State Security Savings Co. v. Pelster

296 N.W.2d 702, 207 Neb. 158, 1980 Neb. LEXIS 943
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1980
Docket42766
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 296 N.W.2d 702 (State Security Savings Co. v. Pelster) 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 Security Savings Co. v. Pelster, 296 N.W.2d 702, 207 Neb. 158, 1980 Neb. LEXIS 943 (Neb. 1980).

Opinion

Grant, District Judge.

This is an action to collect on an installment note in the amount of $90,691.86 executed by defendants Pelster in favor of plaintiff, State Security Savings Co., on November 19, 1969. Pursuant to the note, 83 monthly payments of $1,601.61 were to be made beginning December 19, 1969. Defendants made regular interest payments and some principal payments up to May 1971, but were continually behind on the payment of principal. On May 6, 1971, defendants made a single payment of $39,121.01 which brought the loan current and prepaid it through January 1973.

In February 1972, plaintiff learned that defendants were selling some secured livestock and not applying the proceeds to payment on the note. An officer of plaintiff went to defendants, took all the remaining cattle, sold them in February and March of 1972, and applied the proceeds to the note.

The trial court found that plaintiff had accelerated the note by its actions in February and March of 1972 of seizing and selling all the secured cattle remaining in defendants’ possession, and that, since the instant suit was not filed until January 31,1978, it was barred by the statute of limitations. Plaintiff appeals, alleging that the instant action was one solely on the promissory note, which by its terms provided for acceleration only in the event of default in payments; that the note was not in default at the time of the seizure and sale of the remaining cattle in February and March of 1972 and, therefore, could not be accelerated; and that the statute *160 of limitations had not run since it applies to each installment.

The trial court took judicial notice of a security agreement between the parties executed the same day as the promissory note and securing that note. The security agreement was attached, as an exhibit, to a petition filed by plaintiff in a separate subsequent action in the same court against defendants. At the request of defendants, and without objection by plaintiff, the trial court took judicial notice “of the entire file in Case No. 9065 in the District Court of Antelope County, Nebraska, which was filed February 19, 1974, and dismissed by Order of this Court and this judge on March 6,1975.” The terms of the security agreement provided plaintiff with additional grounds for acceleration, including the sale or encumbrance of any of the collateral by defendants or a determination by plaintiff that it deemed itself insecure. The trial court found that the promissory note and security agreement were executed contemporaneously and should be construed together; that plaintiff had deemed itself to be insecure on February 15, 1972, and, by its actions, had declared the entire indebtedness due; that plaintiffs cause of action accrued on or before March 22, 1972, when the seized collateral was sold; and that plaintiffs instant action was barred by the 5-year statute of limitations. We affirm.

The question presented by plaintiff with regard to the judicial notice taken by the trial court is basic to its appeal. Plaintiff, in its first assignment of error, succinctly states its position: “The court erred in basing its order upon a security agreement which was not introduced into evidence at trial but which was attached to the petition of a related case of which judicial notice was taken.”

The standard controlling judicial notice is set out in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-201 (Reissue 1979), which provides, in part: “(2) A judicially noticed fact must be one not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (a) gen *161 erally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (b) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.”

Subsection 2(b) is obviously the section applied by the trial court in this case. We hold that, under the facts of this case, the trial court may take judicial notice of a specific document attached to a petition filed by the same plaintiff against the same defendants in a separate action concerning the same general subject matter in the same court.

First of all, as stated in Witzenburg v. State, 140 Neb. 171, 178, 299 N.W. 533, 537 (1941): “The general rule is that, while a court will take judicial notice of its own records, it will not in one case take judicial notice of the record in another case. Fassler v. Streit, 92 Neb. 786, 139 N.W. 628. However, ‘There may be cases so closely interwoven, or so clearly interdependent, as to invoke a rule of judicial notice in one suit of the proceedings in another suit.’” The instant case is one on the promissory note between the parties and the judicially noticed case was an action for conversion of security based on the same promissory note and the concurrently executed security agreement which secured the note. The two cases are interwoven and interdependent.

Secondly, the security agreement is “capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” The promissory note and the security agreement were both executed on November 19, 1969. Copies of both were attached to a petition filed in the same court on February 19,1974, by the same plaintiff against the same defendants. The 1974 petition, filed by the same reputable attorneys representing plaintiff in the instant action, alleged the execution of the note and security agreement by defendants; alleged that the security agreement was executed to secure payment of the note; and alleged that the security agreement was in full force and effect on the date of the filing of the petition. Clearly, *162 to be the basis of a lawsuit in 1974, the security agreement had to be operative between the parties in 1974. The agreement was operative when executed in 1969, and it had to be operative in February of 1972. The judicially noticed fact — the security agreement — is capable of accurate and ready determination by resorting to a source — a formal petition with attachments — whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned. The same plaintiff and the same attorneys give us no reason why that judicially noticed fact is not a fact operative between the parties.

It should be noted that plaintiff, if it did have objection to the judicial notice taken, had procedural remedies available to it of which it did not avail itself. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-201(5) (Reissue 1979) provides that, “A party is entitled upon timely request to an opportunity to be heard as to the propriety of taking judicial notice and the tenor of the matter noticed. In the absence of prior notification, the request may be made after judicial notice has been taken.” Further, if as mentioned in plaintiffs brief, plaintiff was surprised “that the court took such notice for the purpose of receiving the security agreement as evidence and applying its provisions to the facts at hand,” plaintiffs motion for new trial could have been based on Neb. Rev. Stat. §25-1142(3) (Reissue 1979). That specific section provides that a new trial shall be granted “for any of the following causes, ...

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Bluebook (online)
296 N.W.2d 702, 207 Neb. 158, 1980 Neb. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-security-savings-co-v-pelster-neb-1980.