Chesney v. Valley Live Stock Co.

244 P. 216, 34 Wyo. 378, 44 A.L.R. 1255, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 48
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1926
Docket1231
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 244 P. 216 (Chesney v. Valley Live Stock Co.) 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
Chesney v. Valley Live Stock Co., 244 P. 216, 34 Wyo. 378, 44 A.L.R. 1255, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 48 (Wyo. 1926).

Opinion

*382 Blume, Justice.

This action was brought by J ames Chesney, as plaintiff, against the Valley Live Stock Company and other defendants, to cancel a certain quit claim deed • and have the rights of the defendants declared junior and inferior to the rights of the plaintiff. It appears that on October 1, 1917, James Chesney, the plaintiff below and hereafter referred to as the respondent, was the owner of certain lands in Uinta county, Wyoming. On that date he sold the land, and live stock and other property on the land, to his son, Edmund L. Chesney, for the sum of $150,000, of which the sum of $50,000 was paid in cash. The purchaser, to secure the balance of the purchase price, executed on the date last mentioned notes to James Chesney for $100,000, secured by chattel mortgages on the personal property, and a real estate mortgage on the land so sold. The indebtedness drew interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum. The real estate mortgage was duly filed for record and recorded in book 77, page 120, mortgage records of Uinta county, Wyoming. In 1919, Edmund L. Chesney organized a corporation under the name of Ches-ney Stock Farm, Inc., but he was the only stockholder thereof. The property above mentioned was transferred *383 to that corporation. Some time before the 3rd day of March, 1921, Edmund L. Chesney entered into negotiations with one Ernest Wooley, of Salt Lake City, for the sale of all of said property. Wooley organized a corporation under the name of Valley Live Stock Company, defendant in this case, and intended to and did purchase the real and personal property mentioned above in the name of such company. The sale was completed on March 3, 1921. The Chesney Stock Farm, Inc., executed a deed to the lands aforesaid and a bill of sale of the personal property to the Valley Live Stock Company. The former chattel mortgages held'by James Chesney .were released, and new chattel mortgages to him were made and executed by the Valley Live Stock Company. As part consideration for the sale, Wooley paid to James Chesney the sum of $10,000, as interest then due on the indebtedness of $100,-000 above mentioned, and the deed to the Valley Live Stock Company states that it is subject “to one certain mortgage in favor of James Chesney for $100,000 which is recorded in the county of Uinta, state of Wyoming, in the County Recorder’s office in book 77 of mortgages, page 120, which said mortgage the said grantee does hereby assume and agrees to pay.” On the date last mentioned, James Chesney also made and executed to the Valley Live Stock Company a quit claim deed to the land aforesaid. This deed simply “quitclaims” the land to said company. In December of that year the Federal Reserve Bank, Uinta Mercantile Company and Blythe & Fargo Company, defendants herein, and hereinafter referred to as appellants, commenced actions against the Valley Live Stock Company to recover certain indebtedness due to the respective parties from said company, and attached the real property hereinabove mentioned. Two of these parties, thereafter and before the commencement of this action, obtained judgments in their respective suits. It seems that these creditors made the claim, when *384 they caused the lands aforesaid to be attached, that the quit claim deed executed, as heretofore mentioned, on March 3, 1921, had the effect of releasing the mortgage of $100,000, given on October 1, 1917, by Edmund L. Chesney to James Chesney. The latter, respondent herein, accordingly brought this action against the Valley Live Stock Company and the appellants herein for the purpose of cancelling such quit claim deed and having the rights of the defendants to the action, in and to the real estate described in such deed, declared to be junior and inferior to his rights under the mortgage. lie alleges in his petition that Edmund L. Chesney executed to him the mortgage of $100,000 aforesaid; that said mortgage was duly filed of record in Uinta county, Wyoming, on November 30,1917; that it is his property and there is due and owing thereon the sum of $100,000, with interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from the 1st day of March, 1921; that said real estate was conveyed to the Valley Live Stock Company, a corporation, on March 3, 1921; that in and by the terms of that conveyance said company assumed and agreed to pay said mortgage and said mortgage indebtedness; that since March 3, 1921, there has existed and now exists upon the deed records of Uinta county, Wyoming, what purports to be a quit claim deed, executed by plaintiff on March 3, 1921, to the Valley Live Stock Company. We quote the remaining part of the petition verbatim:

“Plaintiff alleges that said purported deed is spurious, fictitious, wholly without consideration, fraudulent and invalid, and that the purported record thereof is likewise spurious, invalid and fraudulent because of the fictitious and spurious character of the purported deed; that there never was any agreement or contract between the plaintiff and the said defendant, Valley Live Stock Company, with respect to the making or execution of any such deed, neither was there any duty owing by the plaintiff to make *385 or execute such instrument; neither was there any consideration at any time for the making or execution of any such instrument; that if any such purported instrument existed, the action is not and was not the action of plaintiff and that the same is a forgery; that the defendants and each of them assert or claim some right or interest under said alleged, spurious and invalid record and purported deed, and in and to the said premises, but whatever right or interest said defendants or any of them may have therein, as against said mortgage of plaintiff, is without right, and any such claim or interest is junior and inferior to the said mortgage and mortgage lien of the plaintiff. Wherefore, the plaintiff prays judgment, as against all of said defendants, that said purported quit claim deed and the record thereof may be cancelled, set aside and held for naught, and that the court grant to plaintiff such other and further relief as in the premises may be just, equitable and proper.”

The testimony in the case shows that it was agreed between Wooley and Edmund L. Chesney that the following papers should be executed, namely, a deed to the land and a bill of sale to the personal property made by the Chesney Stock Farm, Inc. to the Valley Live Stock Company; new chattel mortgages from the company to James Chesney, and released by the latter of the old chattel mortgages. It was further agreed that the mortgage on the land to James Chesney should be assumed by the Valley Live Stock Company, and that no new real estate mortgage should be executed. While James Chesney denied that he executed the quit claim deed, he admitted that the grantor’s signature thereon looked like his own, and there is no doubt that the instrument was actually executed by him. But he made no agreement to execute it; nor was there any understanding between Wooley and Edmund C. Chesney. that it should be executed. The evidence tends to show that he had no intention whatever to release the *386 real estate mortgage which he held.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 216, 34 Wyo. 378, 44 A.L.R. 1255, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesney-v-valley-live-stock-co-wyo-1926.