BOWEN v. Olson

246 P.2d 602, 122 Utah 66, 1952 Utah LEXIS 181
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1952
Docket7736
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 246 P.2d 602 (BOWEN v. Olson) 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
BOWEN v. Olson, 246 P.2d 602, 122 Utah 66, 1952 Utah LEXIS 181 (Utah 1952).

Opinions

WADE, Justice.

J. Parry Bowen, since deceased and his administratrix substituted for him, and others brought suit to quiet title to a number of tracts of land against Culbert L. Olson and others. This appeal involves only the tracts of land [68]*68claimed by Culbert L. Olson, the other defendants and tracts of land being separate and unrelated to his claim. The court granted a summary judgment quieting title in the plaintiffs below and respondents herein to an 80-acre tract of farm land claimed by Culbert L. Olson, appellant herein.

From the record it appears that Culbert L. Olson was the record owner of the tract of land involved herein since 1915. In September, 1946, J. Parry Bowen commenced an action against Culbert L. Olson to quiet title to the same tract of land involved in the instant suit and a default judgment was obtained in that suit. The present action was commenced in September, 1948 and summons was served by publication and the mailing of the summons and complaint by the clerk to Culbert L. Olson at 910 Stock Exchange Building, his address in Los Angeles, California, on August 19, 1949. Olson filed an answer claiming ownership and asking that the title be quieted in him. Subsequent to the filing of this answer and after communication with one of the attorneys for respondents he obtained from this attorney an abstract of title to the property from which he first learned of the default judgment obtained by J. Parry Bowen, one of the original plaintiffs in the instant action. Olson thereafter filed four amended cross-complaints, all attacking the validity of the default judgment. In his last amended cross-complaint, appellant set forth more particularly his allegations of lack of service of summons and fraud practiced on the court in obtaining the judgment. Therein he averred that the default judgment entered against him in 1946 was void and should be vacated and set aside because the summons in that action was not served on him as required by law since the affidavit required for the order of publication of summons did not contain probative or evidentiary facts from which the clerk of the court or judge could determine his place of residence was unknown so as to dispense with the necessity of mailing a copy of the summons and complaint to him nor were there such facts alleged therein from which the judge or clerk [69]*69could determine that due diligence had been used to discover his residence. Appellant further alleged that the following statements in the affidavit that:

“‘Personal service thereon (Summons) cannot be had’ and ‘that affiant, for the purpose of finding said defendant, has made diligent search and inquiry in the State of Utah, and has checked the records of both to determine the last address of the defendant, and finds that this last address was:
“ ‘Culbert L. Olsen — unknown’ ”

were deliberately false and fraudulent because nowhere in any records did the affiant find the last address of appellant to be ‘Culbert L. Olsen — unknown.” Also, there was no return on the summons which was filed on the same day the complaint and the affidavit were filed and the order for publication of summons was issued by the clerk. Appellant also alleged that the plaintiff, his attorney and the clerk all had convenient means at the time the action was brought of ascertaining his residence from the assessment rolls of the county assessor and county treasurer, where from 1929 to 1938, when the property was assessed to him, his address appeared as 910 Stock Exchange Building, Los Angeles, California, and this is still his address. That for many years prior to the suit and since he has been a member of both the Utah and California State Bars and that his name and address were published in the telephone and the city directors of Los Angeles and in the published lists of attorneys. That he had been a member of both the Utah and California State Senates in the past and the Governor of the State of California from 1939 to 1943 and this fact was well known and publicized in Uintah County and Utah generally and the affidavit for publication of summons upon which the order was based was purposefully false and fraudulent for the purpose of preventing appellant from knowing of the existence of the action and from appearing and defending his title, he having a good and meritorious defense to the action. He also averred that he did not file a cross-complaint sooner in the instant action because one [70]*70of the attorneys for respondents had indicated that they would not rely upon the validity of this judgment.

Respondents’ answer to this cross-complaint admitted most of the allegations except any knowledge of appellant’s prominence in the political field or that his residence was. known or should have been known, or that appellant was misled into believing that respondents would not rely on the default judgment, denied any fraud, admitted that they relied in the default judgment as one of their claims to title of the land involved, but alleged that they also relied on adverse possession. They further alleged as defenses to the cross-complaint that it was barred by the provisions of Rule 60(b), U. R. C. P. and laches and that the default judgment was res ad judicata against all the claims made in the cross-complaint. Appellant filed a denial to this answer.

Respondents filed a motion for summary judgment based upon the record before the court consisting of the files in the action wherein the default judgment was procured by J. Parry Bowen against appellant, the abstract of title which had been introduced in evidence in the instant case and the files and records of the instant case.

The court granted respondents' motion for summary judgment on the grounds that the action in which the default judgment was obtained was res ad judicata of appellant’s claims in his cross-complaint because the court concluded that his claims were a mere collateral attack and not a direct attack against that judgment, that the cause of action in the cross-complaint was barred by Rule 60(b), U. R. C. P., and that appellant was guilty of laches because he had failed to attack the judgment for more than three months after he had received the abstract of title in which an entry of the default judgment appeared, and more than three years after the entry and recording of such judgment.

In Liebhart v. Lawrence, 40 Utah 243, 120 P. 215, this court held that an action brought to vacate a default judg[71]*71ment on the grounds the service of summons by publication was obtained by fraud is a direct and not a collateral attack. In that case the complaint, among other allegations of fraud, alleged that the affidavit upon which the order for publication was based, contained a false averment about the residence of the defendant being unknown and also failed to disclose due diligence used by any one to discover his residence. The lower court dismissed the action because no motion to set aside the judgment had been made within one year after its entry as required by then Sec. 3005, C. L. 1907, later Sec. 104-14-4, U. C. A. 1943, although the plaintiff knew of such judgment less than one year after its entry. In holding the lower court erred in dismissing the action, this court made it clear that the remedy provided by the statute is not exclusive and that a suit in equity to set aside a judgment for fraud in its procurement may be brought after the time limited in the statute for a motion to set aside a judgment. Rule 60(b), U. R. C. P., supersedes and is substantially the same as Sec. 104-14-4, U. C. A. 1943.

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BOWEN v. Olson
246 P.2d 602 (Utah Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 P.2d 602, 122 Utah 66, 1952 Utah LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-olson-utah-1952.