Dooling v. Casey

448 P.2d 749, 152 Mont. 267, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 392
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1968
Docket11509
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 448 P.2d 749 (Dooling v. Casey) 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
Dooling v. Casey, 448 P.2d 749, 152 Mont. 267, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 392 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

MB. JUSTICE HASWELL

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a net judgment in the amount of $62,952.15 in favor of the buyers under a contract for the sale of land covering damages awarded them for breach of contract reduced by the amount due on a promissory note given in partial payment of the purchase price. All claims for relief and defenses were litigated in one jury trial in the district court of the Fifth Judicial District of Montana before the Honorable Philip C. Duncan, district judge.

Two separate suits were consolidated for trial herein. The first suit, hereafter called the “main action,” was a suit for breach of contract of sale of land. Plaintiffs in this “main action” were the buyers under the contract: John Dooling, the father; John S. Dooling, the son; and James J. Bertino, the son-in-law. Defendants in the “main action” were three Nevada corporations, which were the sellers under the con *270 tract, together with their president and sole owner. The three Nevada corporations were Bright-Holland Company, Mare-mount-Holland Company, and Nemeroff-Holland Company, hereafter referred to collectively as the Holland corporations. John Jay Casey was the president and the sole owner of these three Holland corporations.

The other claim, hereafter referred to as the “second action,” involved an action by sellers for judgment on a promissory note for $50,000 given as final payment under the contract for the sale of the land. The claim involved in this “second action” was brought by the payees on the note, the Holland corporations, which were also the sellers under the contract, against the makers of the note — the two Doolings and Bertino, who were the buyers under the contract; and Dorothea Dooling, the former wife of the elder Dooling.

Plaintiffs in the “main action” operated a cattle ranch in the Big Hole country southwest of Dillon and wanted to expand their operations by acquisition of adjoining land. In early April, 1965, plaintiffs met with John Jay Casey. Casey controlled the adjoining land, part of which was owned by his Holland corporations, and part of which was owned by his daughter, Ellen Casey "Williams, from whom he had a power of attorney. Casey marked the property he was willing to sell on a forest service map which included, among other things, some grazing land owned by the United States on which his daughter held a 500 head term grazing permit from the Forest Service. According to plaintiffs, Casey told them that this permit would be included as part of the deal.

The contract was hammered out at a series of meetings at a Dillon bank, essentially on April 29 and 30. Those present at these meetings, or at least some part of them, were: Casey; the buyers; a Mr. Buba who was apparently an accountant representing Dorothea Dooling; James H. Marshall who was the representative of an insurance company involved in financing the transaction; a Dillon attorney who drafted the eon- *271 tract on behalf of the buyers, the sellers, and the insurance company financing the transaction; and a Dillon banker who was apparently assisting the buyers, the sellers, and the insurance company financing the transaction. During these meetings Casey repeatedly assured the buyers that the 500 head term grazing permit would be transferred to them as part of the deal, according to plaintiffs.

Casey did all the negotiating for the Holland corporations and Ellen Casey Williams.

The contract was drafted by the Dillon attorney, and on May 5 it was executed on behalf of the Holland corporations, as sellers, by Casey as their president, and individually by plaintiffs as buyers.

The contract provided that the sellers agreed to sell and the buyers agreed to buy certain described lands, personal property, leasehold interests and grazing permits. Included in the latter was the grazing permit that is the subject of controversy in the instant case. The total purchase price was $950,000 payable $20,000 by May 7, $880,000 by June 10, and a promissory note by June 10 in the amount $50,000 payable in two years. Sellers agreed to place in escrow with a Dillon bank for delivery to buyers and Dorothea Dooling the following documents: (1) Warranty deed conveying the lands, (2) Bill of Sale transferring the personal property, (3) Assignment of the leasehold interests, and (4) “a waiver of grazing preference, 4 copies, Forest Service Form 2200-12, in favor of Buyers and Dorothea M. Dooling, to the grazing permit described in Exhibit ‘C’.” This latter item was described in “Exhibit C” as “United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Permit to graze 500 head of cattle upon the Beaverhead National Forest.”

On the same day that the contract was executed, John Jay Casey, as attorney-in-fact for Ellen Casey Williams, executed a quit claim deed on her behalf to the Holland corporations covering that part of the lands owned by her which were *272 being sold to buyers and Dorothea Dooling under the contract. Casey, as president of the Holland corporations, also executed a warranty deed on their behalf to buyers and Dorothea Dooling covering all lands sold to them under the contract. Additionally he assigned the leasehold interests.

At the same time Casey, as attorney-in-fact for Ellen Casey Williams, executed a “Waiver of Crazing Privileges” Forest Service Form 2200-12, covering the 500 head grazing permit on the Beaverhead National Forest, and a second waiver form as president of the Holland corporations. Each was based on a purported sale of all the land covered by the contract, the first from Ellen Casey Williams to the Holland corporations, and the second from the Holland corporations to the buyers and Dorothea Dooling. The ultimate result of this “double waiver” was cancellation by the Forest Service of Ellen Casey Williams’ grazing preference and permit, and denial of any grazing preference or permit to buyers and Dorothea Dooling except a temporary permit for 1965 which was not renewed.

On May 15, 1967 buyers filed the “main action” against sellers and Casey alleging breach of contract to transfer the 500 head grazing preference and permit to them. Plaintiffs’ claim was also based on alleged fraudulent or negligent misrepresentations and non-disclosures by Casey with reference to the grazing permit and the transfer thereof which induced them to enter into the contract; they claim unjust enrichment of sellers and Casey by reason thereof.

The answer of the sellers and Casey amounted to a general denial with a counterclaim against buyers for payment of the $50,000 promissory note given as final payment under the contract, interest thereon, and attorney’s fees. Sellers also filed a separate suit covering the same claim as was contained in the counterclaim in the “main action” against Dorothea Dooling, who was a maker on the note but not a party to the contract. The buyers and Dorothea Dooling admitted that they owed *273 the note but claimed the right to offset snch amount against what was owing them on their claim in the “main action.” All claims were consolidated for trial.

After motions for summary judgment by the respective parties were denied, the entire controvsersy came on for trial on April 1, 1968.

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Bluebook (online)
448 P.2d 749, 152 Mont. 267, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dooling-v-casey-mont-1968.