70 Neb. 730 | Neb. | 1904
In the year 1891, Spooner R. Howell was engaged as a sole trader in the lumber business in Chicago, under the name of S. R. Howell & Company. He was also engaged in the same business with one Herbert N. Jewett in Atchison, Kansas, under the name of Howell, Jewett & Company, and in Omaha, Nebraska, under the name of the Howell Lumber Company.
In July, 1891, Mr. Howell, being largely indebted to the First National Bank of Chicago, transferred his property to that bank, including a valuable piece of real estate in Omaha. In payment for this real estate the bank surrendered to Mr. Howell his promissory notes, which the bank held, amounting to $150,000.
In May, 1891, the firm of Howell, Jewett & Company gave certain drafts to these plaintiffs, amounting to something over $12,000. The plaintiffs began an action upon these drafts and procured the Omaha real estate to be attached. Judgment was obtained in that action. This action was brought to set aside the conveyance of the real estate from Mr. Howell (through an intermediary) to the
These interveners, the First National Bank of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, the Lincoln National Bank of Lincoln, Illinois, and the Commercial National Bank of Fremont, Nebraska, having claims against the Howell Lumber Company, and having procured attachments upon said real estate in actions on their respective claims and having obtained judgments thereon, intervened herein to obtain satisfaction of their several judgments out of the proceeds of the real estate. In May, 1900, the plaintiffs and the interveners, with leave of, court, filed amended petitions herein.
The original petitions were ^disregarded and are not included in the transcript. In their amended petition the plaintiffs, in addition to the facts relied upon to subject the Omaha real estate to the lien of their attachment and the satisfaction of their judgment, made general allegations that Mr. Howell conveyed to the defendant bank “all his property of whatever kind or description, and all of the property of the Howell Lumber Company, Howell, Jewett & Company and Herbert N." Jewett, all aggregating an amount of $1,600,000, and that the “various conveyances made by said Spooner R.HoAvell to the First National Bank of Chicago, and particularly the conveyance made by Spooner R. Howell of the land above named, Avere made with the intention to hinder and delay these plaintiffs,” etc, and prayed that the conveyance of the Omaha real estate to the bank be held as fraudulent and void as against the plaintiffs, and be set aside and held of no effect as against the judgment and attachment of these plaintiffs. The prayer also contained the following: “That the said First National Bank be held to account for the various properties received by it, and that it be compelled to show all of the property received by it from said Spooner R. Howell as aforesaid set out, and that it be held that such transactions were fraudulent and void as against the creditors of Spooner R. HoAvell, the HoAvell
The answer of the defendant bank contained specific denials of these allegations and alleged pertinent facts, showing the defendant to be the owner of the Omaha land by purchase from Mr. Howell in good faith, for full valué, in notes of Mr. Howell held by the bank. This answer also objected to the jurisdiction of the court over all transactions between the defendant bank and Mr. Howell, other than that of the conveyance of the Omaha real estate. Upon these allegations, and the evidence, the plaintiffs and interveners insist that the trial court' had jurisdiction of all of the transactions between Mr. Howell and the defendant bank, although made in another state and not relating to any property in Nebraska; and insist that their amended petition should be treated as a general creditors’ bill, to subject to the payment of their claims all money and all property that Mr. Howell transferred to the bank in his settlement with the bank.
1. It seems to us that it is unnecessary to determine whether the bill might have been so framed as to have allowed of such an investigation and order on the part of the court. It seems clear that the general allegations of the bill, without specifying any property so transferred by Mr. Howell, are not sufficient to justify such action on the part of the court. The most that can he claimed for these allegations is that they lay sufficient foundation for such evidence of other transactions as may throw light upon the good faith of the transfer of the Omaha real estate.
2. The defendant bank insists that this action can not be maintained to subject the attached real estate to the lien of the attachment and to the satisfaction of their judg
3. It appears that before the trial of this case in the court below, the defendants Howell and Jewett were discharged in bankruptcy, and the defendant bank insists that this fact is a defense to the bank in this action. This contention can not be sustained. The discharge in bankruptcy could not have the effect to destroy the rights in this land, Avhich had accrued to the plaintiffs and interveners by virtue of their attachments and judgments long before the proceedings in bankruptcy were begun.
4. It appears that neither party urged this action for trial for many years after it was begun, and, in the meantime, the judgments upon which the claims of the plaintiffs and interveners are founded became dormant, and Avere revived under the statute. ' The defendant bank appears to urge this circumstance as a defense in this action, insisting that the plaintiffs and interveners, by this delay, led the bank to suppose that they did not intend to try the case upon its merits, and that, in the meantime, the bank, relying upon its title in the attached land, made large improvements thereon at great expense, and urging other similar circumstances as affecting the right of the plaintiffs and interveners to recover in this action. Such contentions can hardly be supposed to be serious. It Avas the right of either party to urge the case to an early disposition, and, in the meantime, all parties interested in the land must take notice of the pendency of the action and of the claims of the various parties in the land as shown by their pleadings.
5. The trial court determined the issues in favor of the defendant bank and the plaintiffs and interveners have brought the case here upon appeal. The question in this
The evidence shows that Mr. Howell had formed a partnership with Mr. Jewett to carry on the lumber business at Omaha. The name of the partnership was the Howell Lumber Company. The transaction of the purchase of this land was carried on in the name of the Howell Lumber Company. The check that paid for it appears to have been in the partnership name. It was carried on the books of the company as partnership property, but the title was taken in the name of Mr. Howell alone. Mr. Jewett had very little, if any, real financial interest in the partnership business. Money loaned by the defendant bank to Mr. Howell was used by him indiscriminately in the different branches of the lumber business in which he was the principal owner. The trial court found that all parties interested knew that this land appeared upon the records and was held out to the public to be the property of Mr. Howell; that the defendant bank supposed, and was justified in supposing, that this land was a part of the assets of Mr. Howell upon which his creditors might rely as available for their claims; and concluded that, under such circumstances, Mr. Howell might use it to pay his personal creditors. We have been referred to nó author: ity for holding a contrary doctrine.
Upon these issues a mass of testimony was taken, embraced in a bill of exceptions in three volumes and covering over 1,000 pages of closely typewritten matter. A part of this evidence is in depositions, and other written matter, and a considerable portion of it is the evidence of witnesses orally examined before the trial court In studying this
Upon the whole record we are inclined to the view that the general finding of the trial court in favor of the defendant bank is right. This requires an affirmance of the judgment.
Affirmed.