42 Neb. 788 | Neb. | 1894
Plaintiff Lysanrler W. Tulleys filed in the district court of Douglas county his petition which contained averments that plaintiff was then a resident of Iowa; that of the defendants, Keller and Weldon were residents of Nebraska; that the Anglo-American Mortgage & Trust Company, organized as an Iowa corporation, had subsequently become a domestic corporation in Nebraska; that the firm of Burnham, Tulleys & Co., of which plaintiff had been a member, had been engaged in placing loans on real estate, its outstanding loans aggregating on June 1, 1888, several million dollars in amount; that the mortgages securing loans made by Burnham, Tulleys & Co. were made to plaintiff as trustee; that the profits of this loan business were represented by mortgages made subject to those for the loan in each instance consummated; that about June 1, 1888, the Anglo-American Mortgage & Trust Company was organized in Iowa, succeeding to the business of Burn-ham, Tulleys & Co., which from thenceforward existed only for the purpose of settling up their business and collecting outstanding dues; that thereafter plaintiff, as trustee, was named in such mortgages as secured loans made by the Anglo-American Mortgage & Trust Company. There were other averments of the petition which it is not now deemed necessary to quote or describe. The prayer of the petition was that C. B. Keller, as attorney, be enjoined from interfering further in the management of the business which plaintiff claimed should be managed only by attorneys for Burnham, Tulleys & Co. The prayer was also that the Anglo-American Mortgage & Trust Company be restrained from the use of the name of plaintiff and from the use of the name of Burnham, Tulleys & Co.
“Omaha, Neb., May 26, 1894.
“Col. L. W. Tulleys — Dear Sir: Referring to the injunction against your collecting B., T. & Co. second mortgages in order that the same may not be tied up until de*791 cisión of the case in the supreme court, we are willing that you should collect and release the same, paying the money collected therefor over to this company, to be placed in the special trust fund created by the court for such purpose until a final decision is reached, and we hereby authorize and empower you to do so. We think it as well for all concerned that these mortgages should be collected when possible.
“Yours truly, Samuel S. Curtis,
“ jReceiver.”
To the above letter the answer was in this language:
“Council Bluees, Iowa, May 29, 1894.
“ SamuelS.. Curtis, Reo’r, Omaha — Dear Sir : Yours of 26th rec’d relative to collecting B., T. & Co. second mt’ge notes & releasing second mt’ges. I am advised by my Omaha att’ys that the effect of the supersedeas bond filed is to release these second notes & mt’ges from the effect of the injunction. My C. Bluffs att’ys advise the same thing.
“Yours truly, L. W. Tulleys.”
The receiver further showed by his affidavit that the position taken in said letter of Tulleys had since been reasserted and reaffirmed by his agents and attorneys, that the commission notes and mortgages of Burnham, Tulleys & Co. which said Tulleys proposed to collect because of having filed his supersedeas bond aforesaid amount to about the sum of $25,000; that the Anglo-American Mortgage & Trust Company claims a lien upon all the commission notes and mortgages remaining uncollected for its moneys and funds appropriated and used by L. W. Tulleys while its president, to the amount of nearly $160,000, and that if Tulleys is permitted to collect the remaining portion of the said $160,000 (represented by the $25,000 in notes and mortgages), affiant believes thereby will be defeated the claim of the Anglo-American Mortgage & Trust Company for the reimbursement of the funds so used, except to the extent of the amount of the supersedeas bond. This affiant
Judgment accordingly.