Casady v. Scott

237 P. 415, 40 Idaho 137, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 131
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 237 P. 415 (Casady v. Scott) 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
Casady v. Scott, 237 P. 415, 40 Idaho 137, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 131 (Idaho 1924).

Opinion

*144 WILLIAM A. LEE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing appellants’ action, on the ground that their third amended complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The action was begun February 7, 1921, and after a motion to strike parts of the complaint and demurrers thereto, which preliminary pleas were in part sustained, appellants asked leave and were granted permission to file an amended complaint which was filed June 24, 1921. Respondents demurred to this amended complaint and appellants filed a second amended complaint, to which demurrers were interposed and sustained, and the third amended complaint, upon which the judgment of dismissal was had, filed July 22, 1922. The allegations of the third amended complaint, briefly stated, are: That at all times mentioned in the complaint, until the seventeenth day of March, 1910, Wallace Scott and Mary E. Scott were husband and wife residing in Nez Perce and Idaho counties, Idaho, and that respondent Warren F. Scott was their adopted son; that Mary E. Scott died on March 17, 1910, and left as her sole surviving heirs her husband, Wallace Scott, and her said adopted son; that she left an estate of inheritance consisting of her interest in the community property of herself and husband, of which Warren F. Scott became the owner at her death; that about June 23, 1910, Wallace Scott procured from Warren F. Scott an assignment of all of his interest in the estate of his deceased foster mother; that May 29, 1911, Wallace Scott procured from Warren F. Scott and his wife, Rose King Scott, a conveyance in writing of all of their right, title and interest of every kind whatsoever in and to the estate of the said Mary E. Scott; that May 12, 1911, Wallace Scott began probating the estate of Mary E. Scott to procure the distribution of said estate to him. It is further alleged that appellants are attorneys at law and were employed about December, 1916, by Warren F. Scott to take proper legal proceedings to recover the interest which Warren F. Scott had in his mother’s estate, and that an action was commenced in the United States district court to set aside said assign *145 ments and recover for the said Warren F. Scott his interest in the estate of his deceased foster-mother; that February 26, 1918, the action was compromised and settled by the defendant Wallace Scott agreeing to pay to his adopted son $30,000 and at his death to leave Warren F. Scott $175,000. A copy of this stipulation is set forth as an exhibit to this complaint, and the suit in the federal court was thereupon dismissed. That prior to such dismissal Warren F. Scott agreed in writing with appellants to pay them for their services one-half of all money that he might receive from the estate of his father, Wallace Scott, and assigned a one-half interest under the agreement with his father to them, and that they notified Wallace Scott to this effect. A copy of this agreement of Warren F. Scott with appellants is made a part of the complaint. That on October 30, 1918, respondent Warren F. Scott and Wallace Scott fraudulently entered into an agreement to cheat and defraud appellants of their interest in said $175,000 to be left to respondent Warren F. Scott upon the death of Wallace Scott, whereby said agreement to leave Warren F. Scott said $175,000 was canceled, relinquished and released by Wallace Scott paying to Warren a less sum and conveying to him an undivided interest in and to certain described real estate. It is also alleged that Wallace Scott, during all of this time after the making of these agreements, held in trust for appellants one-half of the money which he had agreed, upon his death, to leave Warren F. Scott; that Warren F. Scott and Anna Gertrude Scott, then Anna Gertrude Randolph, entered into an agreement whereby' the said Warren F. Scott conveyed to the said Anna Gertrude Randolph all the property he had acquired or expected to acquire from his foster-father, Wallace Scott, and on the same day the two intermarried and are now husband and wife; and that appellants did not discover said fraud until the sixteenth day of December thereafter.

It is further alleged that on October 6, 1919, the said Wallace Scott died testate and did not leave to Warren F. Scott, as he had agreed to do, the said $175,000, or any *146 other or greater sum than $86,510, and that respondents Dyer and Hardy were named as executors of the last will and testament of the said Wallace Scott, deceased, and gave notice to the creditors on January 8, 1920, that the estate of the said deceased Wallace Scott had been appraised at the sum of $519,062, and that by the terms of said will respondent Warren F. Scott received $86,510, and that other special legacies aggregated $76,500, and the residue of the estate, of about $356,000, was devised to respondents Rebecca Scott, Ralph Scott, James Scott and Calista Huxtable; that no distribution of the estate has been made, and that respondents Dyer and Hardy, as executors, are holding said estate in trust for those entitled to the same. This complaint further alleges that to permit a distribution of said estate to the residuary legatees named in the will of the deceased, Wallace Scott, would' wrong, cheat and defraud appellants of their interest in and to one-half of said $175,000 by them acquired by virtue of their agreement with Warren F. Scott of February 27, 1918; that on March 23, 1922, respondents agreed to a distribution of the residue of the estate of Wallace Scott whereby Warren F. Scott and his wife, Anna Gertrude Scott, were to receive a one-fifth portion of said residue, and that such agreement was made to enable the" said Warren F. Scott to acquire and obtain the sum of $175,000, which the said Wallace Scott agreed to leave to him, in order to wrong, cheat and defraud appellants of their interest therein; that on October 23, 1920, appellants presented their claim to said executors, duly verified, with copies of the agreement between Wallace Scott and Warren F. Scott, entered into February 26, 1918, and the agreement entered into between appellants and respondent Warren F. Scott February 27, 1918.

The foregoing is a condensation of the material facts pleaded upon which appellants rely for a recovery in this action. The record on this appeal contains the original complaint and sets out haec verba the three complaints which were thereafter filed, it having been deemed necessary to put into this record all of these former pleadings, in *147 order to show, as we understand, a complete history of appellants’ several efforts to state the facts upon which they rely for a recovery in such manner that the complaint would not be vulnerable to the motions and demurrers filed against former complaints, and they now insist that, notwithstanding they have upon these several occasions filed amended pleadings, any one of the complaints does state a cause of action on their behalf.

Where a complaint has been amended upon the application of the pleader ordinarily only the last one relied upon need be considered, and all former pleadings which it purports to amend become obsolete. (Ryan v. Old Veteran Mining Co., 35 Ida. 637, 207 Pac. 1076; Armstrong v. Henderson, 16 Ida. 566, 102 Pac. 361; Andrews v. Moore, 14 Ida. 465, 94 Pac. 579; Wooddy v. Jamieson, 4 Ida. 448, 40 Pac. 61; People v. Hunt, 1 Ida. 433; Condon Nat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P. 415, 40 Idaho 137, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casady-v-scott-idaho-1924.