82 Minn. 462 | Minn. | 1901
This is the second appeal of this action. When it was here on the former hearing (76 Minn. 220, 78 N. W. 1114) it was held that defendant was liable to plaintiffs on a promise of indemnity made to secure their justification as sureties to a supersedeas undertaking on an appeal from an order in another action. On the return of the mandate to the district court, plaintiffs amended their complaint, but in no respect affecting the sufficiency of the cause of action, under the rule laid down by this court on the former appeal. After the amended complaint, defendant amended his answer, setting forth an extended statement of all the facts upon which he relies to establish his defense. Plaintiff demurred on the ground of insufficiency to state a defense. These demurrers were sustained by the trial court, from which order defendant appeals.
Plaintiffs on this appeal executed a supersedeas undertaking in his .behalf, as sureties. No exception was made to the sureties by the bank. The defendant Burdic continued to collect and appropriate the rents of the apartment house, and an order was obtained from the district court requiring Burdic to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt, for not turning over the income of such building to the receiver. Application was made to discharge such order. The court refused to grant this application, but upon the condition that a new undertaking on the appeal should be given, complying with the statute, and requiring the appellant to abide and satisfy the judgment or order of the appellate court, which was held to be necessary to constitute a sufficient supersedeas, since the first undertaking only required the appellant on defeat to abide such judg
It is this undertaking that was the subject of consideration by this court on the former appeal. The plaintiffs, at defendant’s request, signed this undertaking as sureties, but the Bank of Owatonna excepted. Plaintiffs declined to act further in the matter or to justify, and requested defendant to have their names stricken from the undertaking. Thereupon defendant assured plaintiffs that if they would continue to remain.as sureties on the undertaking, and would justify, he would guaranty that they would be protected from all liability. Relying upon this assurance, the plaintiffs appeared before the court and justified in the proper manner, and it was for defendant’s failure to fulfil his. promise of indemnity on this second undertaking that this court sustained the claim of the plaintiffs on the former appeal. Esch v. White, 76 Minn. 220, 78 N. W. 1114. The first undertaking was not considered therein.
Upon the acceptance of the second undertaking, which was ordered to stand “as the undertaking on said appeal in lieu and instead of said former undertaking,” the district court discharged the order for contempt, and relieved Burdic therefrom. Burdic remained in possession of the property and continued to collect the rents. The appeal from the order appointing the receiver in the meantime proceeded to a hearing in this court, resulting in an affirmance thereof. Farmers Nat. Bank v. Backus, 64 Minn. 43, 66 N. W. 5. In the meantime the foreclosure proceedings under the John Hancock Insurance Company mortgage passed to judgment. No redemption was made either by Burdic or the bank, and the right to the property became vested in the insurance company, — the prior mortgagee. Burdic had not, however, paid to or accounted for any part of the income of the building, and the receiver brought action against plaintiffs on the undertaking to
Plaintiffs paid such judgment, and brought this action upon the alleged promise of defendant to hold them harmless; and it was the right of plaintiffs, on the promise made by defendant to recover the indemnity provided for therein, which was established on the former appeal. Esch v. White, supra. It is now the contention on this appeal: First, that there was no consideration for the agreement of defendant to indemnify plaintiffs for their justification as sureties; second, that the action by the receiver was not maintainable against the plaintiffs; third, that there is a defect of parties plaintiff, which is made a specific and distinct ground of defense.
1. It is urged, upon the contention of defendant that the first undertaking signed by plaintiffs on the appeal from the order appointing the receiver wms valid and effectual for that purpose, that the holding of the court to the contrary was unsound, the second undertaking being in reality nothing more than a duplicate of the first, and added nothing new to the liability of the plaintiffs, for the reason that, so far as the plaintiffs are concerned, they were liable on the first undertaking as fully as on the second, and, this being so, the undertaking upon which this suit was brought is supported by no new consideration, since it added nothing to the responsibility of the plaintiffs to the obligation they had already incurred.
This contention is more subtle than sensible or just. It will not bear the application of sound legal principles, nor is it availing to relieve the defendant from the promise he made, which was the means by which his client was protected from punishment for contempt, and thereby enabled to retain the rents and profits of the apartment house. Otherwise, he would have had to pay
If it were necessary further to sustain the wholesome doctrine laid down in the former appeal, that binds an attorney who solicits third parties to sign obligations for his client upon a promise of indemnity, we should have no difficulty in holding that,' the court below having treated the first undertaking as insufficient, it must be so considered now. By the order of the district court discharging the contempt proceedings, the second undertaking was substituted in place of the first. The reason upon which the district court acted must be treated as sufficient, and the effect of the first undertaking, so far as any question of consequence or practical importance in behalf of defendant, is of no importance whatever.
2. It was further urged that, inasmuch as the Bank of Owatonna had failed to redeem, any claim for itself or by the receiver to the apartment house property was excluded by such failure. It is also urged that under the doctrine of Marshall & Ilsley Bank v. Cady, 75 Minn. 241, 77 N. W. 831, which holds that an appointment of a receiver does not inure to the benefit of the mortgagees, it
Conceding, without deciding, that the rents of the building during the year of redemption would belong to the owner, and that the right of the receiver to the rents terminated when the time expired to redeem the insurance company’s mortgage; yet the receiver was entitled to an accounting from Burdic, and Burdic cannot now avoid the obligations which arise from such duty,, or ignore the obligation of the receiver to account for Ms stewardship to the court. It is admitted that there has never been a final accounting by such receiver, and, whatever such accounting-may show when it is made, it does not follow, as a matter of law, that the expenses of the receivership, or the costs incurred in the litigation against the plaintiffs by reason of the failure of defendant to keep his promise, will not be a charge on such fund; and the defendant cannot assume how much or how little' such charge amounts to, or prevent payment of the necessary costs and expenses of the receivership.
This would be a sufficient, answer to defendant’s claim in this respect, but we think there is still ■ a better one. The relation of the plaintiffs to the defendant by reason of the promise of indemnity is all that is before this court upon this appeal. The plaintiffs required such promise, defendant gave it, and, by reason of his failure to keep it, plaintiffs have been compelled to pay a large sum of money and attorney’s fees. If the promise of indemnity was good, as we have held, defendant is estopped, upon every principle of justice and equity, from evading it; nor can he say that the collection and retention of the rents by Burdic would be justified or sustained by the court in an action in which all parties have not been heard, and such questions determined.
8. The thirteenth allegation of defendant’s answer stated that plaintiffs were not the real parties in interest, but the true plaintiff therein is a third party, for whose benefit and interest, as defendant is informed and believes, the present action is being
The order of' the district court is affirmed.
On April 12, 1901, the court filed the following opinion:
Upon an application for reargument, errors in the statement of facts in the opinion have been pointed out. In the protracted ■litigation which has led up to the present action several appeals were taken to this court, among them one from the order appointing the receiver in the bank suit, and another from a subsequent order refusing to discharge such receiver. Farmers Nat. Bank v. Backus, 67 Minn. 43, 69 N. W. 638. No reference was made in the record or argument on the present hearing to the latter order, and the court was misled by that fact, and erroneously stated that the two undertakings of the' plaintiffs were given on. the appeal from the order appointing the receiver, when they were in reality given on the appeal from the order refusing to discharge such receiver, not referred to in opinion, but cited above. It should be further stated that, after the appeal from the order appointing the receiver had been sustained in this court, the district court refused Burdic’s application to have the receiver discharged. The plaintiff in that suit (the Farmers National Bank of Owatonna) procured an order from the court requiring Burdic to pay to the receiver the rents of the apartment house, and forbidding him to collect further rents. The rents not being paid over, the attorney of the bank obtained an order to show cause why the defendant Burdic should not be punished for contempt. Burdic opposed this order, and claimed; among other things, that he had taken an appeal, with a proper supersedeas undertaking, from the order refusing to discharge the receiver, and it appears from the answer that there was a conten
It was this undertaking that was substituted by the court in place of the first one. Enough appears in the answer of the defendant to show that there was a controversy between the plaintiffs and defendant as to the legality of the second undertaking, that Burdic had it filed two days before the hearing, and the district court acted upon it in relieving Burdic from the order to punish for contempt. It is idle to claim that this second undertaking was not an inducement for the action of the district court. It was offered voluntarily by the defendant, who was Burdic’s counsel, was presumably acted upon by the court in its order discharging the contempt proceedings, and, whether there was or not a valid previous undertaking, there clearly was a controversy on that question between the parties, hence the action of the court must be held to have decided that the last undertaking was essential to relieve defendant’s client, and he cannot claim the benefit of what the second undertaking accomplished, and then say that it was of no consequence, and furnished no consideration for the promise of indemnity.
Upon this proposition the court does not recede from the result of the case, as first announced, although with reference to other views expressed in the opinion they need not be considered as authoritative in the decision of this appeal. It is proper, also, to say that it was not admitted in the answer, but covered by the general denial clause therein, that defendant was notified by plaintiffs when they were sued on the substituted undertaking given to the bank. In construing the answer, defendant should not be held to be bound by such statement in the opinion; but the liability of the defendant does not depend upon such notice, for, if there was such an indemnity as is claimed and held in former appeal (64 Minn. 43, 66 N. W. 5), upon elementary grounds the liability of defendant depends upon the breach of the same, and he was bound to take notice of such breach, and its consequent results.
Application denied.