Rehder v. Rankin

91 N.W.2d 399, 249 Iowa 1201, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 28, 1958
Docket49435
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 91 N.W.2d 399 (Rehder v. Rankin) 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
Rehder v. Rankin, 91 N.W.2d 399, 249 Iowa 1201, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 349 (iowa 1958).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

This is a suit to quiet title to and partition a town lot and house' and personal property including a bank deposit, all standing in the name of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company, Palo, Iowa, a voluntary unincorporated association, and to dissolve said association. This association operated a switchboard for approximately ten telephone lines around and in that town. .Each line ivas owned by various persons who lived alongside it. Each subscriber furnished his own telephone and equipment and part of the line.

In 1905, or prior thereto, these lines had joined in securing and operating the switchboard which connected, them with each other and, with commercial long-distance toll lines. According to its records this unincorporated association, prior to 1920, called itself Palo Independent Switchboard Company. Its affairs were managed by directors, selected by and representing each associated mutual line. Switchboard operating expenses were obtained by assessments of a few dollars per year against each telephone. The switchboard was installed in dwellings in Palo *1203 wbieh were rented by tbe switchboard company and in which the person employed to operate the switchboard resided. This method of operation required frequent moving- of the switchboard. To avoid this, the lot and house involved in this suit was purchased in 1920-1921, and was thereafter used for that purpose. The money for the purchase was furnished by some, but not 'all, of the members of the association, and one of the issues here is whether these persons who paid for the property became its owners as individuals.

In 1920 representatives of the various telephone lines started to organize a corporation to operate the switchboard and control such lines. The name of the corporation was to be Farmers Mutual Telephone Company of Palo. Articles of Incorporation were executed and by-laws were approved. However, subsequent investigation of similar operations in a neighboring town resulted in a decision not to form a corporation. Hence the articles were not filed and the planned organization was abandoned. Thereafter operations were carried on as formerly by the unincorporated association under the name of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company. Although, from time to time, changes were made in some details of its organization and operations, it continued to function in the same general manner until 1956. In that year Palo Cooperative Telephone Association, a corporation, was organized to furnish telephone service for the territory then served by the Farmers Mutual. The directors and most of the officers of the new corporation were the same as those of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company.

The new' company raised $30,000 by the sale of its capital stock, and purchased a building, telephone equipment, wires and poles. It commenced operations in 1957. With its more modern .equipment and service it promptly and almost completely superseded the old switchboard company. Several, only, of the one hundred and thirty old telephones remained installed, calls through the old switchboard decreased to less than one per day and it no longer had toll connections with outside lines. It levied no annual assessment in 1957 and virtually discontinued its operations.

After this suit was instituted in 1956 as a partition suit, amendments to the petition were filed, in one of which the *1204 dissolution of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company was sought. By amendment it was pleaded, also, that the suit was brought against the defendants individually and as representatives of all members of defendant Farmers Mutual Telephone Company, as a class. There were twenty named plaintiffs and fifty-four named defendants including the directors and officers of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company and the company itself. Upon trial the court ordered and adjudged that the real estate be partitioned among certain plaintiffs and defendants as contributors to the purchase fund and that a further hearing be had to determine the share of each. The ■ judgment entry recited also that the amendment which sought the dissolution of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company, for the purpose of distributing its personal property, including the bank deposit approximating $4000, was not proper. From the part of the judgment partitioning the realty among such contributors, etc., defendants have appealed.

Plaintiffs have appealed from the parts of the judgment adverse to them. Their brief states: “The court erred in denying partition of the bank account of the Farmers Mutual Telephone Company.” Defendants do not resist plaintiffs’ appeal and, in oral argument, request that all the affairs of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company be settled in this suit.

I. Plaintiffs pleaded that in March 1921 they and certain defendants pooled their resources and, with $15 contributed by each, purchased the house and lot for $1350, for the purpose of an accommodation for use as a terminal for the telephone lines, the owners of which agreed to pay for the maintenance thereof and that the title to said real estate was, for convenience, taken in the name of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company. The answer denied these allegations and alleged the ownership of the property was intended to be and was taken in the name of Farmers Mutual Telephone Company, a voluntary unincorporated association, whose members had no severable interest in its assets.

The purchase of this property was made through Farmers Mutual Telephone Company and title was taken in that name, but only part of the owners of telephones serviced by the switchboard contributed to the purchase fund. Plaintiff C. Ira Lewis, *1205 who, as secretary of tbe switcbboard company, participated actively in the transaction, testified the $1350 purchase price was obtained by the subscription of ninety shares of $15 each (there were some half shares), and that each subscriber owned a share or shares in the property, which he might sell or otherwise dispose of, or which would be taken over by the company on a siiding scale of prices. Witnesses for defendants disagreed with this version of the transaction.

Apparently there were no written rides or regulations of the switchboard company which might bear upon this issue. However, various purchases of shares in the real estate made by the company, as shown by its books of account, support plaintiffs’ contention and the testimony of the witness Lewis. The books of the company show payment, October 13, 1921 to T. Cole $15 for “share in house.” Subsequent payments thus shown are: “G-. B. Wright, share, $6.00; J. G. Mather, share $12.00; 1922, S. R. Fraken, share $12.00; 1923, Lint, share $11.00; and 1927, Geo. Greenwood, house share, $11.00.” The consideration for an $11 payment made Harry Vogt is not shown. These purchases of shares in the house were made by Farmers Mutual Telephone Company from time to time over a term of years. They furnish strong evidence that the members of the association understood that the persons who sold it the shares in the house owned such shares. It should be observed that the list of such purchases is not here presented as being complete or without error.

The trial court found the real estate was purchased by contributing persons, under the agreement, substantially as contended by plaintiffs, that each contributor to the purchase price would own a share therein proportionate to his contribution.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.W.2d 399, 249 Iowa 1201, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rehder-v-rankin-iowa-1958.