Delfelder v. Poston

293 P. 354, 42 Wyo. 176, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 48
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1930
Docket1611
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 293 P. 354 (Delfelder v. Poston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delfelder v. Poston, 293 P. 354, 42 Wyo. 176, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 48 (Wyo. 1930).

Opinion

*185 RineR, Justice.

The plaintiff in error, who was the plaintiff in the District Court and who will be mentioned subsequently herein as the “plaintiff”, obtained a judgment against the defendants in error, who were the defendants below and who will be designated here or referred to by their respective names, as may be necessary. Dissatisfied with that judgment, the plaintiff has brought these proceedings in error for its review. No cross errors have been assigned by the defendants for our consideration. This litigation involves another phase of the matters heretofore brought before this court in State ex rel. Poston v. District Court, 31 Wyo. *186 413, 227 Pac. 378, 35 A. L. R. 1082, and Poston v. Delfelder, 39 Wyo. 163, 270 Pac. 1068, 273 Pac. 176.

The facts material to be considered in disposing of this case, as we gather them from the record, are in outline as follows: In the year 1921, the defendants, the Ro¡ek Springs National Bank and the American National Bank, were national banking associations engaged in business in the state of Wyoming — the former at Rock Springs and the latter at Cheyenne. The defendant John W. Hay was president of each of these corporations, and the defendant Lon J. Poston was engaged in the sheep raising business while living at Rock Springs, Wyoming, and was a customer of the Rock Springs National Bank.

Prior to 1921, Jacob A. Delfelder, who was conducting a large live stock business near Riverton, Wyoming, was indebted to John W. Hay in the sum of $150,000, and this indebtedness was steadily increasing. On January 28, 1921, an additional loan was made by Hay to Delfelder which raised the amount of the indebtedness to $225,000. To secure the loan thus made, Delfelder executed and delivered to Hay a chattel mortgage upon all the cattle, horses and sheep owned by Delfelder. For the same purpose the latter, with his wife Evelyn M. Delfelder, a.t the same time also executed and delivered to Hay three real estate mortgages upon various lands owned by them in Fremont, Washakie and Natrona counties in this state. Each of the three last mentioned instruments recited that the indebtedness aforesaid was evidenced by eleven promissory notes dated January 28, 1921 and due October 28, 1921, with interest thereon annually at the rate of eight per centum, “executed by the said J. A. Delfelder and Evelyn M. Del-felder” to John W. Hay, “which said sum or sums of money the said J. A. Delfelder and Evelyn M. Delfelder hereby covenant to pay.” The chattel mortgage above mentioned likewise recited that these notes had been given by Delfelder to Hay and further provided for future advances by Hay not to exceed $20,000, to be made prior to *187 October 28, 1921, and to be due and payable then. These advances were to be for the feed and upkeep of the stock.

Sometime during the latter part of January of the year last mentioned, Delfelder asked Hay to purchase the property thus mortgaged, and upon the latter’s refusal, requested him to find a purchaser. Mr. Hay testified without objection that at that time Delfelder said to him: “I am sick; I owe you a lot of money; I want to pay you; I am not able to attend to this business. Joe has full charge and whatever you do, take it up with Joe. If you get a buyer, go ahead and sell them.” By "Joe” Mr. Delfelder had reference to one Joseph L. Marquis, his brother-in-law. Marquis was well acquainted with the Delfelder properties. He was in the latter’s employ during the years 1920-1921 up to and including the time of Delfelder’s death. As Marquis himself, as a witness, said: "I looked after the business in general.” During those years, as Mr. Del-felder ’s ill health manifested itself and he was obliged to be away, Marquis was left in charge of the outfit.

Toward the end of February, 1921, Delfelder went to Eochester, Minnesota, entering a hospital there for surgical treatment. Subsequently and on March 24th and 25th of that year, telegraphic correspondence passed between Hay and Marquis, who was then in Eochester with his employer, wherein Hay stated he had a party who was able to buy, and would look at the Delfelder sheep, leases, ranges and outfits that belonged with the sheep, at $140,000, and inquired what the price of this property would be. Marquis, after conferring with Delfelder, quoted a price of $150,000, wiring that the latter was anxious to dispose of his holding at fair prices and wanted Marquis to meet Hay’s proposed purchaser in Eiverton. In the course of discussing the matter with his employer, Marquis had urged Delfelder to make the sale suggested by Hay. All this while Delfelder was in a very serious physical condition; his mind, however, was active and his wife, Evelyn M. Delfelder, was with him constantly, except brief intermissions for rest *188 and food. The night of March 27th, Marquis left Rochester for Riverton, but before he reached his destination and on March 28th, at Rochester, Delfelder died.

Upon arriving at Riverton, Marquis found the defendant Poston there, who told him that he had paid $10,000 down on the property, subject to an inspection thereof. Marquis agreed to show Poston the sheep and shortly afterward both men went out to the camps and inspected and counted them. Following this and on or about April 6th, Marquis delivered possession to Poston of 12,184 sheep, 39 horses, 5 tons of alfalfa, 600 tons of ground alfalfa hay, 5 tons of rye hay, and 1,000 pounds of corn, as well as certain land, leases and range lands — all of which property was subject to the lien of the mortgage indebtedness already described. Marquis also delivered over to Poston some saddles, harness sets, a number of wagons, a few farming implements and camp supplies, which were unaffected by the mortgage lien aforesaid. Poston received all of this property and thereafter dealt with it as his own, making sales etc.

On April 9, 1921, Marquis went to Cheyenne, Wyoming, taking with him Delfelder’s bookkeeper, who brought a list of the names and amounts of money the outfit owed at the time Poston took it over. At a conference held on that day between Hay, Poston and Marquis, a written memorandum was prepared and signed by all three men without objection, which recited substantially, among other things, that a sale of the property aforesaid had been made by Del-felder through his agent Marquis on March 25, 1921, to Poston, and that “the original telegrams passing between the said John W. Hay and the said J. L. Marquis constituting said agreement of sale” were “annexed hereto and made a part hereof as the evidence of said sale; ’ ’ that the purchase price of the property taken over by Poston was the sum of $140,000, of which $10,000 had already been paid, and that the balance of $130,000 was, on said 9th of *189 April, 1921, paid by Poston to the American National Bank; and that this entire sale price was credited on the Delfelder mortgage indebtedness of $225,000, exclusive of interest, which had been increased $2867.78 through advancement of that amount by the American National Bank to pay the wages of the Delfelder sheep outfit employees engaged in preserving and protecting the mortgaged property during Delfelder’s illness.

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Bluebook (online)
293 P. 354, 42 Wyo. 176, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delfelder-v-poston-wyo-1930.