Andola v. Picott

46 P. 928, 5 Idaho 27, 1896 Ida. LEXIS 41
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 P. 928 (Andola v. Picott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andola v. Picott, 46 P. 928, 5 Idaho 27, 1896 Ida. LEXIS 41 (Idaho 1896).

Opinion

HUSTON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the-district court for Ada county in an action of ejectment. The facts as shown by the record are about as follows: On the eleventh day of April, 1891, the defendant Mary D. Picott, a married woman, was the owner and in possession of certain real estate situate in Ada county, about two and one-half miles from Boise City, in what is known as “Cottonwood Gulch,” the same being her separate property, and being about-acres in extent. This property the defendant Mary D. Picott had owned and occupied for nearly twenty years prior to said eleventh day of April, 1891. On the said eleventh day of April, 1891, said Mary D. Picott, by warranty deed, conveyed, said premises to the plaintiff A. B. Andola, for the expressed consideration in the deed of $6,000. It appears from the record that the actual consideration paid by the grantee was-$1,500. It appears that, at the time of the execution of such deed by the defendant Mary D. Picott, her husband, Joseph II. Picott, was not in the country. Mary D. Picott received the consideration of $1,500. On the sixth day of July, 1891„ Joseph H. Picott signed and acknowledged the deed, executed and delivered by his wife, to plaintiff Andola, on the 11th of April, 1891, and received therefor from the plaintiff Andola a consideration of $100. On the same day, the plaintiff gave to-said Joseph H. Picott a lease of said premises for six months [32]*32from the first day of July, 1891. On the twenty-second day of January, 1892, plaintiff brought action in the probate court for Ada county to recover possession of said premises. There seems to have been a number of factions, motions, • dismissals, and other proceedings before the probate court, but, as they cut no figure in the consideration of the' question before us, we shall not notice them. The cause was finally heard before the district court of Ada county on the 21st of March, 1896, with a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs.

The specifications of error, as the same appear in the transcript, are as follows: “(1) Insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, and excepted to on the trial, in this: That the evidence is insufficient to show or prove that the deed (exhibit No. 1) is in any sense a legal and valid deed of conveyance to the land in question by the defendant Mary D. Picott, the evidence showing at the time that she was a married woman, and that the .land in question was her separate property at the time of said alleged conveyance by her; and, further, that the same was at said time occupied by her as a homestead. That the evidence shows without dispute that said exhibit No. 1 was signed by her, and acknowledged and delivered by her to the plaintiff Andola on the eleventh day of April, 1891, and was thereafter, to wit, on the sixth day of July, 1891, altered at the instance of the plaintiff Andola, and signed by Joseph H. Picott, and at said time acknowledged by him without the knowledge or consent of said Mary D. Picott, the grantor named, in said exhibit No. 1. That, there is no evidence that tends to show or prove that the plaintiff is the owner or entitled to the possession of the premises in question. Errors in law occurring at the trial, and excepted to by the defendants at the time: 1. That the verdict is against law; 2. That' the court erred in striking out defendants’ separate defense from their answer, and rejecting their evidence thereunder; 3. The court erred in giving plaintiffs’ said instruction to the jury, as asked for, over the defendants’ exception; 4. The court erred in refusing to give to the jury defendants’ said requests, marked Nos, 1" and 2, and to which refusal to so instruct the defendants excepted; 5. The court erred in refus[33]*33ing to permit tlie questions sought to be asked by defendants’ -counsel to the witnesses, Mary D. Picott, W. E. Borah, and J. B. Lyon, as set forth, and to which refusal exceptions were then and there taken; 6. The court erred in striking out all the testimony of the defendant Mary I). Picott, to the effect that exhibit No. 1 was given by her to secure the payment of ■$1,500 on town lots, and to which defendants then and there ■excepted. The above and foregoing statement on motion for a new trial, presented by the defendants’ counsel, is hereby .settled and allowed by me in accordance with the stipulation ■extending the time therefor under the statute, now on file in the above-entitled action. Settlement made over plaintiffs’ objection as to form and sufficiency of statement.”

These are the specifications of error as they appear in the transcript. TJpon the argument before this court, and in their brief, counsel for appellants have not followed very closely ■either the one or the other. However, we will endeavor to get ■at the points made by appellants, and pass upon them. In their answer to plaintiffs’ complaint, defendants set up various-•defenses. All the material allegations of the complaint are ■denied. Then follows an elaborate and extensive series of allegations, which may be summarized as follows: The defendant Mary D. Picott avers that on or about April 11, 1891, the plaintiff Andola, “for the purpose of deceiving, overreaching, -and defrauding the said defendant Mary D. Picott out of the •ownership and possession of said property, etc., solicited said Mary D. Picott to accept a loan for the sum of $1,500 from .said plaintiff Andola,” for a reasonable period of time, the period of time not being mentioned. The said plaintiff then ■and there falsely and fraudulently represented to the said defendant Mary D. Picott that she could pay said money back whenever it suited her convenience so to do. The said plaintiff then and there falsely and fraudulently stated to the defendant Mary D. Picott that all he wanted was the said defendants’ mortgage on certain town lots, which she owned in Boise City, to secure its payment. This defense is elongated •and elaborated over ten or twelve closely printed pages of the transcript. In the answer, the defendants offer to repay to plaintiff the $1,500 alleged to be the true consideration for the [34]*34deed aforesaid, together with interest thereon. Thereupon the plaintiffs file their written acceptance of such offer, and the defendants decline and refuse to make good the offer or tender set up in their answer. The plaintiffs thereupon move the court to strike out so much of the answer of defendants as sets np an affirmative defense by way of allegations of fraud in the procuration of said deed, which motion was granted by the court. And this is the first error alleged.

There was no error in granting this motion. The refusal of defendants to stand by and make good their offer made on their answer was a palpable admission of the utter want of 'bona fides or equity in their contention. TJnder the rules of practice recognized in this jurisdiction, defendants had set up an equitable defense to the action of ejectment. To say nothing of the incredible character of the statements of defendants, by which they seek not only to change a deed absolute on its face into a mortgage, but to also change the location and character of the real estate claimed to have been encumbered, the order of the court was proper.

It is claimed that Joseph H. Picott was induced to sign the deed while in a state of intoxication; but nothing of this kind is claimed or intimated on the part of the defendant, Mary D. Picott. On the contrary, it is made apparent from the record that Mary D. is far more than ordinarily sharp in matters of 'business.

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Bluebook (online)
46 P. 928, 5 Idaho 27, 1896 Ida. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andola-v-picott-idaho-1896.