Beck v. Adams

174 P.2d 134, 62 Wyo. 431, 1946 Wyo. LEXIS 11
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1946
Docket2338
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 P.2d 134 (Beck v. Adams) 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
Beck v. Adams, 174 P.2d 134, 62 Wyo. 431, 1946 Wyo. LEXIS 11 (Wyo. 1946).

Opinion

*434 OPINION

Riner, Justice.

In this case Edgar Peck, as plaintiiff, brought an action in the District Court of Carbon County, against William J. Adams, as defendant, asking that specific performance of an alleged option agreement to purchase real estate contained in a lease given by Adams to Fred P. Hannan and by him thereafter assigned to Beck, be granted the latter. The district court sustained a motion of the defendant for judgment on the pleadings of the parties and dismissed the action. The plaintiff reserving proper exception to this judgment has brought the record here for review. The parties will usually be referred to hereinafter as aligned in the district court or by their respective surnames. The pleadings of the parties are substantially as follows:

Plaintiff’s petition, filed November 26, 1943, sets out its allegations in five numbered paragraphs the first of which avers that the defendant was, on or before the 16th of December, 1938, the owner of:

“Allotment No. 819
South Half of Southwest Quarter (S%SW%) and *435 Lots Nine (9) and Ten (10), of Section Fourteen (14), Township Two (2) North, Range One (1) East, Wind River Meridian.”

Paragraph “2” of the said petition alleges that on the date last above mentioned the defendant leased to Hannan, by án instrument in writing for the term of five years thereafter, all the above described real estate at a fixed annual rental; that the lessor reserved the right to sell the land at any time; that “in case of sale” he gave “Hannan the option to purchase the said land at the agreed price”; that a copy of the written lease was attached to the petition as Exhibit A and made a part of the pleading; that this lease was recorded in the office of the county clerk of Fremont County, Wyoming, December 28, 1938. The attached written lease shows the option to purchase given by the lessor to the lessee in the language quoted above. The second paragraph then continues in its second subdivision by alleging that November 12, 1940, Hannan executed on the original lease a written assignment to the plaintiff Beck and that the instrument was re-recorded April 2, 1941; that plaintiff is now in possession and is the owner of said lease entitled to all the rights of the original lessee. The third subdivision of the second paragraph aforesaid sets out that the written lease contains an error in the description of the leased land, the S% of the SW^ being written therein as the S1/^ of the SE14. However, the allotment number is correctly given in the lease and the parties evidently regarded it merely as a clerical error as it is admitted that the land included in allotment “819” was the land owned and lease by the defendant.

Paragraph numbered “3” of plaintiff’s petition alleges that a short time prior to December 5, 1941, he was informed that the defendant had received an offer from the United States Indian Service, Department of the Interior, to purchase said lands for the sum of *436 §261.30; that on the date last mentioned he paid the advance annual rental and at the same time advised the defendant that he, Beck, claimed the right to meet any purchase offer which the defendant might receive; that on January 14, 1942, plaintiff advised defendant that said plaintiff desired to meet this price offered by the United States Indian Service, as stated above, and requested the defendant to send warranty deed and an abstract of title to some person, attorney or bank in Fremont County, Wyoming, to hold in escrow until the plaintiff “put up” the purchase price; or that defendant could bring the papers to Riverton, Wyoming, himself, and plaintiff would immediately pay him this amount.

The 4th paragraph pleads that plaintiff has performed all of the conditions required of him by said lease and said option therein; that he has demanded a conveyance of the said premises from the defendant but that the defendant refuses to execute same.

The 5th paragraph asserts that he has deposited with the clerk of the district court §261.30 in lawful money of the United States, the reasonable value of said lands which is the offer which has heretofore been made by the United States to said defendant for said lands.

Plaintiff’s prayer for relief asked that:

“the defendant may be required to receive the said sum of §261.30 so brought into court and deposited with the clerk of this court, and to specifically perform the said agreement on his part by executing and delivering to plaintiff a good and sufficient warranty deed conveying unto said plaintiff the lands described herein to wit:”

The lands aforesaid are then described and the prayer continues:

“that the plaintiff may have such other and further relief as to the court may seem just and equitable in *437 the premises, and that the plaintiff recover his costs herein.”

December 27, 1943, defendant’s then attorney, Eph U. Johnson, filed a general denial as an answer to this petition. That same day a written stipulation appears to have been filed in the office of the clerk of the district court signed by plaintiff’s counsel and other counsel for the defendant, John C. Pickett, agreeing that the defendant might have to and including February 5, 1944, in which to “answer or plead otherwise to the petition of the plaintiff filed herein”. February 2, 1944, defendant’s counsel who had signed the written stipulation aforesaid filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s petition upon two grounds, viz., that the petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendant and that there is a defect in parties defendant. This demurrer was filed also by Carl L. Sackett as associate attorney for defendant. February 11, 1944, plaintiff filed a motion to strike defendant’s demurrer aforesaid because the defendant had theretofore filed his answer, the cause was at issue and the demurrer was “improper and out of time.” March 18, 1944, Johnson withdrew his appearance as counsel for plaintiff, and on that date Carl L. Sackett and John C. Pickett as counsel for defendant requested leave by motion to withdraw the answer filed by Johnson, as stated above, and that the demurrer of defendant be considered by the court. As grounds of this motion it is stated in substance that Johnson was employed by the defendant to represent him in the case simply to prevent a default for want of answer and without knowledge that the superintendent of the Wind River Agency at Fort Washakie had made arrangements for Mr. Sackett and Mr. Pickett, the United States attorney and his assistant, for the District of Wyoming, respectively, to act as defendant’s counsel for the reason that the defendant was an Indian and that the in *438 terests of the United States were involved; that these attorneys secured the stipulation and filed the demurrer aforesaid not knowing of the filing of the answer under date of December 27, as recited above; that this answer was filed through a misunderstanding between the defendant and the Indian Agency, aforesaid, concerning the matter of representation by counsel of defendant in this litigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 134, 62 Wyo. 431, 1946 Wyo. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-adams-wyo-1946.