130 Neb. 341 | Neb. | 1936
This action was brought by Mary Dvorak, plaintiff and widow of Edward A. Dvorak, deceased, against Frank O. Kucera as an individual, praying for a judgment for the amount of the proceeds of a $10,000 life insurance policy issued upon the life of the said Edward A. Dvorak, deceased, and that said judgment be declared an equitable lien upon said proceeds. Certain creditors and heirs at law of said deceased obtained the permission of the court and intervened as parties defendant, as did also Frank O. Kucera as administrator of the estate of Edward A. Dvorak. The court, upon final hearing, dismissed the action against Kucera as an individual, and found for the plaintiff in the sum of $7,296.52 and interest, and the further sum of $800 and interest claimed to be due plaintiff’s son Leonard Broz under a contract for his benefit with the plaintiff. The remaining interveners, the heirs of- said deceased, and his creditors appeal.
The petition alleges that the plaintiff loaned her husband during his lifetime large sums of money, and about the year 1928 her husband orally assigned to her as collateral security the policy for $10,000 which .was originally a term policy for ten years and later converted into-an. ordinary
The errors assigned are: (1) Findings of the court and judgment based thereon are not sustained by sufficient evidence. (2) Findings of the court and judgment are contrary to law. (3) The court erred in finding that the plaintiff held the insurance policy as collateral security for the $800 indebtedness to Leonard Broz. (4) That the court erred in refusing to admit the evidence of Frank Kovar. (5). That the court erred in rejecting the evidence of Charles Javorsky. (6) The court erred in admitting the testimony of Leonard Broz. Of these in their order:
1, 2. The testimony of plaintiff was properly excluded as to the transaction with her husband by which she claims to have received the policy as collateral security for his debt to her, but plaintiff testified she had loaned her husband September 1, 1926, the sum of $5,000, and a note for that amount was received in evidence, also a mortgage upon the Dvorak farm securing said note; also on June 9, 1932, the further sum of $670 and a note for that amount signed by her husband was received in evidence. This indebtedness is well established. Plaintiff testified that she had the policy in her possession since about 1928 (the original term policy was converted into the life policy in question in 1931), that she kept the insurance policy in question, together with policies of her own and other valuable papers tied up in a separate bundle, in a safe located in a closet in the farm house where she lived with her husband until March 5, 1932, when the house was partially destroyed by fire, after which, except for a few days in the garage, she kept the policy in question and these other papers in a tin
On rebuttal Mary denied that her husband said to Victor in her presence that she wanted him to assign the policy, that she never asked him to assign it, and that what he did with reference to the policy was voluntary on his part. She also denied that the policy was produced and present at the time the extension agreement was made,' but was in the basement. To recite all the evidence received would unnecessarily prolong this opinion, but the above is a résumé of the material parts.
Leonard Broz and Irene Broz were children of Mary Dvorak by a prior marriage, and Edward A. Dvorak, Jr., Lambert E. Dvorak and Victor A. Dvorak were children of the deceased. All of these people lived together on the Dvorak farm until the marriage of Victor in 1930. All the witnesses, therefore, except Kucera and Ward, were interested parties, and Ward was very intimate with Dvorak, Sr., described as a “crony,” and they were in the habit of having drinking bouts together, Dvorak, Sr., especially, being a victim of excessive drinking, and was undoubtedly drunk at the time he committed suicide. It is extremely difficult for a reviewing court to arrive at a satisfactory conclusion when the testimony is in conflict and the princi
3. There is, however, no evidence to sustain the finding
4, 5. Interveners claim that the court erred in refusing to receive the testimony of Frank Kovar to the effect that Dvorak stated that he had the policy changed to his estate so he could pay all his debts, and the testimony of Javorsky that Dvorak, Sr., stated that he had insurance to cover all his debts. Mary was not present when either of these statements was made and we think they were properly excluded as incompetent and hearsay. The evidence offered was in the nature of admissions, but such are ordinarily received only when against the interest of the party making them, not as evidence in his favor. The interest of the administrator, heirs and creditors of the estate is adverse to that of plaintiff and the evidence was not competent as against the plaintiff. But beyond this, in our judgment, they had no tendency to refute the claim of the plaintiff that the policy had been delivered to her as security.
6. That the court erred in admitting the testimony of Leonard Broz because witness was interested at least to the extent of his claim of $800. It is claimed that the witness was incompetent under section 20-1202, Comp. St. 1929, providing: “No person having a direct legal interest in the result of any civil action or proceeding, when the adverse
We conclude that the judgment in favor of plaintiff for $7,296.52 with interest is correct and should be affirmed; that the district court erred in its finding and judgment in favor of Leonard Broz, and to that extent the judgment should be reversed and action dismissed; and it is so ordered accordingly.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.