Chalmers v. Trent

39 P. 488, 11 Utah 88, 39 P.R. 488, 1895 Utah LEXIS 40
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1895
DocketNo. 548
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 P. 488 (Chalmers v. Trent) 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
Chalmers v. Trent, 39 P. 488, 11 Utah 88, 39 P.R. 488, 1895 Utah LEXIS 40 (Utah 1895).

Opinion

Kura, J.:

This is an appeal from an order entered in the Third Judicial District Court dismissing and striking from the files defendant’s cross complaint. The facts/ as disclosed by the pleadings, are substantially as follows: Plaintiff and defendant, Lamartine C. Trent, at and before the time of the filing of the original complaint, were joint-owners of a part of lot 2, block 72, plat “A,” Salt Lake City, and plaintiff was a married man, and resided with his wife in Chicago. Trent was also married, and, with his wife, Delome Trent, resided in Salt Lake City. At the time the original complaint was filed, Frazer & Chal-mers, a corporation of the city of Chicago, had a lien upon Trent’s undivided one-half interest in said premises, resulting from an attachment; and Trent had a lien upon Chalmer’s one-half interest by way of an attachment issued in an action brought against Chalmers by the former. No other incumbrances were upon the property, and Trent and Chalmers were the owners of the land in equal proportions, subject to these claims. In July, 1894, plaintiff, William J. Chalmers, filed his complaint herein against Trent and his wife. Neither the corporation of Frazer & Chalmers nor the plaintiff’s wife were made parties. The plaintiff avers that Trent and plaintiff are owners in fee simple, as tenants in common, of the property; that Delome Trent was the wife of defendant Lamartine 0. Trent, and had an interest in said property by way of dower. He further alleged the interest that Trent claimed under his writ of attachment, and averred that the plaintiff had an interest in said land by virtue of the writ of attachment issued out of the Third District Court at the suit of the plaintiff against the defendant Lamartine C. Trent, upon the latter’s interest. The complaint further stated that there were no other liens or incumbrances upon said prop[91]*91erty appearing of record, and that no persons other than plaintiff and defendant Trent were interested in said premises, as owners or otherwise, and prayed for a partition, and, if a partition could not be had, that they be sold and the proceeds divided. The complaint was verified by William M. Bradley, one of the attorneys for the plaintiff.

To this the defendant Lamartine C. Trent made answer, and admitted that he and the plaintiff were owners in fee-simple as tenants in common, and that Delome Trent was his wife, and had an interest in said premises by way of dower. Defendant further admitted that he claimed the right under his attachment upon the plaintiff's interest-,, but denied that plaintiff had any right, title, claim, or interest in his (Trent's) one-half interest by virtue of any writ of attachment. There was a further denial that any writ of attachment had ever issued out of the district court-at the suit of plaintiff. It was further averred in the answer that the defendant Trent had an interest in the-said land by way of a lien thereon for taxes paid by him; and alleged that the plaintiff was a married man, and that his wife resided in Chicago, and that she claimed an interest in said estate by way of dower; that Frazer & Chalmers, a corporation, were interested in said premises, and had a -lien upon the defendant's interest therein by way of an attachment, and that the same was of record in the city where the property was situate; and denied positively that there were not other claims against the land than those-mentioned in the complaint. A further averment was in the answer, that plaintiff, at the time of the filing of his-complaint, knew of said interest and claim of his wife and of said corporation, and stated that the necessary parties to-the termination of the case and for proper partition were not before the court; and stated that he, defendant, had never objected to a proper partition, and was perfectly willing that it should be made, and insisted that it might-[92]*92have been done without the expense of an action at law; .-and further, that the defendant, by reason of the necessary parties not being before the court to a complete determination of the suit, objected, and took advantage of the mis-joinder by way of answer, the same not appearing on the face of the complaint. At the same time defendant filed a cross complaint, making William J. Chalmers, his wife, Joan Pinkerton Chalmers, the said corporation of Frazer & Chalmers, and Delome Trent, his wife, defendants, in which it is alleged that plaintiff had a lawful wife living, and that she had an interest in the premises; that Frazer -& Chalmers, a corporation, had an interest in the premises; that all of these parties were necessary to the partition. And the cross complaint set out, in addition, substantially what was contained in the defendant’s answer, and also the interests of the respective parties in full, and prayed for a ^partition.

At the same time Delome Trent answered plaintiff’s •complaint, and admitted that she was defendant’s wife, and that she had an interest in the premises as his wife. •She denied that there were no other liens of record, other than those set out in the complaint, and claimed that the proper parties were not before the court, upon which a •decree of partition could be made. She alleged that she was ready to join in asking for partition if the proper parties were before the court, so that the land, if a sale were necessary, might be disposed of free from all incum-brances and claims. She affirmatively alleged that William J. Chalmers, at the time of the filing of the complaint, knew of the interest of his wife, and of Frazer & Chal-mers, and that, as defendant believed, it was an attempt ■ on the part of the plaintiff to have said premises sold freed from defendant’s interest and from defendant Lamartine C. Trent’s interest, and at the same time to .have the premises sold or partitioned, subject to the rights [93]*93of plaintiff's wife and of said corporation, and to make •unnecessary costs and expenses. On the day these answers and cross complaints were filed an order was entered by the court that summons be issued on the cross complaint-against the defendants therein named. Later, on plaintiff's motion, he was granted 20 days to ¿answer the cross-complaint. Before the expiration of this time, he filed and served a motion for an order of court granting leave-to file an amended complaint, and in support thereof filed an affidavit by William M. Bradley, one of his attorneys, in which it was averred that through inadvertence there was a mistake in the allegations of the original complaint which resulted in the failure' to set forth the interests of all parties interested in said premises, and the further statement that plaintiff's wife and Frazer & Chal-mers were necessary parties to the determination of the-matter. The affidavit further stated that these omissions-in the original complaint and the misjoinder of parties-were not intentional, and asked to be allowed to file an amended complaint herein, and that process issue thereon. A few days later the plaintiff filed and served notice that-at the time stated he would move for an order dismissing and striking from the files the cross complaint of defendant Trent, and on the same day demurrer to the cross complaint was filed by plaintiff on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Two days thereafter plaintiff filed his proposed amended complaint, bringing the same parties in as defendants who-were made defendants in the cross complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 P. 488, 11 Utah 88, 39 P.R. 488, 1895 Utah LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chalmers-v-trent-utah-1895.