Wyman v. Herard

1899 OK 112, 59 P. 1009, 9 Okla. 35, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 26, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1899 OK 112 (Wyman v. Herard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyman v. Herard, 1899 OK 112, 59 P. 1009, 9 Okla. 35, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 7 (Okla. 1899).

Opinion

*58 Opinion of the court by

McAtee, J.:

Among the questions raised by the assignment of errors are, that the trial court should not hare admitted the counter claim of the defendant; that it had no power to order an accounting by Wyman, as trustee; that the mortgages all provide for the protection of the proceeds of the sales of cattle, which were a part of the trust estate; that there could be no accounting until the proceeds, after deducting the expenses, became available; that the beneficiaries in the trust were the unpaid note holders comprehended in the second mortgage, and the other note holders and beneficiaries, along with the defendant in the third mortgage; that the court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter of the trust, or of the parties necessary to a settlement of the trust, and that the remedy by counter-claim could only be invoked in behalf of the defendant in a case in which a several judgment might be had in an action ■arising out of the contract of transaction set forth in the petition, as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or connected with the subject of the action, and that this was not such a case.

In support cf this position the defendant cites Lyman v. Stanton, 40 Kan. 727, a case brougtht before a justice of the peace in Shawnee county to recover money only, and in which the defendant availed himself of a counterclaim involving the foreclosure of a mortgage and the sale of real estate, and the cause having been removed to the district court and a demurrer filed to the alleged counter-claim, on the ground that the land claimed by the defendants was in Butler county, the supreme court held that the counter-claim was not proper, be *59 cause the action was an' action brought for the purpose of foreclosing a mortgage upon real estate situated outside of Shawnee county, and that the counter-claim ought to have been brought, under the provisions of the •Code, in Butler county.

De Ford v. Hutchinson, 45 Kan. 318, is also relied upon. The case was • replevin, for the mortgaged property. 'The defendant answered by general denial, averring that the plaintiff had purchased the mortgaged goods from her; that an inventory and appraisement had been made under this purchase, and the value of the goods ascertained, and that thereupon the plaintiff refused to carry •out his agreement. The case was tried to a jury, which found for the defendant. It was contended by the plaintiff, upon appeal, that the defense set up by the defendant was in the nature of a counter-claim, and ,th:at as such, it could not be sustained, because it did not 'relate to the transaction and “subject of the action” set out in the petition in replevin.

The court sustained the contention of the defendant and her right to set up her counter-claim, and sustained the judgment below. Thereafter, upon a rehearing by thé supreme court of Kansas, (reported in 26 Pac. Rep-. ■ 60,) the supreme court simply -said that they thought it was necessary to eliminate any reference to the counterclaim or set-off, and that the defendant had successfully maintained the sale of the goods from henself to De Ford, and had the right to Recover a judgment against him. No reason is given by the supreme court, upon rehearing, for eliminating the counter-claim and, inas-xmuch as the defendant had filed a general denial in the • cause, and under that general denial had shown that *60 the plaintiff was indebted to her, as the jury found, that it was manifestly not necessary that the court should determine in that case that the defendant had any right to prove a counter-claim under a general denial. The-case has no force in support of the plaintiff’s argument..

In the case of Taylor v. Matteson, 56 N. W. Rep. 829, a stockholder of the Hudson Lumber company had sued another stockholder of the same company, upon account, of a liability incurred by him in signing one of the obligations of the corporation, and in which a counterclaim was alleged, based upon mismanagement by the' plaintiff of the affairs and business of the corporation, it was very properly held by the court that in such an action it was impracticable and unreasonable to attempt to adjust the claims of the Hudson Lumber company, the corporation, against the plaintiff and to wind' up its affairs and take an accounting of its assets in. that action, which was a purely legal action between, individual stockholders. The case furnishes no light, upon the contention here.

Several other cases are cited from different states,, but they are either under different codes of practice or-got parallel as to facts.

Our Code of Civil Procedure provides, in sections 94' •and 95, p. 779, that: “The defendant may set forth in-his answer as many grounds of defense, counter-claim, set-off' and for relief as he may have, whether they be-such as have been heretofore denominated legal, or equitable, or both,” and that the counter-claim must be-one in which a several judgment might be had in an action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth-in the petition as the foundation of the plaintiffs claim,. *61 •or connected with the subject matter of the action, and that, “The right to relief * * must be a right to relief necessarily or properly involved in the action for •.a complete determination thereof, or settlement of the ■question involved therein.”

For convenience, the mortgages which are most material to the discussion here may be designated as the “first mortgage,” by which is intended the mortgage ■dated July 29, 1893, by which the plaintiff was first constituted trustee for the note holders of the preceding mortgages and which amounted in all, up to that time, and'as included in that mortgage, to the sum of $29,000; the mortgage of the same date, made to the Fish & Keck •company to secure the payment of five notes of varying ■amounts, making the total sum of $19,510.72, and including 1,100 head of steers 1 year-old, may be designated as the “second mortgage;” and the mortgage dated August 12, 1893, to secure the payment of $40,-000, — $20,000 of which was due to the defendant upon a promissory note given by Baird & Ingram to Fish & Keck company, .and by them assigned to the defend■ant, may be designated as the “third mortgage.”

The subject matter of the action is the recovery from the defendant of the remnant of the cattle sold to' him by contract of May 13, 1895, upon which this suit was brought. The cattle thus sued for were all admittedly included in each of the three mortgages, and while Wyman, as trustee, was conceded to be the legal owner of the cattle, he was such only as trustee holding them for. the purpose of ■converting them into money and applying the *62 proceeds' on the indebtedness to the first, second and tihird mortgages in their proper order, and those who owned and had paid' for the notes protected by these mortgages; that the beneficiaries of the trust, and each of the beneficiaries, the defendant with the rest,. h¡aíd a right to see to it that the cattle were so converted according to fixed legal principles, and according to a priority which the trustee had no power to-vary, diminish or relinquish.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1899 OK 112, 59 P. 1009, 9 Okla. 35, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyman-v-herard-okla-1899.