Collins v. Parkinson

574 P.2d 913, 98 Idaho 871, 1978 Ida. LEXIS 349
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1978
Docket12540
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 574 P.2d 913 (Collins v. Parkinson) 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
Collins v. Parkinson, 574 P.2d 913, 98 Idaho 871, 1978 Ida. LEXIS 349 (Idaho 1978).

Opinion

McFADDEN, Chief Justice.

This is the second appeal in this case. See Collins v. Parkinson, 96 Idaho 294, 527 P.2d 1252 (1974) [hereinafter Collins I]. See that opinion for a more detailed statement of the facts in this case. In Collins I this court reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case for a new trial on the issue of mutual mistake on the part of Mrs. Exie Soelberg. The case was retried before the court, and following trial, findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment were entered in favor of respondent, Exie A. Soelberg. We affirm the judgment of the trial court for the reasons hereinafter expressed.

Very briefly, Collins I involved three distinct land transactions. In the first, Floyd Collins and Irene Collins, the plaintiffs (herein appellants) purchased from Earl Soelberg (deceased) and Exie A. Soelberg, his wife and respondent herein, a parcel of land near the airport in Butte County which was the community property of the Soelbergs. In the second transaction, the Soelbergs contracted with Mr. and Mrs. Parkinson for purchase by them of another piece of the Soelberg real property. This contract was not recorded nor was the deed delivered. In the third transaction, the appellants, Mr. and Mrs. Collins, received a deed from the Soelbergs for another piece of the Soelberg real property, supposedly adjoining the first parcel conveyed by the Soelbergs to appellants. The deed in this third transaction actually included a portion of the land which the Soelbergs had previously contracted to sell to the Parkinsons. When this was discovered appellants instituted this quiet title action against the Soelbergs and the Parkinsons. The Soelbergs and Parkinsons counterclaimed to have the deed reformed to omit that portion of land from the deed to appellants which was covered by the Parkinson contract.

In the first action the trial court determined that appellant, Floyd Collins, gave to Mr. Soelberg, an attorney, the description for the property to be conveyed under the third transaction. Collins got this description from recorded instruments. The trial court found that because the Parkinson contract was unrecorded, the description given by Collins to Soelberg included a part of the Parkinson land, and when Soelberg prepared the deed which he and his wife executed and delivered to appellant Collins, this error was perpetuated in that deed. The court further found that neither Mr. Soelberg nor the appellants intended the description to include any part of the Parkinson land and that land had been included by mutual mistake. The trial court denied appellants their requested relief, reformed the deed to exclude the disputed land, and quieted title to that land in the Soelbergs subject to the Parkinson contract.

In the first appeal this court held that the trial court below properly applied the remedy of reformation for mutual mistake and that Mr. Soelberg had sustained his burden *873 of showing such mistake, but because there was no showing that respondent, Exie A. Soelberg, has participated in her husband’s and appellants’ mistake in the conveyance of the Soelberg community realty, the trial court’s judgment was reversed and the case remanded on the issue of the respondent’s mutual mistake.

After trial before the district court, the court held adversely to appellants, from which judgment this appeal is perfected.

The appellants have assigned numerous errors to the action of the trial court in its findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment. First the appellants contend that the trial court erred in sustaining respondent’s objections to certain questions asked by appellants’ attorney in the deposition of Exie A. Soelberg, and also in overruling appellants’ objections to certain questions propounded to respondent by her attorney in the same deposition. Appellants also assign error to the refusal of the trial court to sustain an objection to a question asked of respondent during her testimony at trial.

It is the conclusion of the court that the trial court erred in its rulings on the objections to admission of portions of respondent’s deposition. When appellant moved to admit the deposition, respondent objected to the question, “Now if any mistake was made in any of these documents it was made by Earl, was it not?” and four similar questions on the ground that they called for an ultimate conclusion. The court sustained the objections. We do not believe these deposition questions called for an ultimate conclusion; they therefore should not have been excluded on this ground. But because respondent gave at trial substantially the same testimony as was erroneously excluded, appellant was not prejudiced by the error. Because the court’s error was therefore harmless, we decline to modify the judgment below on the basis of this error. I.R.C.P. 61.

Appellants objected to respondent’s counsel leading his witness on cross examination under the deposition. Such an objection goes to the form of the question and, under I.R.C.P. 32(d)(3)(B), 1 is waived unless made at the deposition. Because appellants failed to state their objections at the time of the taking of the deposition, their objections were waived. See Nutterville v. McLam, 84 Idaho 36, 367 P.2d 576 (1961) (construing former Rule 32(c)(2), now I.R. C.P. 32(d)(3)(B)).

Appellants also assert that the court erred when it overruled their objection to the following question as leading:

“Would you have signed that quit claim deed had you known that [the description in it is what it is]?”

The law is well settled that a question is leading when it suggests to the witness the answer sought. I.R.C.P. 43(b)(2). 2 We do not find that the question asked of respondent suggested the answer sought. It was therefore not a leading question. Thus we conclude that the trial court did not err in its rulings concerning the deposition nor the question submitted to respondent at trial.

The appellants assign error to certain of the trial court’s findings of fact. Appellants apparently claim that respondent must establish any mutual mistake by “clear and satisfactory evidence” and that the record discloses that she failed to establish proof in that regard. As pointed out, a party seeking reformation of an instrument bears a heavy burden of proof.

*874 “The evidence must be clear and satisfactory, leaving but little, if any, doubt of the mistake. It must be made out by the clearest and most satisfactory testimony, such as to leave no fair and reasonable doubt on the mind that the writing does not correctly embody the real intention of the parties. A mere preponderance of the evidence will not suffice, and the burden of proof is on the party alleging the mutual mistake.” Udelavitz v. Ketchen, 33 Idaho 165, 168, 190 P. 1029, 1030 (1920).

Whether the complaining party meets this burden is a question generally for the trial court. As we stated in Exum v. PortneufMarsh Valley Irrig. Co., 38 Idaho 155, 157-58, 220 P. 112, 113 (1923),

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Bluebook (online)
574 P.2d 913, 98 Idaho 871, 1978 Ida. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-parkinson-idaho-1978.