Sharmer v. McIntosh

61 N.W. 727, 43 Neb. 509, 1895 Neb. LEXIS 298
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1895
DocketNo. 5420
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 727 (Sharmer v. McIntosh) 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
Sharmer v. McIntosh, 61 N.W. 727, 43 Neb. 509, 1895 Neb. LEXIS 298 (Neb. 1895).

Opinion

Irvine, C.

Sharmer brought his action in the district court of Cheyenne county, alleging that the defendant Frank B. Johnson and Samuel C. Morgan had been copartners, doing business as bankers under the name of the State Bank of Sidney, in the town of Sidney, and continued to conduct said business until June 27, 1889, when Morgan died intestate; that the defendant McIntosh was his administrator; that Johnson, since the death of Morgan, had refused to administer the affairs of the partnership and had at all times since Morgan’s death denied the existence of the partnership; that the plaintiff had deposited divers sums with the bank and had performed labor for the bank, and that the indebtedness from the bank to the plaintiff at the time of Morgan’s death was $4,477.71; that the bank had from time to time given to plaintiff security for the indebtedness to him, usually notes and other evidences of indebtedness belonging to the bank, and that at the time of Morgan’s death the plaintiff held as security for the balance due him certain securities named in the petition. Among these were two cóunty warrants, and the remainder thereof were notes made or indorsed to the bank; that McIntosh claimed that Morgan was the owner of Said instruments and was threatening to collect the same from the debtors, and that because of the controversy as to the ownership of said instruments the debtors refused to pay the same, and there was great dan[512]*512ger of loss unless they could be collected before the question as to their ownership should be decided. The petition further alleged that Johnson and the estate of Morgan were both insolvent. The prayer was for an injunction restraining the defendants from intermeddling with the notes or warrants or taking any proceedings in relation thereto, for a receiver to take possession thereof, to collect them and to retain the proceeds to abide the final order of the court, for judgment against Johnson and the administrator of Morgan for the amount of the debt, and for a decree establishing the plaintiff’s lien upon the notes and warrants, and that the proceeds thereof be applied to the payment of plaintiff. A receiver was appointed as prayed. After the commencement of the suit, McIntosh was in another action appointed receiver of the bank upon the ground that Johnson denied the partnership and refused to exercise the duties of a surviving partner. These facts were set up by supplemental pleadings. Johnson made default; McIntosh, as Morgan’s administrator and as receiver of the bank, answered, denying the allegations of plaintiff’s petition and averring that all the notes and warrants referred to in the petition were at the time of Morgan’s death the property of and in the possession of the bank; that plaintiff was employed by the bank and subsequently to the death of Morgan unlawfully took into his possession the notes and warrants and appropriated them to his own use. There was a trial to the court and finding for the plaintiff and a decree according to the prayer of the petition. From this decree McIntosh appeals.

Before answering McIntosh had demurred to the petition,, and the first reason urged by appellants against the decree is that the court erred in overruling this demurrer. The appellant, by answering over, waived the right to have the demurrer considered as such, but, of course, if.the petition did not state a cause of action the decree was erroneous and should be reversed for that reason. The only [513]*513defect in the petition suggested is that it does not allege -that the bank or Morgan delivered the notes to plaintiff in pursuance of any agreement. The petition alleges that an ■indebtedness had existed for a long time from the bank to plaintiff, and that it was the custom and manner of business between plaintiff and the bank for the bank to give plaintiff security from time to time, usually in the form of notes and other evidences of indebtedness; that the custom had been for plaintiff to permit the bank from time to time to withdraw from pledge such notes, substituting others therefor ; that it had formerly been the custom to endorse such notes to the plaintiff, but that latterly, for fear that such indorsements might impair the financial standing of the bank, it had become the custom to deliver such notes as security without indorsement; that at the time of the death of Morgan, “there were in the hands of this plaintiff in pledge as collateral security upon the same indebtedness the following evidences of indebtedness,” etc. These averments were not very specific and the petition was probably •open to a motion to make them more so, but.no such motion having been made we think they were sufficient allegations, •coupled with the other averments, to state a cause of action. The fair and ordinary interpretation of the language would be that the notes were in plaintiff’s hands as collateral security to his debt in pursuance of a contract with the bank to that effect.

The next objection made to the proceedings is that the court refused the appellants’ request to impanel a jury and try the issues thereto. There is no merit in this objection. The constitutional provision is that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate. (Constitution, art. 1, sec. 6.) But this does not mean that in all cases a party has a right to have the facts determined by a jury. The provision preserves the right to jury trial as it existed when it was adopted, but it does not create or extend such right. There never was, and there is not now, any constitutional or statutory [514]*514right to a jury trial in an equitable action. (Dohle v. Omaha Foundry & Machine Co., 15 Neb., 436. Section 280 of the-Code provides that issues of fact arising in actions for the-recovery of money or of specific real or personal property shall be tried by a jury, unless a jury trial is waived, or a. reference made as elsewhere in the Code provided; and section 281 provides that all other issues of fact shall be-tried by the court subject to its power to order any issue or-issues to to be tried by a jury or referred. This action was not for the recovery of any specific real or personal property, nor was it in the technical sense an action for the recovery of money. The petition stated a case for equitable relief, and when a cause of action for equitable relief is' stated and equitable relief is prayed a jury cannot be demanded as a matter of right for the trial of any issue in the case.

All the other arguments are directed against the admission of certain testimony. It has been frequently said that where a case is tried to the court without the intervention of a'jury, the admission of improper testimony is not in itself ground for reversal. A judgment in such a case must be affirmed notwithstanding the admission of such improper evidence, unless upon the evidence properly admitted and the law applicable to the facts established thereby, the judgment was wrong. Our inquiry should,, therefore, be not simply whether the evidence complained of was improperly admitted, but whether the evidence properly admitted sustained the finding of the court. From the circumstances of the case, probably, the evidence is very meager. The bank was managed by Morgan; Sharmer was employed therein. These two men transacted all the business and no one except them was familiar with the transactions in controversy. The appellant argues with much earnestness that under the circumstances Sharmer was not a competent witness. This was formerly the law. (Gen. Stats., p. 582, sec. 329; Wamsley v. Crook, 3 Neb., [515]*515344.) But this section was amended (Session'Laws, 1883, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 727, 43 Neb. 509, 1895 Neb. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharmer-v-mcintosh-neb-1895.