Dilts v. Mecham

45 P.2d 920, 48 Wyo. 352, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 38
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1935
Docket1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 P.2d 920 (Dilts v. Mecham) 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
Dilts v. Mecham, 45 P.2d 920, 48 Wyo. 352, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 38 (Wyo. 1935).

Opinion

Riner, Justice.

This case comes here by direct appeal, seeking the review of a judgment of the district court of Converse County. The action was instituted in that court by Fred Dilts and Archie Picklesimer, as plaintiffs, against Vernon Mecham, Melvin Mecham, Harry Isaac *356 and Lenora Isaac, as defendants. Judgment being rendered in plaintiffs’ favor, of the defendants Harry Isaac alone appealed. The facts material to be considered as they appear in the record are in summary these:

About February 15, 1929, the plaintiffs through one Robert George, who at the time was ranch foreman for Archie Picklesimer, made an arrangement with Vernon Mecham, an employee on the ranch, whereby Mecham agreed to make a homestead filing upon some 640 acres of land situated in Converse County, Wyoming. It was agreed also that plaintiffs would buy certain improvements which had been placed upon this land by former entryman Mecum, who had lost the entry and who was willing to sell and turn them over to Mecham. This arrangement was carried out, and plaintiffs paid to Mecum the sum of $500.00 for the improvements aforesaid, and also the sum of $36.00, necessary filing fees when the homestead entry was made.

The parties above named met at the Douglas National Bank in Douglas, Wyoming, on February 15, 1929, where a bank official, acting for plaintiffs, drew up and there were executed by the owner thereof a bill of sale for the improvements aforesaid running to Mecham; a note by Mecham for $800.00, payable to plaintiffs three years after date, with interest at eight per cent per annum; a mortgage by Mecham to plaintiffs upon the lands included in the proposed entry; and a lease by Mecham running to Dilts and Picklesimer, upon said lands for three years, “for the purpose of grazing stock only” and for a stipulated rental of “$64.00 per annum, same to be applied 'in payment of the interest on” the note aforesaid. These papers were turned over to the bank official, who kept them in the deposit box of Dilts in the bank. This lease was never recorded and the mortgage was not *357 placed of record in Converse County, Wyoming, until November 23, 1932.

It appears that Vernon Mecham at the time of this transaction, a youth of twenty-one years, asserts — as he states in his testimony — that he was unacquainted with business matters of this kind and that he did not know he was signing a note and mortgage, but thought he was making a homestead filing; that the instruments aforesaid were not filled out when he signed them; and that had he known their nature he would not have affixed his signature.

After the business at the bank had been thus concluded, the parties went to the office of the United States Commissioner, where Mecham made the homestead filing upon the land in question. While there the entryman inquired of George what papers he had signed at the bank, and was told by the latter that the plaintiffs had taken those papers “to protect themselves in case he relinquished and did not go ahead and prove up on the homestead.” Mecham took up his residence on the entry, made additional improvements thereon and remained there until 1932, ultimately receiving title to the land from the Government. In the course of improving his homestead, he used the truck belonging to Picklesimer, the value of the use thereof being testified to by the latter as the sum of $15.00.

In the fall of the year last mentioned the entryman sought to sell the property and approached Picklesimer concerning the matter. The latter, claiming that the plaintiffs had a lease for another year on the entry, declined to offer more than $1000.00 for it. There seems to be a dispute in the testimony given by these parties as to whether anything was said by Picklesimer at this time relative to the mortgage executed by the entryman, as above described, Picklesimer claiming it was mentioned and Mecham declaring that it was not. The offer not meeting with the entryman’s approval, *358 he sought to find another person who would buy the land.

The appellant, Harry Isaac, was a neighbor of the plaintiffs. Picklesimer passed him on the road frequently, and on one occasion, about the spring of 1929 or 1930, Picklesimer told Isaac to keep off the land included in the Vernon Mecham homestead entry, as he (Picklesimer) had a lease on it; he did not, however, tell Isaac then that he had a mortgage on the land and never told him so.

Shortly before November 8, 1932, Vernon Mecham came to Isaac and requested him to buy the land included in the homestead entry acquired as above detailed. Mecham being unable to give Isaac any precise information as to the state of the title to the entry other than he thought there was a five year lease on it to Picklesimer, but that he did not know about the matter certainly, it was agreed that the next day Mecham would meet Isaac in Douglas, the county seat of Converse County, and the county records would then be examined. The following day Vernon Mecham and his father, Melvin Mecham, went to one Daniels, a lawyer in Douglas, and requested him to go to the Douglas National Bank to ascertain the facts about the lease. Daniels did this and reported to the Mechams that “there was a S800.00 mortgage against the place, due in three years, one year past due; that it was recorded in the courthouse at Douglas, also in the Land Office at Cheyenne.” The Mechams then left Daniels’ office and shortly afterwards met Isaac on the street, but failed to tell him of their conversation with Daniels or anything regarding the latter’s statement of there being a mortgage on the property involved. All three, the Mechams and Isaac, thereupon went to the County Clerk’s office and had the Clerk make an examination of the records there. The official told them and showed *359 them that there was “nothing against it,” and, as he said, it was “clear as a bell.”

Following this investigation the Mechams and Isaac went to another lawyer’s office in Douglas, where papers were drawn to complete the sale of the land from Vernon Mecham to Harry Isaac, for the purchase price of $1500.00, — a warranty deed from Vernon Mecham and wife to Harry Isaac, dated November 8, 1932, and acknowledged as of that date, which deed was duly recorded in Converse County on November 9, 1932; a check for $500.00 payable to Vernon Me-cham and signed by Harry Isaac; a note for $1000.00 dated November 8, 1932, due on or before thirty days after date, payable to Vernon Mecham, signed by Harry Isaac and Lenora O. Isaac; and a mortgage of even date on the land thus conveyed running to Vernon Mecham and signed by Isaac and his wife, Lenora. This mortgage also was placed on the Converse County records on November 9, 1932. Isaac gave instructions to the Converse County Bank to pay the $1000.00 note from certain accounts kept in that bank.

Under date of November 14, 1932, Vernon Mecham assigned the Isaac note and mortgage to his father, Melvin Mecham, in liquidation of his two promissory notes for $500.00 each held by the father for money previously loaned his son. This assignment was duly recorded November 16, 1932.

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Bluebook (online)
45 P.2d 920, 48 Wyo. 352, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dilts-v-mecham-wyo-1935.