Farmers' & Merchants' Sav. Bank v. Hudson

218 P. 93, 62 Utah 131, 1923 Utah LEXIS 89
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1923
DocketNo. 3976
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 218 P. 93 (Farmers' & Merchants' Sav. Bank v. Hudson) 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
Farmers' & Merchants' Sav. Bank v. Hudson, 218 P. 93, 62 Utah 131, 1923 Utah LEXIS 89 (Utah 1923).

Opinion

THURMAN, J.

The complaint alleges that on March 10, 1920, plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendant Glen J. Hudson and one IT. C. Parker, in the district court of Cache county, Utah, for the sum of $1,336.66 and costs (to avoid confusion, this ease, when necessary, will be hereinafter referred to as the Cache County Case); that said H. C. Parker appealed therefrom, which appeal is now pending, but that the judgment against Hudson is a valid judgment, and has not been paid in whole or in part; that thereafter, in February, 1921, an execution was issued out of said court in said action in favor of' plaintiff against defendant Hudson, and directed to the sheriff of said county for service, but was returned by him unsatisfied, because no property belonging to said defendant could be found.

It is then alleged in the complaint, on information and belief, that in April following the rendition of said judgment said defendant Hudson was the owner of certain shares of stock in the Murdock Candy Company, a corporation, and caused the same to be exchanged for certain land conveyed to the defendant Florence Hudson; that Florence Hudson is the wife of defendant Glen J. Hudson, and said conveyance was made to her for the use and benefit of defendant Glen J. Hudson, and in trust for him, notwithstanding the deed purports to be an absolute conveyance to said Florence Hudson; that said Florence Hudson holds the legal title only to [133]*133said land, and bas no equitable interest therein; that said conveyance was made without consideration passing from said Florence Hudson, and was made with the intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of said Glen J. Hudson, including the plaintiff, and she accepted the same with knowledge of said fraudulent intent. Plaintiff prays for equitable relief.

Each of the defendants first filed a general demurrer to the complaint after which they filed their separate answers. As pertaining to the questions involved on this appeal, the answers are substantially similar. For that reason we will only state the substance of the material parts of the answer of defendant Glen J. Hudson, who will hereinafter be referred to as the defendant.

The answer makes many denials and affirmations which, in view of the findings, are not in issue here, as the appeal is taken on the judgment roll alone. In addition to these allegations, the defendant, by way of answer and counterclaim, affirmatively alleges that said H. C. Parker, mentioned in the complaint, in October, 1918, made the promissory note in question, payable to himself, and sold, assigned, and indorsed the same to the Utah National Underwriters’ Corporation, a corporation of Arizona, and the said corporation received said note from said Parker as the consideration of a sale to him at Salt Lake City, Utah, of certain shares of stock of the said corporation; that at the time of the sale and delivery of said stock the principal place of business of said corporation was in said Salt Lake City, and all its officers and managers were residents of Utah; that during all of said times it was doing business in the state of Utah at said principal place of business, and as a part of its business activities in said state it was engaged in an extensive campaign for the sale of its capita] stock; that, notwithstanding it was a foreign corporation, it at no time complied with the laws of the state of Utah relating to foreign corporations, and failed, before doing said business and entering into said contract with Parker, and thereafter continued to fail and neglect, to file with any officer of this state a copy of its articles of in[134]*134corporation or its by-laws, or any amendment thereof; that at no time has said corporation, by the resolution of its board of directors or otherwise, accepted the provisions of the Utah Constitution or empowered any person within the state as its agent upon whom process issued by authority of or under the laws of the state conld or might be served.

The defendant then alleges that the plaintiff acquired said note from the said Arizona corporation, and that defendant, at the request of plaintiff, indorsed the same, but did so without any consideration whatever, which plaintiff well knew.

It is also alleged in the answer and counterclaim that when the note, became due plaintiff commenced suit against defendant and said Parker; that defendant failed to appear in said case and made default therein; that judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against said defendant and Parker, as prayed for in the complaint; that Parker in due time appealed from said judgment to the Supreme Court of the state; that at the time of said appeal there was pending in said Supreme Court an appeal by the First National Bank of Price against the said H. C. Parker and Utah National Underwriters’ Corporation, in which case the question at issue was the validity of certain promissory notes executed by Parker, payable to himself, and indorsed by him, and delivered to the said corporation, defendant in said cause, which said notes were sold and delivered by said corporation to said First National Bank of Price, plaintiff in said action; that in said canse the defendant Parker pleaded that the notes were invalid because they were given by him to said National Underwriters’ Corporation in payment for certain shares of its corporate stock, and that at the time of the purchase of said stock said corporation was a foreign corporation and had not complied with the laws of the state of Utah applicable to foreign corporations, in respect to filing its articles of corporation and by-laws or accepting the provisions of the state Constitution, nor had it authorized or empowered any person within the state as its agent upon whom process might be served.

It is then alleged by the defendant that said case of the [135]*135First National Bank o£ Price against Parker and the National Underwriters’ Corporation was decided by said Supreme Court in favor of said Parker, declaring said notes invalid for the reason that said corporation had not complied with the Constitution and laws of the state in respect to the matters above mentioned.

Finally, the defendant alleges that after said decision of the Supreme Court the plaintiff in the Cache County Cáse entered into a stipulation in said Supreme Court with said Parker, confessing that the judgment, of the said district court in said cause was founded upon a promissory note subject to the same'infirmities as were the notes in the case of the First National Bank of Price v. Parker et al., aforesaid, and further stipulated that said Supreme Court might enter judgment in the said Cache County Case in accordance with the decision in the Price Bank Case; that thereupon judgment was entered in said Supreme Court reversing the judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against said Parker in the Cache County Case and as to said Parker the judgment of the district court of said county was vacated and set aside. It is further alleged that said judgment is the only subsisting judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant.

As eountercomplainant, defendant prays for equitable relief.

Plaintiff in reply denies the allegations of the counterclaim, and asks for judgment as prayed for in its complaint.

The court to whom the ease was tried found in favor of the defendants Glen J. Hudson and Florence Hudson solely upon the doctrine of stare decisis, holding that the case comes within the principle enunciated in the Price Bank Case, to wit, First National Bank of Price v. Parker et al.,

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Bluebook (online)
218 P. 93, 62 Utah 131, 1923 Utah LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-sav-bank-v-hudson-utah-1923.