protest, demand and notice [256]*256of nonpayment thereof. C. W. Colby, C. A. Coryell, J. Howard Howe, Lewis Diether.''

On June 13, 1906, the lumber company executed a note ■payable on demand to the Lewiston National Bank in the ■sum of $5,000. Indorsed upon said note was the following-guaranty: “For value received I hereby guarantee the payment of the within note and waive protest, demand and notice of nonpayment thereof. J. Howard Howe, C. A. Coryell, Lewis Diether, C. W. Colby. ’ ’

In this opinion we shall refer to the Colby, Coryell and Howe Lumber Company as the lumber company, to the estate of C. A. Coryell as the estate, and to the Lewiston National Bank as the bank.

On March 2, 1907, Cary A. Coryell died in Lewiston, Idaho, ■ and on April 30, 1907, J. Howard Howe was appointed -administrator. On November 16, 1907, the Lewiston National Bank presented to J. Howard Howe, as administrator, said 'three notes as claims against the estate of Cary A. Coryell. .Before Howe resigned he allowed such claims and afterward .upon protest of the heirs of the estate the allowance was set .aside and the validity of such claims reached this court. Howe resigned as administrator April 30, 1908, and Geo. T. .Miller was appointed as such administrator. Upon a reversal -of said cause said claims finally passed to judgment as claims against the estate of Cary A. Coryell in the district court of Nez Perce county, on November 19, 1909, in which the ■district court rendered judgment in favor of the-bank against the estate for the sum of $38,865.58. An appeal was taken :from that judgment to this court and this court has affirmed :said judgment. (16 Ida. 201, 101 Pac. 723.)

The respondent contends that inasmuch as this is an action -brought for the purpose of releasing the estate upon the •contract of guaranty for the payment of the said notes and ■commenced after the maturity of such notes, and while proceedings were pending for the collection of said notes against the estate in the probate court, in which action full opportunity was given to appellants to make any defense they might have against the enforced payments of said notes, [257]*257that this action cannot be maintained. If this position of respondent is correct,-then it is unnecessary to consider or determine the manifold other questions presented by appellant. „

This action was commenced March 26, 1909, long after the maturity of said notes and after said notes had been filed as claims against the estate, and after heirs of the estate had protested against their allowance.

In the case of County of Ada v. Bullen Bridge Co., 5 Ida. 188, 95 Am. St. 180, 47 Pac. 818, 36 L. R. A. 367, in discussing the right to maintain an -action in equity to cancel a written instrument, this court said:

“Where the invalidity of an instrument appears on its face, or where there is no danger of the instrument passing into the hands of an innocent holder, and where there is an adequate remedy at law, a court of equity will not take jurisdiction -and decree the cancellation of such instrument. (Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, see. 700a; Atlantic Delaine Co. v. James, 94 U. S. 214, [24 L. ed. 112].) In Ada County v. Gess, 4 Ida. 611, 43 Pac. 71 (which was an application for an injunction to restrain the payment of certain county warrants), the court holds that there was a complete and adequate remedy at law, -and therefore equity could not be invoked. (See, also, Morgan v. Board, 4 Ida. 418, 39 Pac. 1118; Rogers v. Hays, 3 Ida. 597, 32 Pac. 259; Clark v. Dayton, 6 Neb. 192.)”

In that case the court comments upon and approves the decision in the case of Farmington Village Corp. v. Sandy River Nat. Bank, 85 Me. 46, 26 Atl. 965, as follows:

“That was a bill in equity praying for a perpetual injunction against the defendants, enjoining them from negotiating or delivering certain bonds issued by -said corporation. It is there held that a court of equity, in a proper case, has full power to order the cancellation of bonds or other written instruments. But that it is a power which the court in its discretion will exercise with care, and only in accordance with what the court believes to be proper and right under the [258]*258circumstances, and that such power will not be exercised where the legal remedy, either affirmative or defensive, would be adequate, certain .and complete. To the same effect is Atlantic Delaine Co. v. James, 94 U. S. 207 [24 L. ed. 112], and Town of Glastenbury v. McDonald, 44 Vt. 450.”

In Ada County v. Bullen Bridge Co., supra, the court also-quotes with approval from Lewis v. Tobias, 10 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
109 P. 505, 18 Idaho 253, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-kettenbach-idaho-1910.