19 Neb. 407 | Neb. | 1886
This is an appeal from a decree of the district court of Lancaster county. The cause was referred to a referee, who heard the evidence and reported his findings of fact and conclusions of law, and which report was confirmed and decree entered in accordance therewith over the exceptions and objections of defendants. The record is unusually voluminous, and the report of the referee is of great length, and we shall be content with a brief statement of the case without quoting at length from either.
The briefs and arguments at the bar of this court abound with charges and counter-charges of dishonesty and bad faith on the part of counsel and litigants; and, while there is much in the case from its inception which savors of a want of good faith and common honesty, we shall neither deem it a duty .nor a privilege to apologize for, explain away, condemn, of criticise the conduct of any one involved in this case, but seek to dispose of the cause, as it seems to demand, in a rather summary way, and thus, if possible, terminate its long and expensive career.
A number of questions are presented for decision by the appellants, some of which we will notic.e in the order in which they occur. It is insisted that there has been a full and final adjudication of all questions involved in this suit by the judgments in the cases reported in 14th and 16th Neb. above referred to. We cannot so hold. The first
It is insisted that plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, and is therefore not entitled to an injunction at all. That if his title fails his recourse should be had upon the covenants of his deed. As between plaintiff and McDowell alone this might be true, but as all parties interested are before the court it was proper for the referee, to consider all the equities of the case and decide as to the rights of all. As we shall see further on it is clear that as between Brigham and Gregory the equities are with the former and the decree should be entered accordingly. Sec. 429, civil code.
Our attention is called to the evidence, and in this connection it is claimed that the referree erred in admitting the testimony of W. J. Lamb, who was the attorney for defendant McDowell in the suit for the foreclosure of the
By the testimony and report of the referee we are informed that Gregory first mortgaged the land in question to defendant McDowell. Afterwards he succeeded in getting the city property substituted as security in lieu of the land, receiving a written release from the trustee. He failed to place this release on record. In securing the release he made an exchange of property by which he traded the mortgaged land for that which he mortgaged in its stead. He not only received the city property for the land, but also the sum of |800 in cash. He now asks that, notwithstanding the fact that he has once received full value for the land, it be still sold under the mortgage and the property received in its stead and mortgaged in its stead shall be protected from sale. We know of no rule either of law or equity which would enable him to do this. As between him and plaintiff the equities are all one way, and this without reference to the presence or want of good faith in Lamb and Billingsley or any other person in afterwards purchasing the land. The decision of the referee that the city property mortgaged by him in lieu of the land should be sold was right.
The next question is as to whether the decision of the referee that. the temporary injunction by which defendant McDowell was restrained from selling the eighty acres first mortgaged by Gregory should be made perpetual was right. In order to a full understanding of the question we quote the Blst, 32d, 33d, 34th, 35th, and 36th findings of the referee, t o-wit:
“31. I find about the 7th of September, 1878, the so-*417 called second suit was instituted in the name of Peter A. McDowell against the defendant Gregory el al., in which it was alleged, in substance, among other things, the making, executing, and delivering of the note and trust deed as herein referred to, and the execution of the second trust deed herein named, and in which it was alleged that the said eighty acre tract had been, by arrangements made in 1876, released therefrom by Peter A. McDowell, at the instance and request of the Gregorys, and the lots named in the second trust deed taken in lieu of the eighty acres, that the Gregorys had fraudulently retained the said release in their possession and not placed the same on record, and they had concealed the fact of such alleged release from the knowledge of the said Peter A. McDowell’s attorneys, and that the said stipulation upon which the decree in the first mentioned suit had been obtained, was obtained through fraud and misrepresentation practiced upon said McDowell’s attorneys, and in which it was further alleged that the debt was still in full force and unsatisfied, and that such facts had not been discovered by McDowell or his attorneys until after the rendition of the decree in the above mentioned suit. A prayer of this petition, in substance, was that the first named decree should be vacated as to the eighty acres, and that the decree of the foreclosure should be made, which should include in its terms 160 acres of land and lot 7 in block 122. A more particular statement of the allegation of which will be found in the petition, which is a part of the bill of exceptions herein.
“ 32. I find that on the 16th of December, 1878, Martin L. Powell entered appearance in said action, and on May 24, 1879, he filed in said action his general demurrer to the said petition therein filed, which demurrer was never ruled upon; that on October 10, 1879, Powell had leave to plead in said action, and that said Powell made no further appearance in said court.
“ 33. That on the 16th day of December, 1879, pending*418 a prosecution of the said action, the said Campbell and her husband conveyed the said eighty acres of land to one Harry E. "Wells, the consideration expressed in said deed being the sum of $250. That said Wells was a mere dry trustee, the beneficiary of the trust being Walter J. Lamb, Billingsley, and McMurtry, the said Lamb and Billingsley being two of the attorneys of the said McDowell in the said foreclosure proceedings.
“ 34. I find that prior to the said conveyance to the said Wells, and ever since about the 19th of April, 1878, the said Lamb and Billingsley, as McDowell’s attorneys, and who were two real purchasers under said last named' deed, had notice from McDowell that McDowell claimed and insisted that he had never released said eighty acres except conditionally, that is, upon the conditions as shown in the finding above named, referring to the letter of said McDowell of April 19, 1878, and that their purchase was with actual notice of McDowell’s claim as there made.
“85. I find that in December, 1878, said McDowell, with Bowers H. Leonard, was in Lincoln, Nebraska, and at the time had an interview with Walter J. Lamb, and that at that time said Lamb told McDowell that he had commenced or would commence an action to have the house and lot substituted as security for the eighty.
“36. I find that on the 10th day of February, 1880, the said H. E. Wells conveyed the said eighty acre tract to E. S. Hume, a sister of L. W. Billingsley, who was merely a dry trustee holding title for the benefit of said Lamb, Billingsley, and McMurtry, which conveyance was made pending the prosecution of the said second suit.”
By these findings it appears that while the decree was in existence by which the land in question was declared subject to the lien of the mortgage, and its sale ordered, and while Lamb and Billingsley were McDowell’s attorneys, they, with McMurtry, purchased, the land for much less than its value and caused the title to be conveyed to
Decebe accoedingly.