Vanice v. Oehm

582 N.W.2d 615, 255 Neb. 166, 1998 Neb. LEXIS 191
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1998
DocketS-97-502
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 582 N.W.2d 615 (Vanice v. Oehm) 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
Vanice v. Oehm, 582 N.W.2d 615, 255 Neb. 166, 1998 Neb. LEXIS 191 (Neb. 1998).

Opinion

McCormack, J.

This case was first heard in 1995. See Vanice v. Oehm, 247 Neb. 298, 526 N.W.2d 648 (1995). At that time, appellant herein, Kaer R Vanice III, had filed an action to foreclose on a mortgage, and Gary L. Oehm and Leslie Oehm (appellees) demurred. The district court for Lancaster County, Nebraska, sustained appellees’ demurrer and refused to allow appellant to amend. Because the petition in Vanice, supra, made reference to a note which could potentially allow recovery, this court reversed the judgment and issued a mandate instructing the district court to allow appellant to amend. Appellant then filed an action alleging breach of contract referencing a loan agreement and also seeking an order foreclosing the mortgage which had secured the loan agreement. In this action it was disclosed there was not a note. Appellees answered by filing a cross-petition, seeking to quiet title in the real estate which was the subject of the mortgage claim. The district court ruled in favor of appellees, ruling that the equitable doctrine of laches barred appellant’s claim for breach of contract and that the foreclosure action was barred by the statute of limitations. Appellant then filed an appeal, and on our own motion, we removed the matter to this court under our authority to regulate the caseloads of the Nebraska Court of Appeals and this court. We reverse the district court’s ruling, and remand the matter for a new trial.

BACKGROUND

. In 1980, appellant and appellees entered into an agreement for the purchase and operation of an automobile dealership in Cassville, Missouri. Appellant is the stepfather of Leslie Oehm and the father-in-law of Gary Oehm. Under the agreement, *168 appellant loaned appellees $50,000 to be used as part of the $200,000 purchase price of an existing dealership in Missouri. Appellant paid the other $150,000 of the purchase price himself. Initially, appellant was to own 75 percent and appellees 25 percent of the stock of the dealership. According to the agreement, the parties formed a Delaware corporation licensed to do business in Missouri as Vanice-Oehm Chevrolet, Inc. (VOCI), with appellant as the majority and voting shareholder, and appellees as nonvoting minority shareholders possessing a 25-percent interest. The agreement stipulated that it would be governed by Missouri law.

The $50,000 loan carried an interest rate of 13.5 percent per annum. As security for the loan, appellees gave appellant a mortgage on real estate appellees owned in Lancaster County, Nebraska. At trial, the parties stipulated that appellees made no loan payments to appellant. Appellees purchased a home in Missouri, and both appellees began working at the dealership. The business was unsuccessful, and in 1982, appellees quit the dealership and left Missouri. Appellant then liquidated the corporation unilaterally, making no attempt to settle with appellees for the value of their shares or providing them with an accounting. For 10 years following the liquidation, appellant made no demand for repayment of the $50,000 loan.

In 1992, appellant filed suit, seeking to foreclose on the mortgage which secured the loan. The district court sustained appellees’ demurrer without granting appellant leave to amend. This court held that the mortgage itself provided no schedule of repayments, and as such, the 10-year statute of limitations began to run at the time of the loan. Thus, we reasoned that the statute of limitations expired 10 years after April 1, 1980, more than 29 months prior to the filing of the action. However, we reversed the judgment and remanded the cause because

when a demurrer to a petition is sustained, a court must grant leave to amend, unless it is clear that no reasonable possibility exists that amendment will correct the defect. . . . Since the agreement makes reference to a note, the operative petition raises a possibility that there exists a document which sets forth a payment schedule which *169 might change the maturity date of the debt secured by the mortgage.

Vanice v. Oehm, 247 Neb. 298, 304, 526 N.W.2d 648, 653 (1995).

In ruling on the claims in the case at bar, the district court found that with respect to the foreclosure of the mortgage, the court was in the same position it was at the time of Vanice, supra. Appellant does not challenge the court’s decision as to that claim. With respect to appellant’s second claim, a claim based upon contract, the court found that “Mo. Rev. Stat. §516.200” applied to toll the statute of limitations while either party resided outside of Missouri. This section of Missouri law provided that the statute of limitations is tolled while appellees are absent from the State of Missouri, which they have been since 1982. Although finding that the contract existed and was breached, the district court applied the doctrine of laches to support a judgment in favor of appellees. The district court held that appellant’s claim requesting foreclosure of the mortgage was barred by Nebraska’s 10-year statute of limitations, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-202 (Reissue 1995), which finding is not challenged in this appeal; that appellant did loan appellees $50,000 to purchase a 25-percent interest in VOCI; that appellant’s failure to issue stock to appellees did not constitute a breach or abandonment of that agreement; that the statute of limitations on the contract action was tolled by the Missouri statute of limitations, § 516.200, due to appellees’ absence from the State of Missouri; and that appellant’s recovery on the contract was barred by the equitable doctrine of laches. Judgment was entered in favor of appellees. The district court did not make a specific finding on appellees’ cross-petition to quiet title to the Lincoln real estate in favor of appellees against appellant’s mortgage, but one could infer that since the mortgage on the property was held to be unenforceable, this mortgage would not be a claim or cloud against appellees’ title. Appellant timely filed this appeal.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Appellant assigns that the district court erred in (1) applying the equitable doctrine of laches because appellees’ right to an *170 accounting, if any, was from the corporation, while the underlying debt ran to appellant personally, and (2) applying the doctrine of laches because appellees failed to prove they were prejudiced by appellant’s delay in asserting his rights.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

A suit for damages arising from breach of a contract presents an action at law. Bachman v. Easy Parking of America, 252 Neb. 325, 562 N.W.2d 369 (1997); VRT, Inc. v. Dutton-Lainson Co., 247 Neb. 845, 530 N.W.2d 619 (1995); Production Credit Assn. v. Eldin Haussermann Farms, 247 Neb.

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Bluebook (online)
582 N.W.2d 615, 255 Neb. 166, 1998 Neb. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanice-v-oehm-neb-1998.