Title & Trust Co. v. United States FidelIty & Guaranty Co.

32 P.2d 1035, 147 Or. 255, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 121
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 P.2d 1035 (Title & Trust Co. v. United States FidelIty & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Title & Trust Co. v. United States FidelIty & Guaranty Co., 32 P.2d 1035, 147 Or. 255, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 121 (Or. 1934).

Opinions

ROSSMAN, J.

Since complete statement of the controversy out of which this appeal arose and a copy of the bond upon which it is predicated are set forth in our decision entitled Title & Trust Company v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, 138 Or. 467 (1 P. (2d) 1100, 7 P. (2d) 805), we shall now confine ourselves to only a brief statement.

*257 E. Henry Wemme, who died December 17, 1914, owning 98 of the 100 shares of the capital stock of The E. Henry Wemme Company, directed in his will that the corporation should pay to Hattie E. Miller and Mamie Karlan $35 a month during the remainder of their lives. For many months following Wemme’s death the corporation made these payments, but in February, 1927, discontinued them. May 7, 1927, the two women instituted a suit to enforce payment of the annuities, to enjoin the corporation from further disposing of its assets, and to compel it to set aside sufficient of its assets to create á trust fund out of which payment of the annuities would be assured. At the time of the filing of the complaint the circuit court issued a temporary injunction restraining the corporation from transferring the two items of its assets specifically mentioned in the complaint. July 19, 1927, the corporation moved for a vacation of the temporary restraining order, which motion was granted after it had supplied the dissolution bond with which we are now concerned. The only portion of the bond of which we need now take notice provides:

<ÉNow, therefore, we, The E. Henry Wemme Company and the Overlook Land Company, as principals, and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Maryland and authorized under the laws of the State of Oregon to transact the business of surety, as surety, hereby undertakes that if the defendants above named carry out any decree which may be given against them, not exceeding the sum of Ten Thousand and 00/100 ($10,000.00) Dollars, then this obligation shall be null and void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

December 12,1928, the circuit court disposed of the cause by a decree which (1) granted each of the two women judgment against the Wemme Company for the *258 sum of $35 a month for the term extending from March, 1927, to December, 1928; (2) appointed the Title & Trust Company, the present plaintiff, trustee to collect from the Wemme Company $20,000 as a trust fund to assure payment of the annuities; and (3) empowered the trustee, in the event that the Wemme Company did not voluntarily deliver to the trustee sufficient of its assets to make the trust fund, to institute action against it and also against the present defendant, as surety upon the aforementioned undertaking.

After the entry of the decree no sums were delivered to the Title & Trust Company for the creation of the trust fund, and on April 4, 1929, the present plaintiff instituted this action against the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, praying judgment for the sum of $10,000. Upon trial the desired judgment was rendered, but upon appeal was reversed. See Title & Trust Company v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, 138 Or. 467 (1 P. (2d) 1100, 7 P. (2d) 805). After the cause had been remanded to the circuit court the plaintiff amended its complaint, but without effecting any material change in it. One portion of the new material alleges:

“Hattie E. Miller is living and of the age of 60 years, and Mamie Karlan is living and of the age of 53 years, and the life expectancy as of December 12,1928, of Hattie E. Miller is-years, and of Mamie Karlan is 23 years.”

After the amended complaint had been filed the defendant filed a demurrer

“on the ground and for the reason that said alleged cause of action stated therein is not brought or stated by the real party in interest, and that said Title & Trust Company has not the capacity to sue in that the amended complaint shows affirmatively that Hattie E. *259 Miller and Mamie Karlan are the real parties in interest; and upon the further ground that the decision on the petition for rehearing in the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon, as rendered by the Honorable Judge Kelly, held, found and determined that the real parties in interest were Hattie E. Miller and Mamie Karlan and not the Title & Trust Company. * * *”

The defendant, without obtaining a ruling upon this demurrer, filed its answer which made no special mention of the plaintiff’s lack of interest. This answer, after many denials, plead a second affirmative defense from which we quote:

“Thereafter in order to secure the dissolution of said injunction the Overlook Land Company and the E. Henry Wemme Company tendered a bond signed by this defendant; that in and by the terms of said bond this defendant agreed to abide by any valid decree entered in said cause; that the only valid decree entered in said cause was for a judgment approximating the sum of Fourteen Hundred ($1,400.00) Dollars and this is the only amount for which this defendant is liable or may become liable under the terms of the decree and bond.”

These averments are followed by a third affirmative defense from which we quote:

“If it be found upon the trial of this cause that the measure of damages to which plaintiff is entitled is the loss plaintiff sustained by reason of the dissolution of the injunction, the plaintiff could not recover a sum in excess of Three Thousand ($3,000.00) Dollars.”

The bill of exceptions recites that before the trial the defendant demurred

“to both the complaint and the amended complaint and also the supplemental complaint on the ground and for the reason that neither of the said complaints states the cause of action which they claim for them; for the further reason that the complaint — in the *260 complaint it says that this plaintiff, the Title & Trust Company, has no interest and is not the real party in interest. * * * The pleadings show that Hattie E. Miller and Mamie Karlan are the real parties in interest instead of Title & Trust Company”.

This oral demurrer did not expressly mention any contention that the complaint failed to state a cause of action. It was overruled. Upon the trial this evidence disclosed substantially the same facts as were revealed upon the first trial except that the two annuitants stated their ages.

We shall now consider the contentions advanced by the defendant which challenge the plaintiff’s right to maintain this action. Section 1-301, Oregon Code 1930, provides that “every action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest”. In our decision disposing of the first appeal, Mr. Justice Kelly, in stating the rules governing the measurement of damages, analyzed the cause of action which arose when the provisions of the undertaking, signed by the defendant, were breached. Since this analysis clearly points out the real parties in interest, we deem it useful to quote from the decision the following:

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Union Oil Co. of Calif. v. Lull
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Bluebook (online)
32 P.2d 1035, 147 Or. 255, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-trust-co-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-or-1934.