Anderson v. Star-Bair Oil Co.

243 P. 394, 34 Wyo. 332, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 43
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1926
Docket1251
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 243 P. 394 (Anderson v. Star-Bair Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Star-Bair Oil Co., 243 P. 394, 34 Wyo. 332, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 43 (Wyo. 1926).

Opinion

*336 Blume, Justice.

Tbe record in this ease is voluminous. There were many parties to the action and the issues involved appear somewhat confusing at first blush. We shall, however, in order that the vital points herein may appear clearly, make no, or only slight, mention of immaterial matters or of parties who have no particular interest in this appeal. The material facts are about as follows:

J. D. Jones was, on May 3, 1921, manager of the Star-Bair Oil Company, a corporation doing business in Na-trona county, Wyoming. On that date the oil company executed to him and to Laura B. Jones, his wife, a note for $8500, secured by a chattel mortgage upon all of the property of said oil company, consisting, as we take it, of an outfit for drilling oil wells. About the month of July, 1921, the National Supply Company, one of the respondents herein, brought an action against said oil company to recover judgment for money due, and caused a writ of attachment to be issued against all of the property of said Star-Bair Oil Company, and claimed that the mortgage given to Jones and his wife was fraudulent. Jones and his wife were both made defendants in that action. A judgment was rendered in that suit on January 5, 1922, for the sum of $2726.60, and the court upheld the attachment theretofore levied upon the property in controversy. In the meantime, pending that action, and before judgment was rendered therein, J. D. Jones and his wife assigned the note and mortgage hereinbefore mentioned to Charles Anderson, who in turn, on October 1, 1921, and without reference to the suit of the National Supply Company, brought an action in the district court of Natrona county against the Star-Bail* Oil Company, National Supply Company, Laura E. Jones and other parties, for the foreclosure of the mortgage of May 3, 1921, alleging that the lien of said mortgage ivas superior to any rights of such defendants, and asking that the claims of such defendants, including that of the National Supply Company, *337 be declared to be junior and inferior to tlie lien of said mortgage. Most of the defendants in that cause appeared and filed answer. It is this action, in which the appeal herein was taken, and is the action hereinafter considered. While the case was pending and before the trial thereof, the various parties interested therein joined in an application to the court to have the property in controversy— included in the mortgage aforesaid and attached as above mentioned — sold, on the ground that it was perishable and expensive to keep. The court, accordingly, made an order of sale thereof, and an attempted sale took place on December 27, 1921, to J. R. Dunbar, for the price of $8772. No money, however, was ever paid by the purchaser, and the sale remained incomplete as hereinafter more fully mentioned. The case came on for final hearing on February 27, 1923, upon the issues joined therein. The court entered judgment on that date, adjudicated the various liens against the property in controversy and established the same in the following order of priority, namely: First, a labor lien in favor of one Kelly and oné Downs in the sum of $310.60 (not in controversy here) : Second, a lien in favor of the National Supply Company in the sum of $2726.60: Third, a lien in favor of Charles Anderson, the plaintiff, arising out of the mortgage aforesaid, in the sum of $8500, and attorney’s fees in the amount of $1901.71. All other parties were declared to have no lien or claim against the property in controversy. An appeal from said judgment was begun by Anderson, but was abandoned by J. H. Adrianee, who, as will be stated directly, became Anderson’s assignee. Hal Curran, who appeared as Anderson’s attorney at the commencement of the action, was discharged as such some time prior to February 27, 1923, and E. G. Vanatta thereafter appeared and acted as Anderson’s attorney in said cause.

On June 28,1923, Charles Anderson made and executed an assignment of the judgment in his favor, in the action aforesaid, to J. H. Adrianee, reciting that the assignment *338 was made for a valuable consideration. It was filed as part of the files in said action, at 1:30 in the afternoon of that date. On the same day, E. G-. Yanatta executed a notice claiming an attorney’s lien for the sum of $3500 upon the same judgment. This notice was filed in said action at 4:40 in the afternoon of that day, and was served upon the various parties to the action on the following-day. On July 31, 1923, J. H. Adriance, in turn, assigned the judgment in favor of Anderson to the National Supply Company, for the purpose of having an execution issued in said cause. Such execution was issued on August 7, 1923, the property in controversy was levied on and sold, at sheriff’s sale, on August 29, 1923, to the National Supply Company for the sum of $2500. E. G. Yanatta, J. D. Jones and Laura E. Jones, filed objections to the confirmation of said sale, mainly upon the ground that the same property had previously been sold on December 27, 1921, to J. E. Dunbar, for the sum of $8772, as hereinbefore mentioned. In the meantime, and on July 23, 1923, E. G. Yanatta also filed a petition of intervention, claiming that the assignment of the judgment by Charles Anderson to J. H. Adriance was made for the purpose of defrauding him, and asking that he be made a party to the cause and that the assignment aforesaid be set aside as fraudulent. On August 3,1923, J. D. Jones and his wife also filed a petition of intervention, alleging that they were the real parties in interest; that Anderson was only the representative of interveners and had no interest in the judgment in his favor, except the sum of $500; and that the assignment of said judgment to Adriance was made for the purpose of defrauding them. They accordingly prayed that said assignment be set aside and that they be declared to be the substituted owners of the judgment. Motions to be permitted to file these petitions of intervention were filed by the parties respectively. The motion for confirmation of the sale aforesaid, filed in said cause, the objections thereto and the motion for permission to file said petitions *339 of intervention, came on for bearing on November 5,1923. The court found that a sale of said property in controversy bad been attempted to be made pursuant to an order of tbe court on December 27, 1921, at which sale one J. K. Dunbar bid the sum of $8772; that a portion of said property was turned over to said bidder; that part of it was not delivered to him; that a large portion of the casing, constituting a part of the property, was stolen property and was taken from the possession of Dunbar under a writ of replevin; that the attempted sale was in fact void, for the reason that the terms of the order directing the sale were not complied with, and that the sale was not in fact completed. The court overruled the objections to the confirmation of the second sale, and entered an order of approval thereof. The motions of Vanatta and Jones and his wife, to be permitted to intervene in said action, were denied. From the judgment so entered, E. G-. Vanatta, J. D. Jones and Laura E. Jones, hereinafter referred to as interveners, have appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
243 P. 394, 34 Wyo. 332, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-star-bair-oil-co-wyo-1926.