Western Assurance Co. v. Kilpatrick-Koch Dry Goods Co.

74 N.W. 592, 54 Neb. 241, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 55
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1898
DocketNo. 7896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 N.W. 592 (Western Assurance Co. v. Kilpatrick-Koch Dry Goods Co.) 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
Western Assurance Co. v. Kilpatrick-Koch Dry Goods Co., 74 N.W. 592, 54 Neb. 241, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 55 (Neb. 1898).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

These cases, presenting for determination precisely the same questions, were tried together and submitted on the same evidence. The plaintiff, Kilpatrick-Koch Dry [242]*242Goods Company, had findings and judgments in its favor and the defendants, the insurance companies, have brought the cases into this court by proceedings in error. The actions are on policies of insurance issued to A. A. Seagraves, a merchant doing business at Silver City, Iowa. The insured property, a stock of merchandise, was partially destroyed by fire, and thereafter the causes of action arising under the contracts of insurance were assigned to the plaintiff, a resident of this state.

The first question presented for consideration is one of practice. The original answers were filed June 16, 1894, and on November 23, 1894, amendments which had been filed without leave on November 7, 1894, were stricken from the files. Defendants then asked to refile them. The applications were denied and the defendants excepted. The proffered amendments presented an entirely new defense, the existence of which was necessarily known to the defendants when the original answers were filed. The applications to amend were made on the day the cases were tried and apparently at the time they were called for trial. No excuse was offered for failing to include in the original answers the defense embraced in the proposed amendments. No reason was given for postponing the applications until the cases were ready for trial on the merits. Under these circumstances was the action of the trial court an abuse of discretion? We think not. Defendants acquired no rights by filing the amendments without leave of court. The law did not charge the plaintiff with notice of their existence and it does not appear that it had any actual notice of them before the day of the trial. The defendants were, therefore, in no better attitude than if the amendments had not previously been among the files of the court. The rule in relation to amendments is stated in 1 Ency. PL & Pr. 637, as follows: “It is in all cases proper to require from the party asking leave to amend some reasonable excuse for the defect in the pleading which it is sought to correct. The grounds for the mo[243]*243tion must ordinarily be shown by affidavit.” This rule has been recognized and approved in at least three decisions of this court. (Commercial Nat. Bank of Omaha v. Gilson, 37 Neb. 750; Omaha & R. V. R. Co. v. Moschel, 38 Neb. 281; Johnson v. Swayze, 35 Neb. 117.) Having reached the conclusion that the district court did not err in denying the application to amend, we need not determine whether the defense pleaded in the proposed amendments was valid or not.

It is next contended that the findings and judgments are not sustained by the evidence. This contention is based on the proposition that A. A. Seagraves executed a mortgage on the insured property in violation of a condition contained in each ,of the policies. It appears from the evidence that on December 27, 1893, young Sea-graves made out a mortgage on the property in question to his father, J. D. Seagraves, of Dow City, Iowa, to secure a promissory note for $1,300. The note was sent to,- and accepted by, the elder Seagraves, but the son retained the mortgage in his possession and under his control until after the fire,, when he caused it to be recorded. The facts in relation to the making of the mortgage are not disputed and are fairly set forth in the following testimony of J. D. Seagraves:

Q. You loaned your son some money prior to this mortgage?
A. I had, $300, about one year before.
Q. And then just before that you had loaned him some more?
A. Just before that my son-in-law intended to go into • business with my son, and put in his money there, and he wanted I should pay him, and I went on and let my son-in-law have the money and took my son as pay.
Q. Did you assume anything for his father-in-law?
A. He spoke that there were $300 that he had owed his father while he was in business there about a year.
Q. His father-in-law you mean?
A. His father-in-law.
[244]*244Q. .He came up to Dow City to see you about it?
A. He came up to tell me that he was not meeting with success, owing to the season, the last year being a very warm fall and winter, and he wanted to make me safe on loaning the money that I had paid my son-in-law, and proposed this way of fixing it up for my interest.
Q. What way do you mean?
A. He give me a mortgage.
Q. On the stock?
A. Yes, sir; on the stock.
Q. And in view of that you agreed to assume these other claims, did you?
A. I did, sir;, this $300 the other money I had paid to my son-in-law for my son.
Q. Did you have any correspondence with your son after he went home and prior to the fire?
A. When he was there prior to the fire and telling me how he was situated in regard to his money matters, I stated to him how I thought it might be safe. We talked it over about the stock of goods he would give as security; make some arrangements. At that time 1 did not know, nor he did not know, what we ought to do. I had no experience in making loans at all of that kind, and it ran along a number of days after he was there, and he wrote me that he thought he had got it safe, and sent me the note.
Q. And told you that he had made a mortgage to secure you, did he?
A. Yes, he told me he had made arrangements, and I do not know that at the time he sent the notes, but after-wards I received the notes. It was all within a week or two before the fire — the whole transaction.
Q. And he explained to you how he had finally arranged it?
A,. Yes, sir.
Q. And you talked the matter over with him, about the security, when he was down there?
A. I did when he was at Dow City.
[245]*245Q. And that lie was "to give you a mortgage on tlie stock?
A. When lie was at Dow City. That was tlie arrangement.
Q. When lie was at Dow City?
A. Yes, sir; I say it was.
Q. Where is that letter that he wrote you after he went home? Have you got it?
A. I haAre not.
Q. Do you know where it is?
"A. I do not. I presume it was destroyed. I did not consider it of any value whatever,
Q. Did he say anything about recording this mortgage in that letter?
A. Not at the time, not at the first that I heard he had made the arrangement.
Q. About the recording?
A. No.
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.W. 592, 54 Neb. 241, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-assurance-co-v-kilpatrick-koch-dry-goods-co-neb-1898.