Oliver v. Lansing

67 N.W. 195, 48 Neb. 338, 1896 Neb. LEXIS 69
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1896
DocketNo. 6428
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 67 N.W. 195 (Oliver v. Lansing) 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
Oliver v. Lansing, 67 N.W. 195, 48 Neb. 338, 1896 Neb. LEXIS 69 (Neb. 1896).

Opinion

Ryan, 0.

On the 22d day of September, 1892, Henry Oliver filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of Lancaster county his petition, in which he averred that in 1872 plaintiff! was an infant; that in said year 1872 the defendant married the plaintiff’s sister; that since said marriage until the disagreements in the petition described plaintiff had trusted defendant as though he had been plaintiff’s older brother; that since the year 1883 the defendant had resided in the city of Lincoln, while the plaintiff was residing in New York, Georgia, and North Carolina, until the month of March, 1891, during which time the plaintiff had large property interests in Lincoln, the management of which, by reason of his confidence in defendant, plaintiff intrusted to said defendant; that by reason of sales and rents collected the defendant had during this time received large sums of money, and had paid out money for taxes, repairs, and other purposes; that in the month of March, 1891, plaintiff became, and has since continued to be, a resident of the city of Lincoln. It will avoid the necessity [345]*345of again reciting the above facts to note, at this otherwise inappropriate place, that the evidence clearly substantiated each of the above allegations. As a reason for not bringing this action earlier than September 22, 1892, plaintiff averred in his petition that, after March, 1891, plaintiff, owing to his faith in the integrity of defendant and in defendant’s repeated promises to account for all moneys of plaintiff received and disbursed by defendant between 1883 and March, 1891, was induced to expect that an amicable adjustment might be made as to matters unsettled between plaintiff and defendant As often happens in matters of accounting, the dispute between these parties litigant at the trial narrowed down to the consideration of but few of the disputed items, in this particular case three in number, as to which, as briefly as possible, the issues joined shall now be described. *

In October, 1885, plaintiff, then a resident of Charlotte, North Carolina, was the owner of lot 9, in block 220, of the city of Lincoln, which lot was then under the management of the defendant; that at defendant’s request plaintiff signed in blank a deed, which was left Avith defendant for immediate use in case a sale of such lot could be made; that on October 8, 1885, the defendant sold said lot to J. B. Trickey for the actual consideration of $450, and, by the use of aforesaid blank deed, effected a conveyance thereof to Trickey Avithout informing plaintiff of the terms of such sale. It was further charged by plaintiff that the defendant fraudulently concealed the real consideration for the sale of lot 9, block 220, aforesaid, and of the real amount, $450, only accounted for $125, which sum the defendant represented- was the entire consideration paid him for said lot. In his answer the defendant admitted the sale of the aforesaid lot, but alleged that the consideration Avas a diamond ring of the value of no more than $125, which sum defendant averred he had paid to plaintiff, and that said sum was the fair and reasonable value of said lot. [346]*346The defendant, further answering in this connection, alleged that he had informed the plaintiff of the true consideration of said sale, and had offered to turn said ring oyer to said plaintiff, if plaintiff so desired, but that plaintiff had refused to receive said ring and had expressed himself perfectly satisfied with the aforesaid amount received.

Of the three specially disputed items, the second was of the following nature, as described in the petition: Plaintiff for about two years before July 1, 1889, was a resident of Atlanta, Georgia, and just preceding the date just named sent to defendant a draft for the sum of f22,435.70 for investment in Lincoln real property, productive of a revenue and centrally located, at judicious prices according to the best judgment of the defendant, and that though such property could have then been easily purchased, the defendant did not follow plaintiff’s instructions, but about' July 10, 1889, falsely advised plaintiff that he was unable to buy property of the hind indicated, but had made to plaintiff a conveyance of block 9, containing sixteen lots, in East Lincoln, for $16,000, which was, as he represented, a less price than equally valuable property could have been purchased from any one else, and that at said price block 9 aforesaid would be a safe and profitable investment. The defendant in his answer denied that he had been directed to purchase improved, productive, and centrally located Lincoln property, but alleged that about July 1, 1889, plaintiff “transmitted said sum of $22,435.70 to the defendant, with the directions to invest the same in such real estate in the city of Lincoln as should by the defendant be selected and by him considered a safe and profitable investment,” etc. The defendant in this connection made other averments of a ratification of the above transaction, with full knowledge of its nature, to which reference may be made later, but which need not now be further referred to in describing the issues specially contested. [347]*347Another of the three transactions above referred to “was one in respect to which plaintiff was granted relief, and which, in the petition, was described in effect as follows : During the month of August, 1889, the defendant, having in his hands the aforesaid $22,435.70, wrote to plaintiff at Atlanta, Georgia, pretending to have found •an opportunity to purchase a piece of ground of fifty feet frontage on O street, near Twentieth, in the city of Lincoln, for $4,700, which was a low price, and advised plaintiff to purchase the same as a safe and desirable investment, and that plaintiff having answered authorizing the defendant to exercise his own judgment as to this proposed purchase, the defendant replied that he had purchased said property for plaintiff for $4,700, whereas in truth and in fact the defendant had purchased but twenty-five feet frontage for $1,700, and for the other twenty-five feet had turned in property which he himself owned, of no greater value than the twenty-five feet which he had bought, but for the twenty-five feet which he turned in the defendant charged the plaintiff $3,000. In this connection plaintiff alleged that he did not discover until May of 1892 that the defendant had conveyed to him the twenty-five feet aforesaid and that he had charged him therefor $1,300 in excess of what defendant had paid for the same area of just as valuable property lying contiguous thereto. This petition closed with the following prayer:

“Plaintiff therefore prays:

“1. That the title to said block 9, in East Lincoln, held by plaintiff under said deed of conveyance of date February 10, 1888, from defendant, be decreed to be merely in trust for defendant, and that upon delivery to defendant, or to the clerk of the court for defendant’s use, of a deed of conveyance thereof free and clear of any liens or incumbrances placed thereon by plaintiff, the plaintiff be discharged and released from said trust.

“2. For an accounting by defendant to plaintiff covering all moneys and credits and properties received and [348]*348controlled, rents and profits, receipts and disbursements thereof, or therefrom, in the said business of handling plaintiff’s money and property from the year 1883.

“3.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 N.W. 195, 48 Neb. 338, 1896 Neb. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-lansing-neb-1896.