Watts v. Gantt

61 N.W. 104, 42 Neb. 869, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 521
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1894
DocketNo. 5727
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 104 (Watts v. Gantt) 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
Watts v. Gantt, 61 N.W. 104, 42 Neb. 869, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 521 (Neb. 1894).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

On the 7th day of April, 1884, W. E. Gantt executed and delivered to Charles H. Watts a promissory note in the sum of $800, due April 7, 1889, and bearing interest at eight per cent per annum, and a mortgage to secure the payment of the note was executed by W. E. Gantt and his wife, Carrie E. Gantt, covering certain lots in Ponca, Nebraska, the title to which was of record in the name of the wife, Carrie E. Gantt, and which were her separate property. July 8, 1891, this action was instituted in the [872]*872district court of Dixon county to foreclose the mortgage, and a portion of the relief prayed for in the petition filed was the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property and collect the rents and profits thereof and apply them on the indebtedness. The statement in the petition, to> show the necessity for the appointment of a receiver, was as follows: “That since the execution of said note and mortgage, said lots have greatly depreciated in value on account of the decline in real estate values in said city of Ponca, and that said lots are entirely inadequate for the payment of said mortgage indebtedness and tax lien, and an insufficient security for plaintiff’s debt, the actual cash values of said lots at this date being not more than $900, and the' aggregate amount of said mortgage indebtedness and tax lien amounting at this date to the sum of $1,380; that W. E. Gantt, the maker of said note, is insolvent and has no property out of which said indebtedness or any part thereof can be made, and that the rental value of said lots does not exceed the sum of $180 per annum.” The petition also contained the following allegation: “That the defendants Carrie E. Gantt and W. E. Gantt have wholly failed to pay the taxes on said lots for the years 1887 to 1890 inclusive, and that said lots were on the 11th day of November, 1890,.sold for taxes to the defendant the Farmers Loan & Trust Company of Sioux City, Iowa, and that said defendant has a tax lien on said lots, on account of said purchase, in the sum of $400.” With the petition there was an affidavit filed for service by publication of the summons and also the notice of application for a receiver. Publication of the two notices was commenced on the following day and continued to completion. The date at which defendants were required to answer was August 7, 1891, and the time set for hearing the application tor the appointment of a receiver, August 15, 1891. The notice ■ of the hearing in the receiver matter was as follows: “You are hereby notified that on the 15th day of August, A. D. [873]*8731891, at 10 o’clock A. M. or as soon thereafter as I can be heard, I will apply to the Hon. W. F. Norris, judge of district court, Dixon county, at chambers in Ponca, Nebraska, for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents and profits of lots 7 and 8, block 99, Ponca, Nebraska, and report the same to said district court, upon the ground that said premises being the property of defendants Carrie E. Gantt and W. E. Gantt and mortgaged by them to the plaintiff to secure the payment of a promissory note executed by defendant W. E. Gantt to the plaintiff April 17, 1884, for $800, defendant Farmers Loan & TrusL Company has a tax lien on said lots, and that said lots are insufficient security for the payment of plaintiff’s debt, and that W. E. Gantt, the maker of said note, is insolvent, and has no other property out of which said debt can be made,” etc. This notice was published in the Ponca Gazette on July 9, 16, 23, 30, and August 6, 1891. With reference to the hearing on this branch of the case there appears the following admission in the fifth paragraph of astipulation admitting certain facts: “ It is admitted that no hearing has ever been had on the motion for the appointment of a receiver; that at the time set for said hearing, to-wit, on the fifteenth day of October, 1891, an objection was made by defendants W. E. Gantt and C. E. Gantt to Judge Norris exercising jurisdiction, on the ground that he would be a material witness in the case, and for said reason said judge refused to act on the same, and the same for said reason has never been passed upon.”

The answers of the principal defendants, the Gantts, were not filed on or before the answer day, August 7, but were filed out of time. The answer of Carrie Gantt was first directed to the sixth paragraph of the petition and denied the existence of any lien against the premises arising from the purchase of the property for delinquent taxes, and averred that the Farmers Loan & Trust Company was a foreign corporation, organized and existing under the laws [874]*874of the state of Iowa, and had never been a corporation of the state of Nebraska, and was not entitled to do business in this state, and that its pretended purchase of the premises for taxes was void; that the articles of incorporation, or charter of the company, did not empower it to purchase lands for delinquent taxes at tax sales or to hold such liens, hence- the purchase of this property by it was unauthorized and void and gave it no right of lien. This was followed by a denial of each and every allegation of the seventh paragraph of the petition, and the remaining portions of this answer were devoted to setting forth that the premises mortgaged were the sole and separate property of Mrs. Gantt, and the debt evidenced by the note that of the husband alone, and that no benefit from the loan made to the husband when the note and mortgage were given, or its proceeds, was ever received by her, nor was any of the money loaned in any manner used upon or for the benefit of her separate estate or property and that no consideration passed to her for executing the mortgage; that her liability created by signing the mortgage was that of a surety, and that she was discharged from liability as such surety by reason of extensions of time for payment of the note, granted to her husband after its maturity, each for a definite time and valuable consideration, and without notice to her, or knowlege on her part, of such extensions. W. E. Gantt in his answer denies that the Farmers Loan & Trust Company have any lien against the premises described in the petition by reason of its pretended purchase for delinquent taxes; also denies the statement of the seventh paragraph of the petition, and for further answer sets up five of what in the answer are denominated counter-claims, the first of which is as follows: “That on the 9th day of July, 1891, at Ponca, Dixon county, Nebraska, the plaintiff falsely, wickedly, and maliciously composed and published of and concerning the defendant, in a newspaper called the Ponca Gazette, the false and defamatory matter following, [875]*875to-wit [then followed the notice of application for receiver, as heretofore copied]; that at the time of publication of said notice the said plaintiff had filed in the office of the clerk of the district court in and for Dixon county the petition, but had not at said time taken the steps necessary to commence an action by causing the issue of a summons therein, and that at the time of the publication of said notice no action had been commenced, or was pending in said court by reason of which said plaintiff could apply for the appointment of a receiver, and plaintiff well knew that neither the district court nor the judge thereof had jurisdiction’to hear said application on the day named and set in said application at said time, or at any other time under said notice, and plaintiff well knew that the charge of insolvency made by him in said notice was false aud that he could not prove said charge.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 104, 42 Neb. 869, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-v-gantt-neb-1894.