Ward v. Yarnelle

91 N.E. 7, 173 Ind. 535, 1910 Ind. LEXIS 59
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1910
DocketNo. 21,324
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 91 N.E. 7 (Ward v. Yarnelle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Yarnelle, 91 N.E. 7, 173 Ind. 535, 1910 Ind. LEXIS 59 (Ind. 1910).

Opinion

Myers, J.

There was a decree in the court below marshaling the assets of a corporation organized for building purposes, whose sole property consisted of real estate with a theater building situate upon it. The property was ordered [540]*540sold, and the proceeds directed paid in five classes indicated as A to E, both inclusive. Class A consisted of three parties, who are appellees, and who had furnished theatrical scenery, installed an elevator, and furnished the seatings for the theater, under contract by which the title was to remain in them until the property should be paid for. Class B included fourteen parties to this appeal, appellees, who had furnished labor or material in the construction of the building, and who had filed mechanics’ liens. Class C consisted of one party only, the Dollar Savings Bank and Trust Company, Trustee, of Toledo, Ohio, one of the appellants, the holder of a mortgage on the real estate, which was executed after the building was ready for the roof. Class D consisted of one party only, the First National Bank of Wabash, one of the appellees herein, holder of a second mortgage upon the property. Class E included all appellees who were given judgments without declaring any specific liens. In the order of the foregoing classes payment was directed by the decree to be made out of the funds to be derived from the sale of the property.

This appeal is prosecuted by appellants Ward, Sweatman and the Harris Construction Company, who were in class B, and the Dollar Savings Bank and Trust Company, Trustee, of class C, against all the other parties to the decree in the court below, including John H. Dicken, receiver of the property.

The main suit was begun by Yarnelle, appellee, as a mechanic’s lien holder for a foreclosure of his lien. To this suit he made defendants the Dollar Savings Bank and Trust Company, Trustee, the National Bank of Wabash, and others. The banks filed cross-complaints, and all the laborers and materialmen filed cross-complaints, or independent suits to foreclose their liens. The parties designated under class A filed petitions in the main cause, in which a receiver had been appointed, to be allowed to remove the property put into the building by them. These independent suits were eonsoli[541]*541dated with the main suit, and tried together as one cause, under an agreement that all matters of defense, affirmative or otherwise, counterclaim or set-off might be given under answers of general denial.

The appellants named in the assignments of errors are Ward, the Dollar Savings Bank and Trust Company, Trustee, Sweatman and the Harris Construction Company, and all the other parties to the decree below are named as appellees. The appellants have assigned errors separately under that designation of parties.

1.

We are confronted at the threshhold of the ease by the motion of Dicken, receiver, to dismiss each of the appeals. He assigns as causes: (1) That the interests of Ward, Sweatman and the Harris Construction Company are adverse to those of the savings bank, and that neither of them has been named as appellee in the assignment of error of the savings bank; (2) that the latter has named no parties to the decree as either coappellants, or eoappellees. The same motion is addressed to the appeal of each of the other appellants.

So far as appellants Ward, Sweatman and the Harris Construction Company are concerned, no notice of the motion has been given. Ward was given priority over the savings bank, as were all the other parties below of classes A and B, and appellees here, but Ward, the Harris Construction Company, and Sweatman claimed more than they were awarded, so that in both ways they were adverse in interest to the savings bank, as was its interest adverse to them, and the interest of said bank, as well as the interest of the three other appellants, was adverse to all the other parties to the decree. The appeals of Ward and the Dollar Savings Bank and Trust Company, Trustee, were term-time appeals, and it was not necessary that any action should be taken as to their co-parties, or that they should be named either as appellants or appellees. §675 Burns 1908, Acts 1895, p. 179. Keiser v. Mills (1904), 162 Ind. 866; Gunn v. Haworth (1902), 159 [542]*542Ind. 419; Small v. Hammes (1901), 156 Ind. 556; Lowe v. Turpie (1897), 147 Ind. 652.

By coparties is meant not coparties plaintiff or defendant, but coparties to the decree. Kaufman v. Preston (1902), 158 Ind. 361; Hadley v. Hill (1881), 73 Ind. 442; Hildebrand v. Sattley Mfg. Co. (1900), 25 Ind. App. 218.

2.

3.

The appeals of Sweatman and the Harris Construction Company were vacation appeals, and notice was given under §681 Bums 1908, §640 R. S. 1881. Therefore as to Ward and the savings bank it was not necessary that they make Sweatman and the Harris Construction Company appellees, because they join in the appeal, and assign errors along with the former, and all the other parties were named appellees. Sweatman and the Harris Construction Company gave notice to all parties adverse to them, and join all as appellees who do not join in the appeal.

4.

The appellants,-in effect, assign errors against each other, and directly against all the appellees. It was not necessary that there be more than one title to the assignment of errors, for, under that title, all who desired might join in the appeal, and assign errors. Breyfogle v. Stotsenburg (1897), 148 Ind. 552. The motion to dismiss the appeal is overruled.

5.

The Dollar Savings Bank and Trust Company, Trustee, is put in the paradoxical position of insisting upon a reversal of the decree, while insisting that as the cestuis que trustent were not made parties to the proceedings below, they cannot be bound by the decree. It appears from the evidence that the savings bank is named as trustee for a series of bonds, of which $24,500 are held by another corporation not a party to the suit, and $500 by appellant Sweatman. It is not claimed that the mortgagee, trustee, is not a proper party, and the question of a defect of parties was not raised by demurrer or answer. It is sufficient to say that if the failure to make the bondholders parties results in [543]*543the decree’s being ineffective as to them, the trustee could not complain, and as the names of the holders of the bonds did not appear until upon the trial, if the trust company desired the cestuis que trustent to be made parties, it should have disclosed their identity, instead of which it has waged the contest in its own name, and so far as it is concerned is not in a position to raise the question for the first time here. Whether the other parties have or can have anything as against the bondholders without their being made parties, we express no opinion.

6.

7.

It is urged against the saving's bank that it has no status here by virtue of §4031 Burns 1908, §2988 R. S. 1881, owing to the fact that it is a nonresident of the State. That question is also for the first time sought to be raised on this appeal. There was no answer or demurrer to the cross-complaint of said savings bank, nor any assignment of error which presents the question.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.E. 7, 173 Ind. 535, 1910 Ind. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-yarnelle-ind-1910.