Commercial Bank & Trust Co. v. Jordan

278 P. 832, 85 Mont. 375, 65 A.L.R. 968, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 68
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1929
DocketNo. 6,460.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 278 P. 832 (Commercial Bank & Trust Co. v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Bank & Trust Co. v. Jordan, 278 P. 832, 85 Mont. 375, 65 A.L.R. 968, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 68 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*380 MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the Commercial Bank & Trust Company to quiet title to an undivided one-half interest in a tract of land situated in Sweet Grass county.

The complaint alleges title in plaintiff, and that each of the defendants, without right, claims some interest in the property. The defendant Marcia E. Stocker filed separate answer and cross-complaint, in which she denied that plaintiff is the owner of the property and alleged that she is the owner of the property as the surviving wife of Charles F. Stocker, but subject to certain transactions between Charles F. Stocker and John F. Asbury, both now deceased, and asks that title' be quieted in her. The defendants Dorothy Asbury Jordan and Elizabeth Augusta Asbury filed joint answer and cross-complaint, in which they deny that plaintiff is the owner of the property and allege that they are the owners thereof as the *381 only heirs of John F. Asbury, deceased, who died seised of said property, but subject to certain transactions between John F. Asbury and Charles F. Stocker, and ask that title be quieted in them. All of the other defendants defaulted.

By reply and answer the affirmative allegations of the answers and cross-complaints were put in issue, save that it was admitted that Dorothy Asbury Jordan and Elizabeth Augusta Asbury are the only heirs at law of John F. Asbury, deceased, and that Marcia E. Stocker is the surviving wife of Charles F. Stocker, deceased. The answer of plaintiff to the cross-complaints also alleged that plaintiff has been in the open, notorious, and exclusive possession of the property continuously since July 3, 1915, and for more than ten years prior to the commencement of the action under color of title based upon a sheriff’s certificate of salé, and that the causes of action set forth in the cross-complaints are barred by sections 9015 and 9016, Revised Codes of 1921.

The defendants Dorothy Asbury Jordan, Elizabeth Augusta Asbury and Marcia E. Stocker filed replies to the answer of plaintiff to the cross-complaints, in which there were denials of the affirmative allegations contained therein.

The cause was tried to the court sitting without a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, from which the appeal was taken.

The record discloses, and the parties stipulated, that the property in question was deeded to Charles F. Stocker on April 30, 1908; the deed being recorded on October 19, 1910. To sustain the allegations of its complaint, plaintiff introduced in evidence the judgment-roll in a certain action entitled Melville Trading Co., a Corporation, Plaintiff, v. Charles F. Stocker, Defendant. From this it appears that the Melville Trading Company commenced an action against Charles F. Stocker on October 21, 1910, to recover judgment for $544.04 for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered by the trading company to Stocker. Summons was served upon the defendant in that action. Upon his failure to appear, judgment by de *382 fault was entered on November 15, 1910. Plaintiff also introduced evidence showing that on January 4, 1911, Charles F. Stocker and his wife, the defendant Marcia E. Stocker, executed and delivered to the Big Timber National Bank their promissory note in the sum of $16,450, and at the same time, to secure its payment, executed and delivered a mortgage upon the property here involved. The note and mortgage were transferred to plaintiff on December 3, 1913. On March 7, 1912, Charles F. Stocker and Marcia E. Stocker conveyed the property in question by warranty deed to John F. Asbury. June 8, 1915, execution in the case of Melville Trading Co. v. Stocker was issued and levied upon the same property. The property was sold under the writ of execution on July 3, 1915. John F. Asbury was at that time the president of the plaintiff bank. The record discloses that he and the other officers of the bank had discussed the matter of making a settlement of the Stocker indebtedness of $16,450, and it was decided that the plaintiff would purchase the property at the execution sale rather than foreclose its mortgage on the property. The record discloses that pursuant to this arrangement, also agreed to by the Melville Trading Company, the bid was made for $100. There is evidence that S. G. Hawks, a director and majority stockholder, made the bid, but one witness thought the bid was made by John F. Asbury.

Immediately after the sale John F. Asbury, with other officers of the plaintiff bank who attended the sale, went to the sheriff’s office while the certificate of sale was prepared by the under-sheriff. The certificate of sale recites that the property was “sold at public auction * * * to the Commercial Bank & Trust Company.” This is corroborated by oral testimony. The bank cashier testified that $100 was paid by plaintiff by crediting the account in the bank of A. G. Hatch, the attorney for the Melville Trading Company. Also, there was introduced in evidence a report made by the plaintiff bank to the state superintendent of banks, and signed by John F. As-bury, in which was shown an item of $100 paid by the plaintiff on August 4, 1915, on the Stocker ranch.

*383 There is evidence that in the summer of 1915, after the execution sale, John F. Asbury and L. R. Peck posted a sign on the buildings situated on the property in question, which was dictated by Asbury, reading as follows: “Notice to public. We do not object to your occupying but please do not destroy. Commercial Bank & Trust Company, Owners.” Ever since the sale the plaintiff has paid taxes on the property, leased it, collected rentals, and treated the property as its own without interference or molestation.

On July 10, 1915, the under-sheriff made return to the execution, in which it is stated that the property was sold “to John F. Asbury.” On November 2, 1916, a sheriff’s deed was issued to State Farms Company. On December 30, 1918, the State Farms Company by deed conveyed the property to plaintiff. On February 24, 1927, a sheriff’s deed to the property was issued to plaintiff.

The court found that plaintiff became the owner of the property on July 3, 1915, by purchase at the execution sale, and that the defendants have no interest therein; that the property was then sold to plaintiff for the sum of $100 and that the sheriff’s deed of February 24, 1927, was regularly issued to plaintiff; that plaintiff has been in the open, notorious, exclusive and peaceable possession of the property for more than ten years before the commencement of this action; that the claim and title of plaintiff was founded upon the sheriff’s certificate of sale of July 3, 1915; that the note in the sum of $16,450, executed by Charles F. and Marcia E. Stocker, and the mortgage securing the same, were unpaid on December 3, 1913, and were on that day assigned by the Big Timber National Bank to plaintiff, and that the same were unpaid and owing to plaintiff on July 3, 1915; that the statement in the sheriff’s return to the effect that the property was sold to John F. Asbury was erroneous and contrary to the facts.

Upon these findings, judgment was entered for plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
278 P. 832, 85 Mont. 375, 65 A.L.R. 968, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-trust-co-v-jordan-mont-1929.