115 Neb. 255 | Neb. | 1927
This action was brought in the district court for Hamilton county by appellee, hereinafter called plaintiff, against appellants, hereinafter called defendants (unless for reasons separately named), to recover $10,000 with interest for the wrongful conversion by them of a draft for $10,000 issued by the Omaha Life Insurance Company to plaintiff in payment of a policy written by it on the life of her husband, Joseph Talich, wherein she was named as beneficiary. After the issues were duly joined, the case was tried to a jury, and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff for $11,889.92, and against all of the defendants, on which judgment was entered. Seeking reversal thereof, defendants have appealed, John S. Marvel alone superseding the judgment.
As above indicated, the action is one seeking judgment for wrongful conversion. However, the defendants insist that it is one for rescission. Neither the pleadings nor the evidence sustain such a contention.
As to the challenge that the judgment is not sustained by the evidence: The substance of the claim of plaintiff
The substance of the claim of the defendants,, save and except John S. Marvel, is: That such draft was obtained by them under and by virtue of an agreement voluntarily entered into by and between them and the plaintiff, by the terms of which she was to and did indorse and deliver to them the draft, and in consideration thereof they delivered to her the indorsed notes in question; that each defendant acted for himself without a common design or purpose other than that each desired to collect the respective debts owing them; and further that John S. Marvel was not personally present.
As to the claim of John S. Marvel, he interposes a general denial to each and every allegation contained in plaintiff’s petition.
There is an acute and striking conflict in the evidence as to just how the indorsement of such draft was procured to be made, and as to how and for what purpose thp draft was left in the possession of the defendants. The record is voluminous. To attempt an analysis thereof, or to fairly quote therefrom, would be to extend this opinion beyond proper limits, and would serve no useful purpose. A careful con
In arriving at this conclusion, we have not been unmindful of the separate challenge urged by John S. Marvel, and neither have we been unmindful of the law applicable to the facts disclosed by the record as to each and all of the defendants; but, we have recognized that, in order for such acts to constitute conversion, they must be positive and must be tortious, as held by us in Colley v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 107 Neb. 864. “Any distinct act of dominion wrongfully exerted over one’s property in denial of his right is a conversion.” Starr v. Bankers Union of the World, 81 Neb. 377-380, “All are principals in conversion, and every' person who knowingly aids and abets another in the conversion of the property of a third person is liable to such third person for the value of the property so converted.” Osborne Co. v. Piano Mfg. Co., 51 Neb. 502. “Any wrongful influence designedly exerted by an interested party and producing a condition of mind that deprives the other party of the exercise of his free will may amount to duress and invalidate a contract signed while the influence prevails.” Farmers State Bank v. Dowler, 112 Neb. 262.
Also, in our determination, we have considered the defendant John S. Marvel’s claim, in substance, that the record is without evidence connecting him with such conspiracy, and that he not being present is not holden for damages. He was the president of the defendant bank, as well as of the Bank of Commerce at Hastings, the cashiers of which banks were the active participants in the carrying out of the plan, and as such as well as individually were personally interested in seeing that the notes were taken up, as 'was John S. Marvel; that on receipt of the draft John S. Marvel was given full credit on his own individual account in the Giltner bank for the full amount of his note, $834-.30, and interest, making a total of $953.30;
As to his operating through his agents, and his receipt and retention of the money, we find the following authorities instructive: 38 Cyc. 2054, 2055; Pearlman v. Snitzer, 112 Neb. 135; Cooper v. Newman, 45 N. H. 339; Evans v. State Nat. Bank, 24 Fed. 325; Jones v. Minnesota & Manitoba R. Co., 97 Minn. 232; Canifax v. Chapman, 7 Mo. 175; Banks v. Windham, 7 Ala. App. 616; Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Franklin Construction Co., 70 N. H. 37.
The necessity for, as well as the application of, the foregoing rule is apparent when considering a case like this, as the proof of an agreement to enter into a conspiracy rests in the first instance solely in the minds of the would-be conspirators ; hence, one not a party thereto must rest his case largely on the proveable surrounding facts and circumstances.
Defendants have called our attention to other assignments of alleged error which we have not discussed herein, but which, upon examination, we conclude are without merit. The defendants have had a fair trial. The judgment of the district court is without reversible error, and is therefore in all things,
Affirmed.