Polenske v. Ennis
Polenske v. Ennis
Opinion of the Court
From a judgment of the district court for Adams county, dismissing plaintiffs’ action against the defendant School District No. 17j Red Willow county, for want of jurisdiction, plaintiffs appeal. As the controversy here is solely between the plaintiffs and defendant school district, the parties will be referred to simply as plaintiffs and defendant.
November 14, 1906, defendant entered into a written contract with one E. M. Liberty for the construction of a large school building, and he gave defendant a contractor’s bond, with the Bankers Surety Company as surety. On the same day the contractor entered into a subcontract Avith one A. S. Ennis, by which Ennis agreed “to furnish all material and labor necessary to build and complete all masonry, * * * including all iron, structural iron, galvanized iron, steel ceiling in place and complete.” Plaintiffs furnished the subcontractor, Ennis, a quantity
Plaintiffs’ amended petition will make the matter plain. The petition alleges that plaintiffs are a partnership; that Ennis and Liberty entered into a contract with their codefendant school district for the erection of the building referred to; that the surety company became surety for the labor and material used in said building; that plaintiffs furnished brick for the erection of the building; “that said brick were used in the construction of said school building, and that the defendant Albert S. Ennis wras a subcontractor under his codefendant Richard M. Liberty, but that, from time to time, the said school district' recognized him (Ennis) as a contractor, paid' moneys direct to him, and upon his order when so requested, upon the original contract for the erection of said building; that there is coming to, due and payable from said school district to the defendant Albert S. Ennis, the sum of $4,900 upon the contract as aforesaid as such contractor, which is now due and payable from said school district to the said Ennis, which amount said school district promised and agreed to pay.
“The plaintiffs further show unto the court that the defendants Richard M. Liberty and school district, • as aforesaid, and the surety company have conspired and federated together to cheat and defraud these plaintiffs in this, to wit, they claim and allege that there is nothing due or coming to their codefendant, Albert S. Ennis; that there is nothing due or coming to said plaintiffs by reason of said assignment, which claim and assumption they well know to be false and fraudulent as against these plaintiffs.
“Plaintiffs allege that said school district has now in its possession a large amount of money due the said Albert S.. Ennis, and by him assigned to these plaintiffs. That said school district has paid over to its codefendant Richard M. Liberty a large amount of money since the making of the assignment aforesaid, and after these plaintiffs had given them notice of such assignment of the moneys belonging to the defendant Albert S. Ennis; that said school district is withholding large sums of money due said Ennis, claiming that their codefendant surety company has demanded that the same be withheld and payment refused. But these plaintiffs show unto the court that said defendants, they, each and every of them, refuse to give any accounting or make any accounting for the money in their hands .due and payable to these plaintiffs by reason of the assignment aforesaid of the moneys due and coming to the said Albert S. Ennis.
“Plaintiffs further show that Albert S. Ennis is insolvent, and, unless these plaintiffs have the benefit of the moneys to them assigned, they will suffer the loss of their claim and indebtedness to them and suffer thereby irreparable injury.”
The test of plaintiffs’ right to join defendant with Ennis in an action brought in a county other than the county of defendant’s residence is well stated in the second paragraph of the syllabus in Barry v. Wachosky, 57 Neb. 534: “The test for determining whether an action is rightly brought in one county against the defendant found and served therein, so that others made defendants thereto may be served in a foreign county, is whether the defendant served in the county in which the action is brought is a bona fide defendant to that action — whether
The judgment of the district court is right, and it is
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Emil Polenske v. Albert S. Ennis
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published