Council Improvement Co. v. Draper

102 P. 7, 16 Idaho 541, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 56
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 102 P. 7 (Council Improvement Co. v. Draper) 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
Council Improvement Co. v. Draper, 102 P. 7, 16 Idaho 541, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 56 (Idaho 1909).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

This action was commenced on March 19, 1907, by the respondent, Council Improvement Company. By the allegations and prayer of the complaint it was sought to both eject the appellant, John W. Draper, from the premises, and to quiet respondent’s title to the lands described in the complaint. The amended answer on which the case was finally tried was filed on June 22, 1907. The case came on for trial on June 25th, and on the same date, and prior to entering upon the trial, the parties filed a stipulation of facts and submitted the ease to the court for decision and judgment on the facts stipulated by the parties. This stipulation traces the chain of title under which each party claims the ownership and right of possession of the premises, and the case was submitted to the court for its determination under the law as to which party held the legal title to this property, — the plaintiff claiming and asserting its title through a deed from the administrator of the estate of one Zadock Loveless, deceased, and the defendant claiming the property by reason of being an heir at law of Zadock Loveless, deceased. Under the facts stipulated, the only question that was open for the court to decide was whether or not the administrator’s deed passed title to the land, or the heirs at law of Zadock Love[545]*545less took title to the land by patent from the United States, freed of any and all rights of the creditors of the estate of Zadoek Loveless, deceased. The court decided, and rightfully, we have no doubt, that the plaintiff in the case acquired no title by reason of the administrator’s deed, and that the title had vested in the heirs of the deceased. It appears that Zadoek Loveless died intestate in Washington county in the year 1884, and that prior to his death he had settled and made homestead entry upon the land in controversy, and that he had not made final proof on the land or received patent therefor prior to his death. Subsequent to the death of Loveless, such proceedings were taken by William Loveless for the heirs, that on January 13, 1888, a patent was issued by the United States, granting and conveying “unto-the heirs of Zadoek Loveless, deceased, and to their heirs, the tract of land”- described in plaintiff’s complaint. Prior to the issuance of patent the administrator duly and regularly petitioned the probate court of Washington county for an order authorizing him to sell this homestead claim and improvements, and thereafter an order of sale was duly and regularly made and the administrator accordingly, and in pursuance thereof, on November 11, 1886, sold the land and all the right, title, interest and claim of the estate therein to one Edwin B. Lockwood.

Respondent deraigns its title to the property through the administrator’s deed made to Lockwood. The court decided that no title passed by the administrator’s sale, but that, on the contrary, the title from the United States was vested directly in the heirs of Zadoek Loveless, and that the estate of the deceased acquired no right or interest therein. Judgment was accordingly entered on January 10, 1908, in favor of the defendant. Thereafter, and on March 19, 1908, L. L. Burtenshaw, attorney, and also secretary of the plaintiff corporation, made and filed a motion and affidavit to vacate and set aside the stipulation of facts and the judgment based thereon. This affidavit in no way attacks or assails the correctness of the stipulation or any of the facts therein set out, but alleges that Mr. Burtenshaw, as the rep[546]*546resentative of and attorney for the plaintiff corporation, was ignorant of and not informed as to all the facts in the case, and especially the essential facts on which plaintiff’s title and right of possession rested; that subsequent to making and entering into the stipulation, affiant learned other facts in relation to plaintiff’s cause of action, and alleges that at the time of entering into the stipulation the defendant must have been, and was, cognizant of the existence of such facts, and that he did not disclose them to affiant. It is alleged in the affidavit “that one of the grantors of the said plaintiff held deeds of conveyance and assignment and relinquishment of all the interests in the estate- of Zadock Loveless to William J. Loveless by the heirs of such estate, including Mary E. Draper, the wife of said defendant, conveying the said property described in said complaint, and that at the time of the execution and delivery of such deeds, the grantor of this plaintiff entered into the possession of such premises by virtue of such conveyance.”

It should be here observed that Mary E. Draper, the wife of defendant, is a granddaughter of Zadock Loveless and one of his heirs. It is further alleged by the affidavit that after the signing of the stipulation of facts, one Andrew Adams, who was the administrator of the estate of Zadock Loveless, deceased, informed affiant that he, Adams, had been intimately acquainted with the lands in controversy since the year 1884, and that as administrator of the estate he sold the land to Edwin B. Lockwood, who immediately went into possession of the premises, and that he, Adams, knew of the deeds of conveyance and relinquishments from the heirs of Zadock Loveless, conveying all their interest in and to the estate of the deceased Loveless. The affidavit further alleges that the affiant learned similar facts as to the conveyance from the heirs of Loveless in an interview with one Martha J. Wheelhouse, and also learned from her that the plaintiff’s grantors have been in the continuous possession of the premises for a- great many years. Touching the knowledge affiant and plaintiff previously had with reference to these matters and the diligence exercised in procuring such knowledge, the affidavit proceeds:

[547]*547“This affiant further says that it was not possible for the said plaintiff or this affiant to have discovered or produced the said facts above stated, as they were unknown to this affiant at the time of making such stipulation, for the reason that the said Andrew Adams did not at that time and had not for a long time prior thereto been a resident of this state, and the said plaintiff and this affiant not having any knowledge of said facts, or any of them, had no reason to suspect that such facts existed, and the said deeds of conveyance had not been recorded, but had been kept in the possession of the said Andrew Adams, and their existence was entirely unknown to the said plaintiff and this affiant until said conversation with the said Andrew Adams, long subsequent to the making of said stipulation.”

Affiant alleges, in substance, that he is now prepared to establish plaintiff’s claim, both by adverse possession and mesne conveyances from the heirs of Zadock Loveless. He failed, however, to make any of the deeds a part of his showing, and it appears that they have never been recorded, and they do not appear in the record in this case. The defendant filed a number of counter-affidavits denying that he had in any way deceived or misled the plaintiff, and alleging that if any deeds are outstanding as mentioned in the affidavit of Mr. Burtenshaw, that such deeds were merely relinquishments of the respective rights of the heirs in and to their claims or any claim they might have had to the estate of Zadock Loveless, and that they were not deeds for this tract of land. It is also set out in the affidavit that at the time of making and entering into this stipulation, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 P. 7, 16 Idaho 541, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/council-improvement-co-v-draper-idaho-1909.