De Vas v. Noble

369 P.2d 290, 13 Utah 2d 133, 1962 Utah LEXIS 163
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1962
Docket9478
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 369 P.2d 290 (De Vas v. Noble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Vas v. Noble, 369 P.2d 290, 13 Utah 2d 133, 1962 Utah LEXIS 163 (Utah 1962).

Opinions

CROCKETT, Justice.

Defendants Mr. and Mrs. Brack H. Noble appeal from a judgment nullifying two deeds to real property obtained from the plaintiff: one on the ground of fraud; and the other for forgery; and also from an award of damages.

The trial court having found for the plaintiff, it is both our prerogative and duty to review the evidence and every inference that may be fairly and reasonably drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, which we do in our treatment of the facts.1

Plaintiff Hattie DeVas is an elderly lady of the type sometimes referred to as a “character”: She has lived for many years as a recluse in a makeshift dwelling on the property in question in the brush-covered hills east of Farmington, Utah. Her unique home and manner of living, which we will again refer to below, are quite detached from civilization and its ways, and unspoiled by such modern trappings as running water or electricity or the contrivances attendant therewith. The suspicions of limitation upon her cerebral equipment were such that before she was permitted to testify the trial judge, with the agreement of counsel, directed that she be given a psychiatric examination. The report indicated that she could testify but the examiner had reservations as to the confidence to be reposed in her testimony and that it should be received with caution.

Essential facts surrounding the procurement of the deeds referred to are these: Hattie DeVas owned about 30 acres of land up in the foothills. It had been of little value until the urban incursion during and following World War II, which burgeoned the population of Davis County. In September of 19S2, defendant Brack H. Noble talked to her about the possibility of purchasing some of her land and also discussed some other matters, including the desirability of a survey; and that running water should be brought to the plaintiff’s place. Mr. Noble in fact got Mr. Robert G. Harding to survey part of the plaintiff’s land. On September 23, 1952, the plaintiff signed a warranty deed to Mr. Noble of about 30 acres of the land. The document was signed in the office of attorney Wendel B. Hammond at Bountiful, who acknowledged the plaintiff’s signature as notary. The plaintiffs version of this transaction is that she signed a paper so there could be a survey of the land. Arid while she admits that there had been an oral agreement to sell some of her land to Mr. Noble she claims no conveyance was [136]*136to take place until she was informed of the number of acres the survey revealed she owned and a price per acre had been agreed upon between herself and Mr. Noble. She further maintains that she was never given the results of the survey; that no amount was ever agreed upon or paid for the property; and that she was induced by deception into signing the document, believing that the paper she signed was only to cause a survey to be made of her lands. A second deed, found to be a forgery, purported to convey to the Nobles about seven acres of her land.

The position of the plaintiff is that the defendants practiced a continuing fraud and deception upon her up to the spring of 1958, periodically promising to do right by her concerning her land but failing to do so. Defendants dispute these charges. They admit that no major monetary consideration was given for the land, but they assert that the following things constituted consideration for it: that the $10.00 nominal consideration recited in the first deed was in fact paid; that the Nobles were to cause the land to be surveyed; that they were to file on and develop a spring and pipe water to the plaintiff’s property; and that they were to give the plaintiff a number of curios and antiques, all of which they claim was done. In view of the fact that upon disputed evidence the trial court found that the defendants gave no consideration for the property, that finding is sustained.

The issue of gravest concern is defendants’ contention that the statute of limitations had run before plaintiff commenced her action. Sec. 78-12-26(3) requires that an action for fraud be brought within three years. But it also expressly states that: “ * * * the cause of action in such case shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake.” The statute is an affirmative defense. Therefore, it must be expressly pleaded and proved.2 Accordingly, once the fact of fraud in inducing the signing of the deed was established, as was here found by the trial court, it then became the responsibility of the defendants to show that Hattie DeVas was aware that she had been cheated out of her prpperty more than three years before she instituted her action. The trial court refused to so believe and find, but found to the contrary: that the deception continued until shortly prior to the 'filing of the action.

Defendants insist that the evidence is such that it requires that finding to be overturned and found the other way as a matter of law. It must be conceded that statements were elicited from Mrs. DeVas which normally should be regarded as [137]*137showing that she knew she had been cheated out of her property shortly after the original conveyance. But there are unusual factors present here, which we discuss below, which must be taken into account in determining whether the trial court must be overruled in refusing to find in accordance with the defendants’ contention.

In addressing the question whether the trial judge was obliged to make the finding demanded by the defendants, it is well to keep in mind certain principles applicable where it is required that a fact be found affirmatively and the court refuses to do so. In order to compel such a finding it is necessary that the evidence concerning the fact in question not only be of sufficient quality and substance to support a finding that it is true, but it must go beyond that and be such that all reasonable minds would so conclude. On the other hand, if there is any reasonable basis in the evidence, or lack of evidence, from which reasonable minds could honestly say they were not convinced of such facts by preponderance of the evidence, then the ruling of the trial court should be sustained.3

Due to his function as the determiner of the facts and his advantaged position in close proximity to the witnesses and the trial, it is his privilege to be the exclusive judge of the credibility of the witnesses, the weight to be given the evidence and the facts to be found therefrom. This includes appraisal of the ability of the witnesses to know and understand and their capacity to remember. The court’s prerogative of course does not go so far as to permit him to stubbornly ignore and refuse to be guided by credible, uncon-tradicted evidence when all reasonable minds would accept it. That could result in arbitrary and unreasoning denial or distortion of justice. Nevertheless because of the prerogative just mentioned as judge of all aspects of the case, if the testimony of a witness is affected with any frailty which might reasonably be considered as casting suspicion upon it or discrediting its accuracy or truthfulness, the court is not bound to accept such testimony as the fact and so find. And the rule is not otherwise because the witness happened to be a party to the action.

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Bluebook (online)
369 P.2d 290, 13 Utah 2d 133, 1962 Utah LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-vas-v-noble-utah-1962.