Clontz v. Fortner

399 P.2d 949, 88 Idaho 355, 1965 Ida. LEXIS 420
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1965
Docket9438
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 399 P.2d 949 (Clontz v. Fortner) 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
Clontz v. Fortner, 399 P.2d 949, 88 Idaho 355, 1965 Ida. LEXIS 420 (Idaho 1965).

Opinion

*358 TAYLOR, Justice.

February 4, 1952, Rolland J. Hawes and wife and John P. Hawes and wife, as vendors, entered into a written contract for the sale of the real property involved, to O. S. Butler, as purchaser. March 15, 1954, the purchaser, O. S. Butler, and wife assigned the contract to the plaintiffs (appellants) herein.

The original purchase price was $90,000. Annual payments of $4,333 of principal, plus interest, were due and payable February 4th of each year. Plaintiffs failed to.make the payment due in February, 1957, and were advised by Hawes that, if the payment was not made, within sixty days, action would .be commenced upon the contract. Plaintiffs thereafter obtained the money necessary to make the payment from one Cecil Brim, and. in April, 1957, gave Brim an assignment of their interest in the Hawes-Butler contract.

Thereafter, plaintiffs brought an action against Brim to have.the assignment declared a mortgage so that plaintiffs could repay. Brim and be revested with their rights under the contract. Judgment in that-action, entered pursuant to stipulation, declared the .assignment to be a mortgage, and allowed plaintiffs sixty days from the date of judgment, October 10, 1957, to redeem by paying the amount owing to Brim, which amount was determined to. be $9,692.-90.

Immediately after the entry of the judgment, plaintiff Paul Clontz listed the property for sale and began contacting, prospective buyers in an effort to make a sale: His purpose was to raise the money to pay Brim and to realize some part of his own equity in the property. Among others, Clontz talked to defendant (respondent) H. O. Fortner. In his deposition Clontz testified that defendant Fortner approached him and offered to lend him the money necessary to pay Brim, and offered to act as attorney for Clontz (defendant was a licensed attorney).

Defendant in his deposition testified that Clontz approached him and advised him that he was trying to sell the property in order to pay Brim; that he had a prospective buyer in Utah to whom he thought he would be able to sell the property for more than the amount required, but that he could not conclude such a sale within the time remaining of the period allowed for redemption from the Brim obligation.

December 8th, the day before the expiration of the redemption period, the parties went to the office of E. L. Rayborn, attorney in Twin Falls, to have documents prepared to effectuate an agreement they had reached. Rayborn had acted as one of *359 plaintiff’s attorneys in the action brought by them against Brim. In his deposition, Ray-born testified that the parties advised him they had agreed upon a sale of the property by plaintiffs to defendant Fortner, and an option from Fortner to plaintiffs to buy the property back within sixty days for the sum of $9,853.22, plus $2,000, and plus any other sum or expenses Fortner might incur in protecting his interest in the property in the interim. Rayborn further testified that he accordingly prepared an assignment of the Hawes contract, and a deed, conveying the property from plaintiffs to defendants, also an option from defendants to plaintiffs, as directed; that a loan from defendants to plaintiffs, or interest on such, was never mentioned by either party; and that the documents prepared by him were duly executed and delivered.

Plaintiffs paid the Brim judgment and remained in possession of the property, by their lessee, during the sixty-day period allowed by their option. At the end of that period — the option not having been exercised — plaintiffs’ tenant surrendered possession to defendants on or about February 9, 1958. Defendants thereafter continued in possession of the property until early in 1963, when they sold the property to a third person.

January 16, 1963, plaintiffs brought this action, seeking to have the assignment and deed declared a mortgage, and seeking the right to redeem the property therefrom by paying the amount due defendants theredn. Defendants answered April' 9, .1963; admitted the execution and delivery of the documents prepared by Rayborn; denied that a loan was made by them to plaintiffs; alleged the defenses of estoppel, laches, and limitations. Thereafter,. defendants moved the court for summary judgment. Their motion was supported by the depositions of plaintiff Paul Clontz, defendant H. O. Fortner, and attorney E. L. Rayborn, .and by the affidavit of their counsel, John H. Daly. Plaintiffs filed no countershowing and offered no evidence in opposition to the motion, apparently resting their resistance upon the deposition of plaintiff Clontz. The motion was granted and judgment was entered dismissing plaintiffs’ action. Plaintiffs brought this appeal from the judgment.

IRCP 56(e), after providing the procedure for supporting or opposing a motion for summary judgment, further provides:

“ * * * When a motion for summary judgment is made and supported as provided in this rule, an adverse party may not rest upon mere allegations or denials of his pleading, but must answer in detail as specific as that of the moving papers, setting forth the material facts as he believes and intends to prove them to be. If he does not so answer under oath, summary judgment shall be entered against him.”

The only error assigned is that the court erred in granting the motion for the reason *360 that genuine issues of material fact were shown to exist, which required a trial.

Defendants acknowledged that Clontz, in his deposition, testified as follows:

“A I don’t know that I approached Fortner, John. He approached me. He got the news around town someplace. ' Where he got it I don’t know, hut Fortner approached me to help me out, to represent me as an attorney and loan me this money. I never went to Fortner and asked him for the money.”
“A I.told Fortner that I was trying to sell the ranch, and I though I had it sold..
“Q Did you tell him to whom you thought you had it sold?
“A No.
"Q Do you remember anything else that was said?
“A No, I don’t.
“Q Did you tell him you wanted him to Joan you money?
“A I told him I would borrow it if I couldn’t do something else with the ranch.”
. “Q At the time that this money, was paid to 'Brimm, .or- to the court for Brimm, -which I guess is more accurate, it was paid here in court, you wanted more time in which to try to sell the property fo¿ á better price, didn’t you.
“A Yes.'
“Q And you wanted an additional sixty days?
“A Yes.
“Q And you got that through your dealings with Mr. Fortner?
“A It was the only way I could borrow the money from Fortner was to repay it in sixty days.
“Q You say that was the only reason?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
399 P.2d 949, 88 Idaho 355, 1965 Ida. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clontz-v-fortner-idaho-1965.