Neiderjohn v. Thompson

264 P. 699, 38 Wyo. 28, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 23
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1928
Docket1395
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 264 P. 699 (Neiderjohn v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neiderjohn v. Thompson, 264 P. 699, 38 Wyo. 28, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 23 (Wyo. 1928).

Opinion

*37 Brown, District Judge.

This suit was brought by R. K. Neiderjohn, Receiver of the First National Bank of Rock River, Wyoming, against H. A. Thompson. The petition sets forth two causes of action. The first to recover the statutory liability of the defendant on fifty shares of the capital stock held by him of the First National Bank of Rock River, Wyoming, at the time it closed its doors; the second on a note given by him to that institution. Plaintiff caused a writ of attachment to issue and served notices of garnishment upon defendant H. A. Thompson, Rock River Mercantile Company, of which company defendant was president and general manager, and upon G. R. McConnell. McConnell answered as garnishee that he held 240 shares of the capital stock of the Rock River Mercantile Company belonging to defendant H. A. Thompson, Defendant in his answer denied that he was indebted to plaintiff. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff. A few days before judgment, F. C. Thompson, a brother of H. A. Thompson, asked to be permitted to intervene in this suit, alleging that he held the 240 shares of capital stock of the Rock River Mercantile Company as collateral security to a note held by him against the defendant H. A. Thompson. In his petition intervener also attacked the garnishment proceedings. He was permitted to intervene without objection. Issue was joined on this petition and trial had. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, Neiderjohn, and against the intervener, F. C. Thompson. H. A. Thompson did not institute an appeal or any error proceedings from the judgment in the main ease. F. C. Thompson appeals from the judgment against him. In this judgment against the intervener, F. C. Thompson, the following language appears, “the court finds in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant H. A. Thompson and the intervener F. C. Thompson.” Both are given an exception to the ruling.

The intervener in his specifications of error sets up some forty-two rulings of the trial court which he now urges as *38 error. The record is somewhat voluminous and the briefs are long1. While we have read the record and briefs and carefully considered each point raised as error, we think it unnecessary to attempt to discuss all of the errors specified in the brief.

As stated above, H. A. Thompson did not appeal from the judgment in the main case. He is, however, attempting to unite with F. C. Thompson in his appeal and therein objecting to the validity of the garnishment proceedings. This we think he cannot do. The intervener was opposed to both the plaintiff and defendant in his petition of intervention. H. A. Thompson is not a party to the contest between the intervener and the plaintiff by virtue of being the defendant in the main case, and was not made a party in the pleadings between them. The judgments in the main case and in the intervention case were separate and distinct. The former was rendered fourteen months before the latter. His name, therefore, in the judgment against the in-tervenor is surplusage. We think therefore that H. A. Thompson waived any irregularity in the attachment and garnishment proceedings and that having failed to bring the judgment against him in the main action into this court for review he cannot now be heard on any of the matters settled by that judgment.

F. C. Thompson came into this action as intervener without objection a few days before judgment in the main case was rendered. The rule established by this court in Stanley v. Foot, 9 Wyo. 335, 63 Pac. 940, is: “A claimant to money garnished, or property attached in an action between other parties cannot intervene in the action for the purpose of having his rights thereto determined.” What effect, if any, the repeal of Sections 4766 and 4768, Wyoming Compiled Statutes 1910, by Chapter 111, Session Laws 1915, may have upon that rule we need not now determine. Apparently all parties were anxious for a speedy determination of the various claims of the parties concerned, and no objection was interposed to the intervention suit. Even *39 though the intervention suit may have been improper, yet since there was no objection, the court could properly determine the issues thereby raised. Schloredt v. Boyden, 9 Wyo. 392, 64 Pac. 225.

The intervener claimed to hold the stock garnished as collateral security to a note he held against IT. A. Thompson. The trial court found against him on this issue of fact. The evidence is too long for us to give it more than a cursory examination. We have, however, carefully considered it in detail. The intervener F. C. Thompson lived in Iowa. He was the owner of a mercantile business'in a small town of 280 inhabitants. He did business through a bank there. He had at one time sent money to his brother here by bank draft. He was paying interest on a loan on a small farm he owned. He sold liberty bonds to buy a stock of hardware. Yet he claimed to have loaned his brother H. A. Thompson $13,500.00 on two occasions; $10,000.00 on the first occasion and $3500.00 on the second occasion, and to have carried this money in currency in a money belt to Wyoming, having accumulated it in his business, hoarding it in a small safe in his bed room. H. A. Thompson on receiving the money, though doing business through the First National Bank of Rock River, and himself being the cashier of that bank, placed it in his safe instead of depositing it with the bank. He borrowed it to purchase stock of dissatisfied stockholders of the Rock River Mercantile Company, yet he had borrowed money from other sources and purchased all of this stock that he ever purchased, before he borrowed from his brother. He loaned most of this money to the Mercantile Company of which he was president and general manager, without the knowledge of any other officer, in little sums as the company needed it, yet the company’s bank account failed to reflect the transaction. He failed to mention the obligation to his brother in a financial statement shortly before the bank failed, made for the purpose of obtaining credit. He was a witness in the criminal trial of Lewis C. Butler and testi *40 fied that he owned 95 per cent of the stock of the Rock River Mercantile Company, which included the 240 shares in question, without mentioning the lien of his brother. In the answer of the Rock River Mercantile Company as garnishee he does not disclose the lien of F. C. Thompson. F. C. Thompson made no claim to a lien on this stock until more than a year after it was garnished and just before judgment in the main action. Whenever the story told by these brothers came in contact with written records, these records contradicted the story. It was corroborated by no independent evidence. There are so many contradictions in this testimony and the story told is so unreasonable when compared with present day business methods, that we think the judgment of the lower court thereon should not be disturbed.

The intervener objected to several irregularities in the garnishment proceedings. This we think he cannot do. It has been held that the intervener must first establish his ownership or interest in the property in question, and failing in that he has no' further interest in the controversy. In 28 C. J.

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Bluebook (online)
264 P. 699, 38 Wyo. 28, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neiderjohn-v-thompson-wyo-1928.