Bedal v. Johnson

218 P. 641, 37 Idaho 359, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 200
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 218 P. 641 (Bedal v. Johnson) 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
Bedal v. Johnson, 218 P. 641, 37 Idaho 359, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 200 (Idaho 1923).

Opinion

FLYNN, Commissioner.

— This is a case of first impression in this court. Plaintiff claims that in 1868, when she was about a year old, her father made an oral contract with O. P. Johnson and wife, whereby the father turned plaintiff over to them and surrendered his rights as a father, in consideration of which the Johnsons agreed to legally adopt [368]*368plaintiff and make her their heir and upon their death leave her all their property. Plaintiff seeks specific performance of this contract against the surviving widow of O. P. Johnson, who married him in 1906, without notice or knowledge of the alleged agreement.

Plaintiff alleges that in 1914, O. P. Johnson, who was then 83 years old, in violation of the alleged adoption agreement, by deed dated May 25, 1914, for the consideration stated therein to be love and affection, conveyed to his wife, Nellie Payne Johnson, appellant herein,, practically all his real estate including lands claimed by plaintiff to be the separate property of his first wife, and also assigned to her notes, securities and moneys, the total value of the property, real and personal, being, as plaintiff is informed and believes, more than $300,000. O. P. Johnson died testate, on or about February 9, 1916, leaving no natural children surviving him. His will, dated February 3, 1909, was presented for probate on November 10, 1917, by his widow, Nellie Payne Johnson, the application for probate excusing the delay by reciting that practically all his estate had been disposed of prior to his death and that the application was made partly because of the filing of this suit and the allegations therein contained. The will bequeathed the sum of $50 to the respondent herein and the balance of testator’s property was bequeathed and devised thereby to Nellie Payne Johnson and Orville P. Johnson, Jr., a son of O. P. Johnson by his second wife. The second wife died on or about August 15, 1906, and the son died in 1912.

Covering, as it does, the testimony of more than three score witnesses and numerous incidents in a period of nearly fifty years, the record is exceedingly voluminous. Therein is unfolded a tapestry on which is depicted the romance of an Idaho pioneer, and though the picture is marred and spotted by ungentle handling and in places torn to shreds in the struggle for the threads of gold that glisten in its weave, it is perhaps necessary to a clear understanding of the facts that we attempt prosaically to reconstruct its salient features.

[369]*369Born in Tennessee in 1832, O. P. Johnson came to California in 1849, and thereafter ■ drifted to Oregon where for many years he bore the significant name of “Poker” Johnson. In the fall of 1867 we find him and his first wife, Rosanna Johnson, keeping a wayside inn or roadhouse at Horseshoe Bend, Boise county, Idaho Territory, a few miles from Placerville, in the famous Boise Basin. He was then about thirty-five years old and his wife about twenty-five. They were childless and possessed little of the world’s goods. That year, "William Alexander, a miner, and his wife came to the placer mining camps bringing with them their infant child about four or five months old, the respondent herein. Mrs. Alexander died in May, 1868. The baby was cared for by a neighbor for a short time, and then put in charge of Mrs. Rosanna Johnson by the father with an agreement to pay for its care. In the fall of 1868, Alexander came in from his mining claim and being then several months in arrears on the payments for the baby’s care, he was asked to pay therefor or to give up the baby to Mrs. Johnson. After considerable discussion he finally reluctantly agreed to the proposal of the Johnsons, which is the basis of this action, that if he would give them the child as their own- they would adopt the child and malee her their heir and that she would have all the property they might leave at their death. Boise county was then in its early development, a mining country, with few women who might care for the child, and Alexander considered that this was the best thing he could do for her under the circumstances. In November, 1869, on his own application, Johnson was appointed guardian of the person of respondent by the probate court of Ada county.

Shortly thereafter, the Johnsons moved from Horseshoe Bend to Whitley Bottoms, on the Snake River, taking with them the child and a half-breed Indian boy, whom they were rearing, and driving their herd of thirty-five or forty cattle. There Johnson engaged in the cattle business out of which, grew the fortune contended for in this suit. In 1874 Alexander called on the Johnsons and threatened to take [370]*370the child away. The same agreement made in 1868 was again made by the parties, and, in pursuance thereof, Johnson, in 1875, procured the enactment of a special act of the legislative assembly of Idaho, which provided that

“Whereas, Orville P. and Rosanna Cecilia Johnson . . . . have adopted Kate Alexander, an orphan and minor about eight years old as their child, and desire her to bear their name and to be their heir, and they have requested the passage of the Act in this form:

“Therefore Be It Enacted ....
“Section 1. [Changes the name of Kate Alexander to Kate Cecilia Johnson.]
“Section 2. That Orville P. and Rosanna C. Johnson are hereby appointed and made the guardians of said Kate Cecilia Johnson, and shall have the care and custody of her person until she becomes of lawful age; and the said Kate Cecilia Johnson is hereby made the lawful and legitimate heir of said Orville P. and Rosanna C. Johnson, the same as if she were their natural child, and shall be treated as and have the same rights as an heir as if she were their natural child; provided they file with the Secretary of Idaho Territory their written and duly acknowledged consent and acceptance of this Act.”

From the time she was first taken into their household the Johnsons treated respondent as their child and she in turn looked upon them as her parents, not knowing till her father’s appearance in 1874 that she was not their natural child. After the passage of the aforesaid act, her natural father dropped out of respondent’s life. The Johnsons sent her to school and she performed the ordinary duties of a daughter and assumed the ordinary privileges, including that of making a runaway marriage, when she was about 14 years old, to a worthless fellow from whom she was soon divorced; and on April 20, 1884, two days after the decree of divorce was signed, she married Richard Tucker. She and her husband took up their residence with the Johnsons at Boise and thereafter moved with them to the Hagerman Valley, and there lived together - for many years. Three [371]*371children were born to respondent as the result of the Tucker marriage. She secured a divorce from Tucker on the advice of the Johnsons in 1891, and in 1894 she married Harry Sprowls, with whom she and her children resided at the Johnson ranch until 1900. Her third husband died in February, 1900, shortly before the death of Mrs. Rosanna Johnson in March, 1900. In June, 1900, respondent and her children left the Home ranch. Whether her departure was occasioned by the immoral conduct of O. P. Johnson with a woman during the .last days of his wife and thereafter, or the fact that Johnson believed that respondent had tried to get the Chinese cook to poison him, both of which versions are supported by abundance of testimony, the fact is that the parting of the ways had come for respondent and Johnson.

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Bluebook (online)
218 P. 641, 37 Idaho 359, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedal-v-johnson-idaho-1923.