Worthington v. Oak & Highland Park Improvement Co.

69 N.W. 258, 100 Iowa 39
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 9, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 N.W. 258 (Worthington v. Oak & Highland Park Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worthington v. Oak & Highland Park Improvement Co., 69 N.W. 258, 100 Iowa 39 (iowa 1896).

Opinion

Bothrock, C. J.

1 [42]*422 [40]*40I. The petition in the main action was filed on the twenty-seventh day of July, 1893, by Worthington and Dissmore, trustees, to foreclose a trust deed executed by the defendant, the Oak & Highland Park Improvement Company, to secure payment of certain negotiable bonds. The appointment of a receiver was demanded to take possession of the property of the corporation, including the Highland Park College, owned and operated by the improvement company. On the same day that the petition was filed, the following order was made by the court: “And now, this cause coming on to be heard upon the application of the plaintiffs for the appointment of a receiver, the plaintiffs appearing by 'C. 0. & C. L. Nourse, their attorneys, and the defendants, the Oak and Highland Park Improvement Company and Highland Park Normal College by E. J. Goode, their attorney, and 0. H. Longwell by Barcroft & McCaughan, his attorneys, and L. M. Mann in person, and all parties consenting thereto, it is ordered and adjudged that L. M. Mann be, and he is hereby, appointed receiver of the property described in the mortgage, with full authority to take possession thereof, and receive, manage, and control the rents and income arising theréfrom. It is further ordered that the said receiver have authority, and he is hereby directed, to continue to operate the said college, as an institution of learning, affording like facilities as heretofore, and to operate the dormitories and boarding department of said college in connection therewith, and to make all contracts for professors, teachers, servants, helpers, and assistants he may find necessary to the successful operation and continuance thereof. Said receiver [41]*41is also hereby authorized to employ the present president, 0. H. Longwell, to take charge of the educational department of said college, upon such terms as he may agree upon with the said Longwell, and also to recognize and adopt any contracts now outstanding made by the said Longwell for the employment of professors for help for the ensuing year, or for printing and advertising for the ensuing year, and for work and labor and supplies for the ensuing year, so far as the said receiver may deem the same necessary and advantageous to the successful operation of the college. The receiver is also authorized to effect an insurance of the property, and to pay all taxes and assessments against the same. And the receiver is further authorized to issue receiver’s certificates in payment of, or to raise money for the employment or purchase of work and labor, material, or supplies, as above authorized, and the same shall be a first1 lien upon any funds coming into his hands by virtue of his receivership; and the receiver has leave to apply to the court for such further order, or direction, as he may deem necessary from time to time to carry out the above orders. And it is further ordered that the said L. kL Mann, give bond in the penal sum of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) ,with sureties to be approved by the clerk of this court, conditioned as required by law, for the faithful performance of his duties. Dated, July 27,1893. [Signed.] C. P. Holmes, Judge.” The intervener had been an instructor in the college for two or three years. The school year commenced in the month of August, and the receiver was appointed during the summer vacation. The intervener claims that, before the close of the school year in the summer of 1893, 0. H. Longwell, the president of the college, entered into an. oral contract with her, by the terms of which she was engaged as an instructor for the ensuing year, at the same rate of compensation [42]*42which she had theretofore received. She further averred that, after said Maun was appointed receiver, he completed said agreement for employment, by which it was contracted that she should continue as an instructor in the same branches of learning in which she had before been employed. She averred that she entered upon the performance of her duties under said contract at the opening of the college year, and continued under the contract until September BO, 189B, when the said receiver dismissed and discharged her from further service as an instructor under said contract; and she demands that the receiver be required t'o pay her, from the funds in his hands, the sum of one thousand one hundred and seventy dollars, the balance which would be due for the year’s service if she had not been wrongfully discharged. It is admitted in the answer that the intervener was employed by the college, beginning with the fall of 1890, and ending with the summer of 1893; and it is admitted upon information and belief, that the intervener entered into a contract with 0. H. Longwell, the president of the college, for one year, commencing September, 1893, and to continue until the summer of 1894; but that plaintiffs have no knowledge, or information, sufficient to form a belief as to the exact terms of said employment. It is denied that the receiver entered into any contract to employ intervener for the whole of the school year, and that he notified her that he was only acting as receiver, and that he could only employ her for such time as her services should prove to be beneficial in conducting the operation of the college. It is admitted that intervener performed the duties of an instructor for about five weeks under this arrangement with the receiver, and that she was then dismissed from said employment, for the reason that the entire receipts from the department of elocution and physical culture, [43]*43of which, the intervener was principal, were far less than the salary agreed to be paid her, and said department was no longer beneficial to the interests of the parties owning the property. Other averments of the answer need not be here referred to.

[45]*453 4 [43]*43The first question to be considered is whether the •intervener was employed by the receiver for the school year. We have stated the respective claims of the parties as to the terms of the contract. There is no dispute that 0. H. Longwell, the president of the college, employed her for the ensuing college year. But as the property of the improvement company, including the college, went into the hands- of the receiver, the contract with Longwell could not have been enforced as against the receiver. We do not understand that anything is claimed by the intervener for that contract, more than that the receiver recognized it, and adopted it, and made a contract upon the same terms, as he was authorized to do by the order appointing him receiver. The main question of fact, then, is, what was the contract made by the receiver? This must be determined by the evidence. The testimony of the intervener and the receiver are in conflict. And it is to be conceded that she, to say the least, was mistaken in testifying to the contents of a letter that she wrote to the receiver. She claimed in her testimony that the letter was on the subject of her employment for the year. When the letter was produced, it had no reference to future employment. It related to payment of arrears due to her for the previous year. This letter was written at the city of Oskaloosa, where intervener was stopping at the time. Notwithstanding this mistake in the testimony of the intervener, we think her version of the contract made with the receiver is corroborated by many circumstances in the case. The main corroborative fact is found in a letter by the receiver to her, [44]*44written on the third day of August, 1898.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.W. 258, 100 Iowa 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worthington-v-oak-highland-park-improvement-co-iowa-1896.