Andrus v. Blazzard

54 L.R.A. 354, 63 P. 888, 23 Utah 233, 1901 Utah LEXIS 14
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 54 L.R.A. 354 (Andrus v. Blazzard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrus v. Blazzard, 54 L.R.A. 354, 63 P. 888, 23 Utah 233, 1901 Utah LEXIS 14 (Utah 1901).

Opinions

BASKIN, J.

It appears that a promissory note, at the date thereof was made in the following manner and form to-wit:

“Salt Lake City, Utah, Aug. 19, 1893.
“Two years after date, we jointly and severally promise to pay Erank E. McG-urrin, or order, at McCornick and Co’s. Banking House in Salt Lake City, eleven hundred and fifty-four dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum, payable quarterly at the said bank, for value received. If the interest be not paid as stipulated the legal holder of this note may declare the principal due and proceed by law to recover both principal and interest.
“Jambs Blazzabd,
“By Edwabd B. Ceitchlow, his attorney in fact.
“Thomas Blazzabd,
“By J. L. RawliNS, his attorney in fact.
“JoiiN Blazzabd,
“By Joseph H. Hubd, his general guardian.
“Mabiam -Blazzabd Steebs.”

On the same date a mortgage on certain real estate was made and signed in the same manner as said note, to secure the-payment of the same. This note and mortgage was, after the [242]*242maturity of the note assigned to plaintiff. The amended complaint contained three counts. The first was based upon the note and mortgage, and prayed that the mortgage be adjudged to be a valid and subsisting lien upon the interest of the said John Blazzard in the premises mortgaged, and that the same be sold to satisfy the plaintiff’s debt, interest, costs, and attorneys’ fees.

The second was on the note alone and sought to charge the said John Blazzard and Joseph H. Hurd, personally thereon, and the third was on the note alone and sought to charge the said Joseph H. Hurd, personally thereon as one of the several obligees thereof.

On motion of the said Joseph H. Hurd, the first and second counts were stricken out, on the ground that the ward was not bound by either the note or mortgage. Thereupon the said Joseph H. Hurd answered the third count, and among other matters alleged that “For a further and separate answer and defense defendant alleges, that on or about the nineteenth day of August, 1893, the Probate court of Salt take county, Utah Territory, duly made an order in the matter of the estate and .guardianship of John Blazzard, an incompetent person, authorizing, ordering and directing this defendmit in the name and for the act and deed of the said John Blazzard to execute said note; and to secure the payment of the same, likewise, in the name and as and for the act and deed of the said John Blazzard, to secure said mortgage upon his undivided five twenty-eighths interest of, in and to the real estate described in the mortgage; that in obedience to the said order of the said Probate court, and not otherwise, this defendant signed to the said note and to the said mortgage the name of the said John Blazzard by himself as general guardian, upon the express and distinct .understanding and agreement however, that this defendant should not thereby be or become personally obligated or bound [243]*243in any manner whatsoever by reason thereof, but that- the same should, if legally sufficient and competent therefor, bind the estate of the said John Blazzard and nothing more, which said understanding and agreement was then and there expressly brought to the attention of and assented to by the said McGur-rin, and was also well known to and perfectly understood by the plaintiff, at the time of the assignment of said note to him as alleged in the complaint.

“•Defendants further allege that neither the said principal sum of $1154, nor any part thereof, was ever paid to or received by this defendant, or the said John Blazzard, and that the said note and mortgage were directed by the said court to be given in the manner and form aforesaid for the purpose of paying the attorney’s fees incurred by Mariam Blazzard Steers as guardian ad litem of the said John Blazzard, in the prosecution of certain litigation in behalf of herself and others.”

It appears from the evidence that previous to the execution of the said note the said James Blazzard, Thomas Blazzard, John Blazzard and Mariam Blazzard Steers were parties to five cases pending in the Third District Court of the Territory of Utah, and which were consolidated into one, in which was involved their titles to a certain estate; that in pursuance of the mandate of the Supreme Court of the Territory, the said district court awarded to each of the makers of said note, and other parties to the action certain interests in the real estate involved and ordered conveyances to be made in accordance with the decree, and that the said James Blazzard, Thomas Blazzard, John Blazzard and Mariam Blazzapd Steers, who were plaintiffs and intervenors in said actions, pay to the defendants therein, $8,500; that the defendant in the pending case, Joseph Hurd, as the general guardian of the said John Blazzard, on the same day that said note was executed, filed in the probate court of Salt Lake county, a petition setting out the foregoing [244]*244facts, and in addition thereto the' following, to-wit: “That neither the plaintiffs or intervenors have any estate or money other than the land decreed to them, and except as hereinafter stated are unable to comply with the decree requiring them to pay the money aforesaid. That $1,000 which has been in the hands of the receiver had been paid. That it is necessary to raise by mortgage the sum of $7,500 to comply with said decree. That in addition the sum of $2,325.88 is required to pay Messrs. Rawlins & Critchlow and C. S. Varían, attorneys and counsel for plaintiffs, being the balance due them of the sum agreed by plaintiffs, (John Blazzard by his guardian ad litem agreeing) to be paid; that the services of said counsel were contingent, of great value and resulted in securing the property in lot six aforesaid, and that the compensation agreed upon was and is reasonable; that said property is not worth less than $40,000. That plaintiffs and intervenors have now an opportunity to procure a loan upon a mortgage on said property for the purposes aforesaid. That the amounts necessary to be raised, as estimated, are as follows:

On the whole property.$7,500 00
Commissions. 200 00
Expenses of examining title .......... 100 00
On five-sevenths interest of plaintiff. .. . 2,325 88

That all the parties in interest are now ready to complete the loans and perfect the title, and the deeds can not be exchanged nor the decree against the plaintiffs and lot six satisfied, until your petitioner is authorized with power in behalf of John Blazzard.”

That on the same day said probate court made and entered the following order: “Now therefore, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed, that Joseph H. Hurd, guardian of the person and estate of John Blazzard, a person of unsound mind, be, and is hereby authorized as guardian aforesaid and for [245]*245John Blazzard, to execute with the plaintiffs and intervenors aforesaid, a note or notes, and a mortgage or mortgages, of the premises in lot 6, block 69, hereinbefore described, to procure a loan or loans sufficient to pay the sums hereinbefore mentioned, upon such terms and for such time as may be reasonable, and to execute the conveyances hereinbefore and in said decree mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
54 L.R.A. 354, 63 P. 888, 23 Utah 233, 1901 Utah LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrus-v-blazzard-utah-1901.