Reynolds v. First National Bank

87 N.W. 912, 62 Neb. 747, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 282
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1901
DocketNo. 10,308
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 912 (Reynolds v. First National Bank) 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
Reynolds v. First National Bank, 87 N.W. 912, 62 Neb. 747, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 282 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

From a ruling of the trial court sustaining a demurrer to the amended petition of the plaintiff and entry of judgment of dismissal of this action, he prosecutes error proceedings in this court. The petition of the plaintiff, so far as it is necessary to refer in the consideration of the points presented to us for decision, alleges in substance, omitting legal verbiage, that one Dolan was seeking to engage in the retail liquor business, and being largely indebted to the defendant bank it ivas desirous of helping him to engage in such business in order that he might have a good and profitable business and thereby be enabled to make money and pay off his indebtedness to said bank; that for the reason mentioned the bank assisted Dolan to obtain a bond in order that he might obtain a liquor license, which was necessary in order to engage in the retail liquor business; and that on or about April 10, 1890, the said bank, by its managing officer, requested and procured the plaintiff to sign the said liquor bond, representing to him that Dolan was largely indebted to the bank and was to assume large indebtedness to it and that it was to the interest of the bank to help Dolan procure a license and to help him obtain a bond in order that he might conduct the business, make money, and pay off the indebtedness which he was OAving the bank, and that the bank at that time, by its managing officer, verbally promised the plaintiff and orally agreed with him that if he would sign the said liquor bond with the said Dolan, the bank would [749]*749hold him harmless by reason of said signing, and then and there undertook to the said plaintiff to hold him harmless by reason of the signing by the plaintiff of the bond of the said Dolan; that said request and agreement was made by the bank in the usual course of business and as a means of collecting a debt owing it by Dolan which it would otherwise have been unable to collect, and said agreement and promise was a direct promise to pay plaintiff, unconditionally, whatever moneys plaintiff should be compelled to pay and expend by reason of signing said bond, and was made on the bank’s own behalf; that by reason of the said agreement the plaintiff signed the said liquor bond, which was filed and approved on or about the 12th day of April, 1890, and a liquor license was thereupon issued to the said Dolan to conduct a retail liquor business for the period of one year, and that he made payments from moneys realized from said business to the bank upon the said debt owing by him to it as aforesaid; that in August, 1891, suit was instituted for damages against the said Dolan and the sureties on his bond; and that the plaintiff was compelled to and did incur and expend for traveling and incidental expenses, court costs and attorneys’ fees in and about the litigation, and in defending a.gainst the same, the sum sued for, which, it is alleged, by reason of the contract mentioned, the defendant bank is liable for, and for which judgment is asked against it.

Different propositions are presented and argued by counsel for the respective parties for and against the sufficiency of the petition, the principal ones being: (a) that the contract is ultra vires and void as to the bank and therefore unenforceable; (b) that it is void by reason of the statute of frauds, in that it is verbal and not to be performed within one year; and (c) because it is a special promise to answer for the debt, default, or misdoings of another and is not in writing.

It is not incumbent on us to discuss and consider the .three propositions mentioned if any one is regarded as an [750]*750insurmountable obstacle to plaintiff’s recovery on the facts alleged in the petition.

Whether or not the alleged contract is ultra vires, and non-enforceable for that reason, under the facts pleaded, may not be entirely free from doubt, and yet on first impression we are disposed to say it is. We do not, however, in our view of the conclusion which must be reached on the other propositions advanced, deem it best to enter into a discussion of this phase of the case, and therefore, without expressing a positive opinion, pass on to the second question presented, regarding which we think there can exist no substantial grounds for difference of opinion.

If the agreement was not to be performed within one year from the. date of its making, this must be held to be decisive as to the proper disposition of the case on the demurrer to the petition. By section 8 of the statute of frauds (Compiled Statutes, 1901, ch. 32) it is provided that any agreement which by its terms is not to be performed Avithin one year from the making thereof shall be void unless the same or a memorandum thereof be in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged therewith. The plaintiff argues that the agreement on which he grounds his right to a recovery is not Avithin the inhibition of the statute; that the license of the principal on the bond to sell intoxicating liquors was for but the period of one year and that the obligation of the defendant bank to hold the surety on the liquor license bond harmless, and to be performed by it, could by the action of the principal possibly, and even probably, accrue and be discharged Avithin a year from the time of making the contract. Counsel invokes the rule, which is well sanctioned by the decisions of the courts, and generally held to by the text-writers, that an agreement is not- to be declared void, as coming Avithin the provisions of the statute, because not to be performed Avithin a year from the making thereof, if the performance of the contract depends upon a contingency which may happen Avithin the year, although in fact it does not happen-until after the [751]*751(expiration of the year. On this same phase of the subject this court has spoken in a well considered ease by its present chief justice, and we can not do better than to reiterate the rule therein announced, as a working basis for what may hereafter be said. In Powder River Live-Stock Co. v. Lamb, 38 Nebr., 339, it is held that such a contract to be void must be one that by its terms is not to be performed within one year from the making thereof, and that the statute does not refer to such contracts as may possibly or probably not be performed within that time. Says the author: “The statute does not include a verbal agreement which may possibly or probably not be performed within a year, nor does it apply to a parol contract, in the terms of which there is nothing inconsistent with a full and complete performance within such period. When a contract, not in writing, by its terms, or by any fair and reasonable construction of its provisions, is capable of being performed within a year, it is not within the statute.” And further on: “On the contrary, the doctrine established by the adjudications of this country is that, in order to bring a case within the operation of the statute of frauds, there must be an express and specific stipulation in the contract that it is not to be performed within the year, or it must appear therefrom that it was not the intention of the parties the agreement should be performed within that period”; citing Treat v. Hiles, 32 N. W. Rep. [Wis.], 517; Baker v. Lauterback, 11 Atl. Rep. [Md.], 703; Aiken v. Nogle, 47 Kan., 96; Durham v. Hiatt, 127 Ind., 514; Kent v. Kent, 62 N. Y., 560; Barton v. Gray, 57 Mich., 622; Horner v. Frazier, 4 Atl. Rep. [Md.], 133; Smalley v. Greene, 3 N. W. Rep. [Ia.], 78.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 912, 62 Neb. 747, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-first-national-bank-neb-1901.