209 N.W. 315 | Minn. | 1926
1. On September 23, 1922, the defendant Remer entered into two contracts with St. Louis county for the construction of roads. The Aetna company was the surety on its bonds. Shortly after the making of the contracts Remer and the bank entered into an agreement whereby the bank was to advance money to finance the contracts. The money received from the county was to be deposited with the bank and such money and the money advanced by the bank was to be used only in discharging obligations in connection with the road work. Remer made his first application for an advance on February 3, 1923, though prior thereto he had carried some overdrafts, and on that date he made a formal assignment to the bank of all money due or to become due from the county. Remer did not keep his accounts separate in the bank. He deposited moneys other than those received from the county and drew checks for purposes other than paying on the two road contracts. The evidence sustains the trial court's finding that the bank advanced $34,489.07, and received $29,289.60, leaving an unpaid balance of $5,199.47. The contract was completed and accepted by the county. There was due Remer from the county $4,501.66. The amount due the bank from Remer was $697.81 in excess of the sum due Remer from the county. The memorandum of the court makes the situation clear:
"The circumstance that funds from sources other than the county and loans made by the bank to Remer, were deposited in his account, and that he drew checks on said account for purposes not connected with the contracts in question, does not, in my opinion, *355 bar the right of the bank to claim the funds now held by the county, in view of the evidence that the advances made by the bank on account of these particular contracts are greatly in excess of the amounts deposited from the above mentioned sources, as well as in excess of the amount of the funds now remaining under the control of the county."
The bank's equity to the $4,501.66 is superior to the equity or right of the surety. The recent cases of Ganley v. Pipestone,
2. The bank appeals from the judgment for costs in the sum of $66.52 against the Aetna company. Its claim is that it should recover from the Aetna company the difference between $5,199.47, the amount due it from Remer, and $4,501.66, which it is to receive from the county, or $697.81, plus several interest items not necessary to detail.
The findings of fact and conclusions of law were made on March 24, 1924, and an amendment on October 1, 1924. On March 28, 1925, the bank made a motion to amend the conclusions so as to give, in addition to the judgment of $4,501.66 against the county, judgment against the Aetna company for $697.81, and several interest items. This motion was denied on the same day, and on May 16, 1925, on motion of the bank, judgment was entered against the county for $4,501.66. The defendant Aetna company appealed. The bank did not appeal. There followed some wrangling about the judgment for costs against the Aetna company, and some misunderstanding, but it was finally entered on November 23, 1925. The plaintiff *356 appealed from it on December 4, 1925. At the time of its entry the time to appeal from the judgment of $4,501.66 had elapsed. The Aetna company alone had appealed. The plaintiff invokes the rule that the time to appeal from a judgment does not expire until the inclusion of costs. If that rule has application, the plaintiff is not helped. It has not appealed from that judgment. The appeal from the judgment for costs does not help it. If there was error against the bank, and we do not say there was, it was in the denial of its motion of March 28, 1925, to include with the judgment against the county a judgment for $697.81, and interest, against the Aetna company. The judgment of May 16, 1925, was an adjudication against its claim, for it necessarily included the ruling of March 28, 1925. No appeal was taken from it by the bank and it is at rest.
Other claims are urged which do not require discussion. The court's denial of the Aetna company's motion to reopen, made a considerable time after the trial, is sustainable, if upon no other ground, as within the exercise of sound discretion. The case involved some complications and some uncertainty in its facts and is well ended by the affirmance of both judgments.
Judgments affirmed.