Albin ex rel. La Rue v. Parmele

Nebraska Supreme Court
Albin ex rel. La Rue v. Parmele, 78 Neb. 74 (Neb. 1907)
111 N.W. 121; 1907 Neb. LEXIS 171
Ames, Epperson, Oldham

Albin ex rel. La Rue v. Parmele

Opinion of the Court

Oldham, C.

The only question at issue in this appeal is as to whether or not the district court for Cass county, Nebraska, has rendered an accounting for rents and profits of the premises in dispute between the parties in conformity with the mandate issued by this court on April 19, 1905, in the case of Albin v. Parmele, 73 Neb. 663. The full history of this litigation and all the issues determined therein appear in the former opinions rendered by this court in Albin v. Parmele, 70 Neb. 740, 746, and 73 Neb. 663. By reference to these opinions it will be noted that, at the first hearing of this cause in this court, it was determined that, under the will of Benjamin Albin, deceased, William Albin was devised a life estate in the premises in controversy without the power of alienation or incumbrance, and that the deed from William Albin and wife to defendant Parmele, and the deed from Parmele to Carey, and the mortgage from Carey to Parmele were properly canceled and held for naught by the district court, but that the court had erred in incumbrancing the estate with a judgment lien for the purchase money paid by Parmele to William Albin. In the memorandum opin*75ion on the motion for rehearing the cause was remanded for a determination of the rights of the parties under a five years’ lease, executed by William Albin to his brother Frank Albin, and assigned to defendant Parmele. At a retrial of the cause, the court, in attempted conformity with this mandate, held the lease absolutely void, and without effect, and rendered judgment against the defendants for possession of the premises and the full amount of the rents and profits accruing during their occupancy of the same. On a review of this judgment, at the last hearing of the cause in this court, it was determined that the lease for a term of years was an incumbrance on the estate, and as such was executed without authority, but that, in an equitable accounting for rents and profits, the occupancy of the premises under the lease should be treated as the holding of a tenant at will. The judgment was reversed, with directions to the court below “to take an accounting of the amount due for rents and profits of the premises in controversy during the time they were occupied under the lease, and to credit this accounting with such sums as William Albin has received from the lessees during the existence of the lease.” In conformity with this direction the trial court found that the amount stipulated in the lease was the reasonable value of the leasehold interest for the first year that it was occupied by the lessees, and that the amount therein stipulated had been paid to the guardian of the lessor for his support and maintenance. The court further found that, for the three succeeding years, in which the premises were occu-' pied by the defendants under the assignment of the lease and their void deeds, the value of the premises was in excess of $200 a year, the sum named in the lease, and of the total value of $370, and that during said time William Albin had received from the lessees the sum of $1,000, and, consequently, was not entitled to any further recovery for rents and profits. The decree found that the defendants had delivered the peaceable possession of the premises to the plaintiff at the expiration of the lease, in March, *761905, and judgment was entered- quieting the title to the land and canceling all the conveyances thereon, in conformity with the judgments and mandates of this court. Prom so much of the judgment as denied plaintiff’s claim for rents and profits, plaintiff appeals to this court.

It seems to us that the judgment of the district court is in strict compliance with the directions contained in the mandate. We directed an equitable accounting between the parties, not under the terms of the leasehold contract, which was invalid, but rather by treating the occupancy as if it were a tenancy at will, and charging the occupants for the actual value of the use of the premises, and crediting them with the amount paid plaintiff during the time of such possession. The court charged defendants with the occupancy as directed by this mandate. Defendants were credited with the $1,000 paid to William Albin by defendant Parmele at the time the deed wag executed and the lease assigned, and it is of this credit, and not of the charges in the accounting, that complaint is made. We held at the first hearing of the cause that a judgment for the purchase money could not be taxed as a lien against the land in controversy, because there was no authority under the will to incumber it. But we did not hold that the amount actually paid by defendant Parmele to William Albin might not be taken into consideration in an equitable accounting for rents and profits. The testimony tends to show that the $1,000 received from Parmele was largely used for the support and maintenance of William Albin and his family, and, as the court did not render judgment over against plaintiff for the remainder due, but merely dismissed plaintiff’s claim, we think the judgment was in conformity with the mandate, and recommend that it be affirmed.

Ames and Epperson, CC., concur.

By the Court: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is

Affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
William Albin, by George N. La Rue, Guardian v. Charles C. Parmele
Status
Published