State ex rel. Davis v. Banking House

224 N.W. 21, 118 Neb. 231, 1929 Neb. LEXIS 106
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1929
DocketNo. 26406
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 21 (State ex rel. Davis v. Banking House) 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
State ex rel. Davis v. Banking House, 224 N.W. 21, 118 Neb. 231, 1929 Neb. LEXIS 106 (Neb. 1929).

Opinion

Redick, District Judge.

Claim against the Banking House of A. Castetter, insolvent, in the hands of a receiver, by William Reeh, intervener. The claim was allowed and ordered paid from the depositors’ guaranty fund and the receiver appeals.

Objection to the jurisdiction of this court is made because the transcript was not filed within three months from the date of the decree. A motion for new trial was filed based upon errors occurring at the trial, and transcript was- filed within three months from the date the motion was overruled. This was in ample time. Bowers v. Raitt, 96 Neb. 460.

[233]*233' The facts are as follows: On June 9, 1919, the intervener and F. H. Claridge entered into the following written agreement:

“This agreement made this 9th day of June, 1919, by and between F. H. Claridge and William Reeh, witnesseth, that F.. H. Claridge has sold to William Reeh and William Reeh has bought of F. H. Claridge the following lands in Dakota county, Nebraska, to wit (describing them).” “And the said F. H. Claridge hereby acknowledges receipt of $2,000 in cash as part payment on said land, and the said Reeh hereby agrees to pay $6,500 on 'March 1,1920, and assume a mortgage of $10,000 now upon said land and give a mortgage to said F. H. Claridge of $11,860 due five years after March 1, 1920, bearing 6 per cent, interest from March 1, 1920, and the above amounts being $30,360 or $165 per acre, being the purchase price of the farm; the said Claridge is to pay all taxes of 1919 and prior and pay all interest on the mortgage up to and including March 1, 1920, possession to be given to said Reeh on March 1, 1920, and the said Claridge is to give a warranty deed and to furnish- an abstract showing good and merchantable title; said Claridge is to make a deed to said land at once and place same with the Banking House of A. Castetter, Blair, Nebraska, in escrow, and said Reeh is to make a mortgage as above and deposit same with the above bank.”

While the contract was made in the name of Claridge, the land belonged to the bank of which he was president, and the contract is treated as though made in the name of the bank. The cash payment referred to in the contract was made by Reeh giving his personal check for $750, dated June 9, 1919, and -an assignment to the bank of a note and mortgage of one Jacobson for $1,250. The check was cashed immediately and the $2,000 payment credited to the real estate account of the bank. The next day, June 10, 1919, Reeh executed and delivered to the bank his note for $6,500, due March 1, 1920, a note for $11,860 dated March 1, 1920, and due five years there[234]*234after, and a mortgage on the land securing this second note as provided by the contract. On the same day Claridge executed a warranty deed to Reeh, which was to be delivered to the purchaser March 1, 1920, when he paid the $6,500. note, at which time the mortgage and note for $11,860 were to be delivered to Claridge. The notes, mortgage and deed were left with the bank in escrow awaiting the payment .of the $6,500 note and the furnishing of an abstract by Claridge showing good, merchantable title.

Reeh was unable to pay his note March 1, 1920, and on August 10 executed a new note due March 1, 1921, for $6,100, $400 rent of the farm for 1920 being credited •upon the original note. Matters remained in this situation until March 15, 1921, when the Banking House of A. Castetter was declared insolvent and a receiver appointed under the banking department of the state of Nebraska. Subsequently the receiver, without the knowledge of Reeh, filed the deed and mortgage held in escrow by the bank and brought suit against Reeh on the $6,100 note. Reeh answered that suit setting up want of consideration for the note and secured judgment against the bank, which judgment, on appeal, was aiffirmed by this court.

It therefore appears that the deed of the lands had never been legally delivered to Reeh and, by the judgment referred to, the note of Reeh for $6,100 was without consideration, or the consideration thereof had failed. The defense of want of consideration was based upon the failure of Claridge to furnish an abstract showing good and merchantable title to the lands covered by the contract. The situation then is that the bank retained the $2,000 cash payment on the contract and Reeh has received nothing therefor except the naked title evidenced by the record of the undelivered deed wrongfully withdrawn from escrow.

On June 14, 1926, Reeh intervened in this proceeding, setting up the facts as above outlined, and claiming that [235]*235the $2,000 cash payment was a trust fund or special deposit and praying judgment against the bank and the receiver for that amount with interest at 7 per cent., and that the same ¡be allowed as a preferred claim and paid out of the depositors’ guaranty fund. He also offered to execute and deliver to the bank any instrument necessary to release intervener’s apparent interest in the land by virtue of the recording of the Claridge deed, and prayed that the contract and his note and mortgage for $11,860 be canceled.

So far as the plaintiff’s rights growing out of the contract are concerned, the action is in 'substance one for money had and received, to recover from defendants a sum of money in their hands which in equity and good conscience belongs to intervener. The situation finds its ■analogy in the ordinary case of a contract for the sale of real estate where a cash payment has been made and the vendor thereafter is unable to make title. In such case the vendee is entitled to recover the consideration paid in an action for money had and received, and therefore the judgment of the district court is correct to the extent of its award against the bank.

It is claimed in the brief of appellant that the action is barred by the statute of limitations, but the statute was not pleaded and the point was hot presented to the district court, is not included in the assignments of error in this court and therefore will not be considered.

The real important question involved is the correctness of the order of the district court requiring the judgment of intervener to be paid out of the depositors’ guaranty fund. In this regard the claim of intervener is that, under the circumstances above set forth and the evidence, to which reference will now be made, the $2,000 constituted a “trust fund” or a “special deposit.” To sustain this proposition intervener produces parol evidence, which was admitted by the trial court over objection of receiver, to the effect that, at the time the written contract was entered into between Claridge and Reeh, it was orally [236]*236agreed that the $750 check and the $1,250 note and mortgage constituting the cash payment should be placed in escrow, together with the deed of Claridge and the note and mortgage for $11,860, and held by the bank until the transaction was completed.

The receiver objected to this evidence on the ground that it was thereby sought by parol to change and vary ■the terms of the written contract. If this evidence was ■competent and' sufficient to establish the facts claimed, the fund would have constituted a special deposit, 'entitling the intervener to preferment as claimed; if not, that "portion of the júdgment awarding payment out of the depositors’ guaranty fund is erroneous.

The parol evidence rule is well established in this state (Security Savings Bank v. Rhodes, 107 Neb. 223; Atlas Refining Corporation v. Vaughan, 110 Neb. 753; Davis v. Ferguson, 111 Neb.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 21, 118 Neb. 231, 1929 Neb. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-banking-house-neb-1929.