Badger v. Badger

254 P. 784, 69 Utah 293, 1927 Utah LEXIS 77
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1927
DocketNo. 4482.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 254 P. 784 (Badger v. Badger) 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
Badger v. Badger, 254 P. 784, 69 Utah 293, 1927 Utah LEXIS 77 (Utah 1927).

Opinion

HANSEN, J.

The plaintiff brought this action against the defendant in the district court of Salt Lake county for the purpose of securing a decree of divorce from the defendant. The plaintiff and the defendant have been married a little less than two years and there are no children issue of the marriage. Various acts of cruelty are alleged by the plaintiff as a basis for the relief prayed. The defendant filed an answer denying any acts of cruelty on her part. She also filed a cross-complaint where she alleges that the plaintiff has been guilty of various acts of cruelty towards the defendant. She further alleges that the plaintiff owns real and personal property of the value of $100,000' or more, that the property owned by plaintiff consists of the Oxford Apart *295 ments, situated at 119 West North Temple street, the Roselyn Apartments, situated at 853 South Fourth East street, a double house situated at Nos. 1072 and 1074 East Seventeenth South street, all in Salt Lake City, Utah, and also certain large acreage of land situated near Holden, in Millard county, Utah; that the personal property belonging to the plaintiff includes a large stock interest in various corporations, among them being Ralph A. Badger & Co. and the Mt. Nebo Marble Company. She also alleged in her cross-complaint that the plaintiff received a salary of $300 per month and has a net income in excess of $300 per month. In her cross-complaint she prays judgment against the plaintiff for a decree of separate maintenance and an equitable proportion of the property belonging to the plaintiff.

To this cross-complaint plaintiff filed a reply, wherein he denies all acts of cruelty alleged by the defendant, except such acts as he alleges were justified under the circumstances.

After the issues were thus joined, the plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement adjusting their property rights in the event the court in which the case was pending should grant a decree of divorce. Thereupon the defendant filed an amended cross-complaint, in which she omits some of the alleged acts of cruelty contained in her original cross-complaint, and further alleges that a property settlement has been had between plaintiff and defendant, and she prays judgment that the property settlement theretofore agreed upon be ratified and affirmed by the court and that she be granted a decree of divorce. The plaintiff filed no answer or other pleadings to the cross-complaint of the defendant.

The defendant offered evidence in support of her cross-complaint, and the court, at the conclusion of her evidence, made findings of fact, conclusions of law, and entered a decree of divorce in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff. In the decree she was awarded the property provided for in the agreement theretofore entered into between the plaintiff and defendant. The property so awarded to the *296 defendant consisted of a contract for the purchase of the Roselyn Apartments on which there was a 'balance owing of $6,630.97 as of February 1, 1926, also a vacant lot 37x822 feet adjoining the Roselyn Apartments; also, $150 cash; rent due from a'Mrs. Smith in the sum of $25; a court allowance for the month of February, 1926, amounting to the sum of $112; and an additional sum of $300 as attorneys’ fee for defendant’s attorneys.

The decree of divorce was signed and filed on February 23, 1926, and four days thereafter, February 27, 1926, a notice of application to set aside the decree of divorce was served upon the attorneys for the plaintiff, to which was attached a copy of a verifed petition stating the basis for said motion. This petition was filed on March 2, 1926. In the petition the defendant sets out that she had consented to take the Roselyn Apartments as the principal settlement of the property rights which she was to receive relying upon the representation of the plaintiff that the income from said property amounted to $140 per month, but that this property would not rent for to exceed $120 per month; that there was a balance due on the contract of purchase of said apartments in the sum of $6,630.97, payable $100 per month; and that if she is compelled to pay the taxes, repairs, and insurance, with a rental of only $120 per month, she will be unable to pay for the apartment house, and the contract of purchase will be forfeited.

To this petition an answer was filed denying the alleged representations, and upon these issues a hearing was had, and the court modified the decree of divorce to the effect that the plaintiff should pay to the defendant an additional $120, but otherwise the decree of divorce would remain in full force and effect. The hearing was had on March 4, 1926, and the modification of the decree was signed by the trial judge on March 10,1926, and filed with the clerk on the day following.

On March 16, 1926, the defendant filed another petition for a modification of the decree of divorce, in which other *297 counsel appeared as her attorneys, and under date of May 22,1926, by leave of court, an amended petition was filed by the defendant. This petition refers to and makes the original cross-complaint of the defendant a part of the petition and sets forth that the acts of cruelty alleged in such original cross-complaint are true. It is also alleged that at the time of filing the cross-complaint the plaintiff was the owner of the property therein mentioned and set out; that the Oxford Apartments were worth from $80,000 to $50,000; that the property situated at Seventeenth South and Eleventh East streets was of the value of $10,000 ; the equity of the plaintiff in the Roselyn Apartments was of the value of $1,500; the Millard county property was worth $3,000; that the plaintiff was the owner of a large amount of stock in the Ralph A. Badger & Co. and the same was of great value; that he received a salary of at least $300 per month; and that he was in receipt of at least the sum of $800 per month and was able to provide for the defendant according to her station in life. It is also alleged that there was owing upon the contract for the purchase of the Roselyn Apartments $6,600; that the rents derived therefrom did not exceed $120 per month; that $100 per month must be paid on the contract of purchase; that petitioner is unable to pay the sum of $100 per month in addition to the expenses of repairs, insurance, taxes, and other items of expense; and that unless she is granted additional relief she will lose the apartment house by forfeiture of the contract of purchase. The defendant further alleged that at the time the property settlement was had the plaintiff gave to her then attorneys a statement of his financial condition and his property, from which it was made to appear that the plaintiff was not able to pay the defendant any alimony; that said statement was false, in that the plaintiff was the owner of the property above mentioned ; that the plaintiff further represented that the rentals of the Roselyn Apartments amounted to the sum of $140 per month and that they were in a good state of repair, and that the indebtedness owing on the contract of purchase was the *298 sum of $6,000, which said representations, were false; that these false representations were so made with the intention that they should be acted upon by the defendant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kasny v. Coonen And Roth, Ltd.
Appellate Court of Illinois, 2009
MacRis & Associates, Inc. v. Neways, Inc.
2000 UT 93 (Utah Supreme Court, 2000)
MacRis & Associates, Inc. v. Neways, Inc.
1999 UT App 230 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1999)
Bolte v. Aits, Inc.
587 P.2d 810 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1978)
Singer v. Steven Kokes, Inc.
384 A.2d 463 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1978)
Bowles v. Marx Hide & Tallow Co.
4 F.R.D. 297 (W.D. Kentucky, 1945)
Chesney v. District Court of Salt Lake County
108 P.2d 514 (Utah Supreme Court, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P. 784, 69 Utah 293, 1927 Utah LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/badger-v-badger-utah-1927.