96 P.2d 895 | Wyo. | 1939
On May 1, 1935, Lillian G. Ellis, the defendant in the case below and respondent here, was the owner of certain lands in Fremont County, Wyoming, including certain isolated tracts hereinafter to be mentioned. A mortgage on the premises had been foreclosed and the period of redemption expired some time in the fall of 1935. Prior to May 1, 1935, she had also been the owner of certain personal property, consisting of cattle, sheep, and other property, and was also the owner of certain leases on state land. A mortgage had been given on the personal property to the Rock Springs National Bank. The mortgage had been foreclosed, but the defendant had been given the privilege to redeem her property until May 1, 1935. On the last mentioned date, and the day after, she entered into four transactions with the plaintiff. The first transaction was as follows: She borrowed of the plaintiff the sum of $25,000 and gave her note therefor, due in six months, providing for an attorney fee and expenses of collection in case of default. This amount was not sufficient to pay the Rock Springs National Bank, and she accordingly borrowed $1000 more on May 2. She gave a mortgage to secure all of this indebtedness on about 460 head of steers, 29 horses, about 1700 head of sheep, and some other personal property. This mortgage was also security for any future advances which plaintiff might make to the defendant. About $5600 was advanced after May 1, 1935, of which $3750 was advanced by plaintiff to the defendant for operating expenses after the due date of the $25,000 note hereinbefore mentioned. The second transaction was as follows: On May 2, 1935, the defendant agreed to sell the sheep *74 mentioned in the above mortgage for the sum of $8000. The plaintiff agreed to buy them, provided that the sale should subsequently be found to be satisfactory to it. It was so found thereafter and credit was given to the defendant on her indebtedness for the sum of $8000. The receipt given by plaintiff for this credit will hereafter be mentioned. The third transaction was as follows: Either on May 1 or May 2, 1935, the defendant made an assignment to plaintiff of the leases on about 6833 acres of state land. These leases are in controversy here, the plaintiff claiming that they were assigned in consideration of its purchase of the above mentioned sheep, the defendant claiming that they were assigned merely as additional security for the indebtedness mentioned above. The leases expired on March 1, 1938. The fourth transaction was as follows: Plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract for the purchase by plaintiff from the defendant of certain isolated tracts, consisting of 1040 acres, at the sum of $3.00 per acre, provided title thereto could be secured or for a lease thereof for the period of ten years, if title could not be secured, the lessee paying the annual taxes and assessments levied against the land. This contract will hereinafter be referred to in somewhat greater detail.
The indebtedness above mentioned, though some payments had been made thereon, was long in default when, on June 4, 1937, plaintiff made demand upon the defendant for the delivery of the property embraced in the chattel mortgage. According to the testimony of Mr. Maxwell, arrangements had been made with the brother of the defendant to take up the indebtedness, but it does not appear that any tender of any amount had been made to plaintiff of the amount due or any part of it before the commencement of this action, which was on June 9, 1937. At that time plaintiff brought this action to replevin the mortgaged *75 property, setting forth the chattel mortgage, the right of possession given therein to plaintiff in case of default, alleging the indebtedness due to be the sum of $15,500 and interest, that a demand had been made and refused, and praying for the right of possession of the property. On June 12, 1937, before the property was taken out of the possession of the defendant, the latter filed an answer and cross-petition, admitting the execution and delivery of the mortgage, that the contract for the isolated tracts above mentioned, the assignment of the leases, and the execution of the note and mortgage above mentioned, were all part of the same transaction; that plaintiff had failed to pay the taxes on the isolated tracts and that the amount thereof should be credited on her indebtedness; that the leases were assigned to plaintiff merely as additional security for such indebtedness; that she did not know the exact amount thereof and asked for an accounting. She offered to pay to plaintiff the amount which the court should find due to the plaintiff and prayed that the assignment of the leases as well as the contract for the isolated tracts be declared as additional security for the mortgage indebtedness; that the plaintiff be enjoined from selling the property and that she have other relief as might be found to be equitable.
An injunction was issued by the court commissioner, as prayed. Plaintiff, on June 21, 1937, filed a motion to vacate the injunction, alleging that the answer and cross-petition of defendant does not state facts sufficient to entitle her to an injunction; that the contract for the isolated tracts is void and of no force, because plaintiff has not placed herself in position to perform her part, and that the taxes on said lands cannot, in any event, be credited on the indebtedness; that a large amount of money is still due to the plaintiff and that it is at all events entitled to the possession of the mortgaged property. The motion was denied by the court *76 on July 17, 1937, over the objection of the plaintiff. The plaintiff then filed a general demurrer, asked to withdraw it, and this being denied, filed, on August 7, 1937, its answer, denying, generally, the allegations of the answer and cross-petition, setting out in more detail the indebtedness due the plaintiff and alleging the provisions in the note and mortgage relating to attorney's fees.
In the meantime, and on July 19, 1937, the court made an order in the case directing the sale of the cattle covered by the chattel mortgage and directing the proceeds thereof in the sum of $17,500 to be deposited with the clerk of court and that upon such deposit such clerk should release the chattel mortgage given to the plaintiff. This order was made over the objection of the plaintiff. A motion to vacate this order was subsequently denied. The sale was had on September 28, 1938, pursuant to the order theretofore made, counsel for the plaintiff consenting thereto, and the total amount deposited in the hands of the clerk of court, after deducting fees, was the sum of $17,506.07. Thereafter the clerk of court released the mortgage of record, as ordered. The case came on for final trial on March 31, 1938. A good deal of testimony was taken, most of it relating to the question as to whether or not the leases had been assigned as additional security. Plaintiff, at the close of the case in chief made by the defendant, moved for judgment in its favor for the reason that none of the evidence on the part of the defendant in any way tends to show that plaintiff was not entitled to the possession of the property at the commencement of the action. The motion was denied. On May 16, 1938, the court rendered its judgment herein, finding the amount due plaintiff on its indebtedness to be $16,767.33; that the value of the leases is $2.50 per acre over and above the rentals provided therein, or a total of $17,084.07. Judgment was entered *77 for plaintiff accordingly. Judgment was entered against the plaintiff in favor of the defendant for the value of the leases as above mentioned in the sum of $17,084.07, with the provision that if the plaintiff should within 15 days assign to the defendant valid leases to the state lands instead of the original leases, which had expired on March 1, 1938, then and in that event such deposit should satisfy the judgment rendered against the plaintiff; that the clerk of court should pay over to plaintiff the amount of judgment in its favor upon the deposit of such leases for the defendant, and that the balance of the money in the sum of about $800 in the hands of the clerk of court should be paid over to the defendant or her attorneys. On May 27, 1937, the plaintiff, having secured new leases from the State of Wyoming to the said lands above mentioned, deposited them, together with an assignment thereof, with the clerk of court for the benefit of the defendant herein, stating that it had assigned the leases to the defendant. The form of the assignment does not appear in the record. Plaintiff at the same time asked that the court make an order directing the clerk of court to pay the plaintiff the amount of its judgment against the defendant. On July 14, 1938, the court refused to make such order, stating that it appeared to the court that the plaintiff had not complied with the judgment. Other facts pertinent herein will be mentioned hereafter. From the foregoing judgment, the plaintiff has appealed. The points raised and argued will, in so far as we think it necessary, be mentioned hereafter.
1. Defendant has moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the plaintiff voluntarily deposited the leases in court and thereby avoided a judgment of $17,084.07 against it, and because plaintiff moved that an order be entered for the clerk to turn over to it the amount of the judgment in its favor. It is held that *78 there is no "waiver or estoppel where the right to the benefit is conceded by the opposite party, or appellant is entitled thereto in any event." 4 C.J.S. 416; 2 Am. Jur. 977-978. The plaintiff is entitled to the amount of the judgment in its favor in any event, and that point is conceded, so that the foregoing rule would seem to be applicable in this case in so far as the plaintiff asked that this amount be turned over to it. Furthermore, the defendant resisted the motion in that connection, and the resistance was successful, so that defendant seems hardly to be in position to urge that point. There has, so far, been no acceptance of benefit.
The deposit of the leases was not voluntary, in the sense that it prevents an appeal. The situation in that respect is similar to that in the case of Pond Creek Coal Co. v. Runyon,
"It is contended that the payment defeated the rescission adjudged, and that one cannot appeal from a judgment after satisfying or accepting that part of it that is favorable to him. The defect in this argument is that the judgment must be considered in its entirety, and, so considered, is not favorable but adverse to appellant. That it granted appellees either of two kinds of relief to be determined by the subsequent action of appellant does not affect the question. The requirement that the coal company pay $2078 to defeat a cancellation of the deed was a part of the judgment and was, for all practical purposes, equivalent to entering a judgment against the coal company for that sum in lieu of the judgment of cancellation. The payment was made in obedience to a part of the judgment that appellant was bound to perform in order to abate the more drastic decree of cancellation. The performance, *79 therefore, cannot be regarded as voluntary. If it was not voluntary, the right to appeal exists."
So in the case at bar, the plaintiff turned over the new leases so as to avoid another, more drastic, alternative. Its feeling in that respect was not unreasonable, as will appear from some statements made hereafter. We are inclined to believe that any reasonable man would have acted likewise. Plaintiff did not so much accept a benefit, as it attempted to avoid an evil. Forfeiture of the right of appeal under the circumstances would be altogether too harsh to be consistent with justice. The motion to dismiss must be overruled.
2. The plaintiff assigns as error the holding of the court to the effect that the leases to state lands were given as security. The evidence on that point was sharply conflicting. There is much force in the argument, met with some difficulty, that the fact that plaintiff agreed to buy some of defendant's lands, namely the so-called isolated tracts, is consistent only with the theory that these leases became the absolute property of the plaintiff. On the other hand, there is in the record an insinuation that the reason for such purchase was that the plaintiff expected to become the owner of all of the defendant's property within a comparatively short time — in other words, expected that she would be unable to redeem her property. Still, that theory is at least considerably weakened by the fact that she was given two years to redeem her property, though the indebtedness was due in six months after the loan was made, and plaintiff advanced various sums of money to defendant long after the due date. However these matters may be, there are indications in the record that neither the defendant nor the officers of plaintiff intentionally testified falsely. Our power in reviewing the evidence is limited in scope, and we must solve the apparently insuperable difficulty herein in that light. Defendant testified positively that the *80
leases were assigned as security for her loan. There are some corroborating circumstances. Plaintiff, for instance, claimed that the leases were assigned as part of the transaction whereby the defendant sold the sheep embraced in the mortgage for the sum of eight thousand dollars. But when plaintiff gave defendant a receipt for that amount after the sheep were turned over to plaintiff, it stated: "for and in consideration of 1700 head of sheep mortgaged to the Yellowstone Sheep Company for $8000, credit was given for same on note of Lillian G. Ellis, dated May 1, 1935, of $7000 and her note of May 2, 1935, for one thousand dollars was marked paid and returned." It may be noted that the consideration of $8000 is indicated to be for the sheep, not the sheep and the leases as claimed by plaintiff. While an attempt to explain this fact was made, still we are not able to say that the court was not warranted in considering the omission as a corroborating circumstance of defendant's testimony. The testimony of the value of the sheep was in sharp conflict. Some of the testimony for the defendant fixed that value as high as $11,637. Without attempting to review the evidence in the case on the point under consideration any further, we have, after giving all the facts and circumstances their due weight, come to the conclusion, even if we discount to a large extent that the leases were worth over $17,000, that we are unable to say that the finding of the court is not supported by substantial evidence. Counsel for plaintiff appeal to the rule that the evidence to establish that an absolute assignment is held merely as security must be clear and convincing. It has been held that while the appellate court will review the evidence in the light of that rule, it will, nevertheless, not disturb the finding of the trial court, if there is substantial evidence warranting a clear and satisfactory conviction of the correctness of the finding. Wadleigh v. Phelps,
Counsel for the plaintiff also complain very bitterly of the finding of the court to the effect that the state leases were worth $2.50 per acre over and above the rental paid thereon, or a total of $17,084.07, and rendering judgment against the plaintiff for that amount, with the alternative mentioned in the statement of facts. They say that the action of the court in rendering such judgment was in the nature of an unjustified coercion to force plaintiff to act against its will. The judgment seems high, particularly in view of the fact that defendant agreed to sell adjacent land, with a title in fee, for the sum of three dollars per acre, in view of the fact that the rental on such land only required the payment of taxes on the land, and in view of the early expiration of the leases. Still, there was evidence in support of the court's finding, and we think that it merely followed what it conceived to be the weight of the evidence. In any event, the judgment in that respect was merely in the nature of an auxiliary order. An order similar in character was entered in the case of Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co. v. Curry,
When plaintiff deposited the new leases for the state land, together with the assignment thereof, with the clerk of court, in order to be released from the money judgment against it, it asked the court to make an order directing the clerk of court to pay to plaintiff the amount of the judgment in its favor. The court refused to do so, holding that its order, to become effective as a release of the money judgment against plaintiff, had not been complied with. The record does not show the form of the assignments, hence shows neither compliance nor non-compliance, and we must, accordingly, presume the court's action to be correct. It is stated in the briefs that the refusal of the court as above mentioned was based on the fact that the new leases were assigned subject to the reversal of the case in this court. It is undoubtedly true, as argued, that it is unfortunate that a large amount of money was tied up in the hands of the clerk of court without any benefit to any one whatever, and that no better way was found to dispose of the matter without so much harm. Still, if we may assume that the reason of the court's action was as stated in the briefs, then the assignment must either be considered conditional, in which event the plaintiff did not, strictly at least, comply with the court's order, as it set out to do, or it was not conditional — that is to say, making the assignment subject to reversal of this court was merely a statement of a right which the plaintiff had in any event. In the latter case, the plaintiff could have obtained the money by striking out, without harm, the clause to which objection was made. Again, plaintiff might have made a showing that the leases were in fact accepted. The record is silent when that was done. But whenever it was, that showing might have been made at least at that time. Of course, the caution exercised by counsel in this connection was entirely natural. It was due to the hope that this court might reverse the trial court *83 in finding that the leases assigned to plaintiff by defendant were held merely as security. As we have seen, they have lost. On the whole, it seems that it was as much the fault of the plaintiff as that of the defendant that the money was not paid over, so that we do not feel that we can interfere in this connection.
3. The statute (Section 89-4007, Rev. St. 1931) provides that in case of replevin the defendant may give a re-delivery bond in an amount double of the value of the property and thus retain possession thereof during the pendency of the action. And it is further provided thereby that if the property taken on the writ of replevin is taken for the purpose of the foreclosure of a chattel mortgage, which, we take it, was the purpose in this case, then if the defendant tenders the amount due on such mortgage, with accrued costs, the sheriff shall immediately redeliver the property to the defendant. The defendant herein did not pursue either of the alternative courses thus pointed out by the statute, but instead set up certain defenses and caused an injunction to be issued. The plaintiff contends that these defenses were not admissible. Counsel for defendant seem to think that the point was not sufficiently raised by the plaintiff, in view of the fact that the demurrer filed was never ruled on. We think, however, that the record shows, both by the motion to vacate the injunction as well as by the motion made at the trial at the close of defendant's testimony in chief, that plaintiff insisted upon this contention from beginning to the end; that the trial court ignored it, and that we should not refuse to pass on it on purely technical grounds.
We have held that no counterclaim may be filed in a replevin action, except only when it goes to the defeat of the right of possession. Schlessinger v. Cook,
"Of course there may be in some cases peculiar facts and circumstances in the nature of the property, the character of the condition, the conduct of the mortgagee, or, perhaps, in the accidents or misfortunes of the mortgagor, or in other respects, that would render it necessary for a court of equity to intervene to protect *86 the contractual or statutory rights of the mortgagor or his assigns. Such facts and circumstances might give to the court jurisdiction in equity."
We find a number of instances in which courts have applied equitable principles in actions of replevin. For instance, in cases involving conditional sales, courts, in order to prevent monstrous forfeitures, and unconscionable advantage, have permitted a vendee under such contract to set up a counterclaim for damages, and tender the vendor the balance due after deducting such damages. Buffer Sons. Mfg. Co. v. Lucas,
4. On May 1, 1935, the same date on which the mortgage herein mentioned was executed, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written agreement in regard *89 to the sale by defendant and the purchase by plaintiff of certain isolated tracts of land consisting of 1040 acres, at the agreed price of $3.00 per acre. These tracts had been included in the mortgage to the Federal Land Bank, which mortgage had been foreclosed, the period of redemption expiring in the month of October, 1935. The defendant in the agreement represented that she would be able to refinance the loan due to the Federal Land Bank, and had information to the effect that the bank would accept the sum of three dollars per acre for the isolated tracts above mentioned, and release them from the operation of the mortgage. So, in the agreement of May 1, 1935, above mentioned, between the plaintiff and defendant, the former agreed to pay the purchase price agreed upon either to the defendant or to the above mentioned bank as soon as it had assurance that it would acquire a merchantable title. And it was further agreed that "in the event the said Federal Land Bank fails or refuses to release said lands from said mortgage, then the said vendor hereby agrees to lease said lands to the said vendee for a period of ten years in consideration of the said vendee paying the annual taxes and assessments levied against the same," and that it should have immediate possession and continue in possession so long as it should pay the taxes and assessments levied against it. It appears that the lands in question are still in litigation between the Federal Land Bank and the defendant; that she has never been able to give title to the land, and so the purchase of the land has never been completed. The trial court in the final decree herein cancelled the entire agreement and directed possession of the lands involved to be delivered to the defendant. Plaintiff complains of this action of the court. Its counsel state that no relief was asked or prayed for in the cross-petition of the defendant. The defendant, however, prayed that the contract and the leases and the mortgage "be declared *90 to be part of the same transaction, and together constitute a single transaction to be collateral security only for the purported indebtedness." While, accordingly, the cancellation of the contract was not asked directly, it was indirectly. And it would seem that the trial court's action was brought about mainly or entirely by plaintiff's acts and conduct. It did not pay the taxes assessed against the isolated tracts, and did not offer to do so, even at any time during the trial. The contract provided that it should have possession of the land "so long as it pays the taxes and assessments levied against the same." It was not able to buy the land and considered the contract at an end, for it stated in the motion to vacate the injunction already mentioned, supported by the affidavit of plaintiff's manager, as follows:
"As shown by the affidavit hereto attached marked Exhibit `A' and made a part hereof by reference thereto, the contract made and entered into between Lillian G. Ellis and the Yellowstone Sheep Company on May 1, 1935, a copy of which is attached to the defendant's answer and cross-petition and marked Exhibit `A', is void and of no force and effect for the reason that the defendant failed to redeem the land therein described from the foreclosure of the Federal Land Bank's mortgage and said defendant has not placed herself in position to perform said agreement or any part thereof, and consequently, the plaintiff is not liable or chargeable under said contract for any taxes or assessments levied against the land described in said contract."
Here plaintiff not alone repudiated the contract in so far as the payment of rental is concerned, and consequently the whole of the lease, but it also considered the whole of the contract as "void and of no force and effect." We find no explanation of this treatment and this conduct in the record, or even in the briefs of counsel for plaintiff. We are unable to see how, in the face of the record before us, we can say that the action of the trial court was prejudicial to the plaintiff. *91
5. The note in suit provides that the maker thereof promises to pay all costs of collection, expenses and attorney fees in case of non-payment at maturity. The mortgage provides that in case of default, the mortgagee shall have the right to take possession of the property mortgaged and sell the same and satisfy the principal indebtedness, the expenses and an attorney fee equal to 10 per cent of the principal indebtedness. Plaintiff in its reply filed in this case alleged these facts, and asked an allowance for such fee. Upon motion of the defendant, the court, the Hon. H.R. Christmas presiding, struck these allegations from the reply. On the trial of the case, the plaintiff sought to prove, but was not permitted to prove, that the note had been placed in the hands of plaintiff's counsel for collection prior to the time of the commencement of this action, and that $1500 is a reasonable attorney's fee. It is not improbable that the judge presiding at the trial of this case felt constrained by the previous order by which all reference to attorneys' fees was stricken from the reply. We think that the ruling in both instances was error. This case perhaps presents as good example as can be found in legal lore to illustrate how the opinions of counsel are apt to be moulded or influenced by their zeal for the interests of their clients. Compare their views on the question of admissibility of the cross-petition herein with their view on the point now under consideration. There counsel for plaintiff insisted upon taking a narrow view as to what may be done in an action brought as one of replevin; counsel for defendant insisted upon taking a broad view. Their attitude is exactly the reverse in connection with the point now considered. Counsel for the defendant say that no attorney's fee may be recovered in an action of replevin, and cite Knight et al. v. Beckwith Commercial Company,
See also Orient Petroleum Co. v. Bank Trust Co., *94
If what is said is true in actions at law, it should at least be equally true in proceedings in equity. And it has been so held. Counsel for defendant seem to think that the plaintiff should have asked for foreclosure *95
of the mortgage. Why that was not done is, of course, clear from what we have already stated. But that contention, too, is, we think, clearly answered by the authorities. In the case of Nett v. Finance Corporation,
"By necessary implication, plaintiff's complaint in such an action constitutes an offer to do equity by paying any balance which the court may find still due on the note and mortgage; the answer to such a complaint is, in effect, a bill for an accounting or suit to foreclose the chattel mortgage; being a court of equity, in such case, the court is in position to dispose of the whole matter and may decree that the injunction issue unless the payee accept the amount found due to him, and may enter judgment against the payor for the amount so found due and thus foreclose the mortgage in court. Riemer v. Schlitz,
The case at bar comes within the principle of that case, since defendant by its cross-petition turned the case, in part, into an injunction suit. See in that connection Church v. Brown,
Counsel for defendant seem to suggest that no attorney's fees should be allowed because plaintiff, in refusing to redeliver the leases, was a wrongdoer, and by its action in depositing the new leases in the office of the clerk has practically admitted that fact. We fail to find any such admission. We have already noted the *97
reason why the new leases were deposited, and we have not been cited to any authorities holding that a contractual right like that at bar can, under circumstances appearing in this case, be defeated by way of penalty like that suggested by counsel. It is true that a contract for attorney's fees will not, in certain cases, be enforced. See Graves v. Burch,
The foregoing conclusion necessarily leads to the consideration of other matters. On July 19, 1937, the court, Hon. C.D. Murane presiding, upon application of the defendant, made an order directing the sale of the cattle included in plaintiff's mortgage, and that upon the deposit of $17,500 of the proceeds of the sale with the clerk of court, the latter should release the mortgage of record. We can see no serious objection to the order of the court, except that it did not sufficiently protect the whole of the plaintiff's claim. The court was doubtless, partially at least, misled by the allegation of plaintiff in its petition as to the amount due. If that had been correct the amount fixed by the court would have been sufficient. Thereafter on August 7, 1937, the plaintiff, in its reply, set forth the attorney's fees due, and thereupon filed its motion to vacate the order of sale and release of the mortgage above mentioned upon the ground that the money required to be deposited was not sufficient. The application was denied by the court, the Hon. H.R. Christmas presiding. The action of the court was objectionable on the same ground as mentioned in connection with the original order. On September 28th, 1937, the cattle were sold, with the approval of counsel for plaintiff; the sum of $17,683.60 was deposited with the clerk of court, and he, on November 9, 1937, released the mortgage of record. The sale of the cattle cannot, of course, be recalled, but plaintiff is entitled to a first lien on all of the money deposited with the clerk, so that the *99 attorney's fee mentioned may be satisfied, and to the same end the release of the mortgage must be rescinded to the extent of property not embraced within the sale of September 28, 1937. Furthermore, since the court held that the leases were held as security, they are bound the same as the other property for the satisfaction of the fee. The new leases which the plaintiff deposited with the clerk of court, and which are now held by the defendant, were doubtless procured pursuant to the right of renewal granted to the old lessee by statute, and may, accordingly, be said to merely take the place of the old leases. That was doubtless the theory of the court in directing the plaintiff to procure new leases and deposit them. An order should, therefore, be entered that the plaintiff has a first lien on these leases till its claim here mentioned is satisfied, and if that is not done within a reasonable time such further order or orders should be made so as to make the lien effective.
6. Appellant also complains of the action of the court in assessing all costs in the trial court against it. We think the action was not justified. Plaintiff should pay all costs connected directly with the litigation as to the leases. Defendant should pay all costs connected with the enforcement of the indebtedness herein, including attorney's fees, the sale of mortgaged property and matters incidental thereto. Other costs, if any, should be equally divided between the parties hereto.
The judgment of the trial court is, accordingly, affirmed in holding the filing of the cross-petition of defendant admissible, in holding the leases herein mentioned to be security to the mortgage debt herein, in cancelling the contract for the isolated tracts, and in other respects as already indicated; it is reversed in refusing to allow an attorney's fee, and in assessing the costs in the trial court, and the cause is remanded to the district court with directions to immediately *100 order the clerk of court to pay the plaintiff the amount of the judgment in its favor, to allow an attorney fee, and reassess the costs in the court below, in accordance with the foregoing opinion, and to make such other and further orders herein as heretofore expressed herein, and as may be necessary to carry the foregoing opinion into effect, and not inconsistent herewith. Each party will pay their own costs in this court.
Affirmed in part; in part, reversed with directions.
RINER, Ch. J., and KIMBALL, J., concur.