First National Bank of Green River v. Ennis

14 P.2d 201, 44 Wyo. 497, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 40
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1932
Docket1734
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 201 (First National Bank of Green River v. Ennis) 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
First National Bank of Green River v. Ennis, 14 P.2d 201, 44 Wyo. 497, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 40 (Wyo. 1932).

Opinion

*500 RineR, Justice.

The First National Bank of Green River, a corporation organized under Federal law to transact a banking business, brought an action in the District Court of Sweet- *501 water County to exact an accounting from George H. Ennis and Rock Springs Water Company, a Wyoming corporation, as defendants, because of certain moneys alleged to have been collected and received by the defendants in consequence of their purchase and possession of certain water right contracts in which the bank asserted an assigned interest. The District Court, by its judgment in the matter, declined to allow the relief sought and this proceeding, by direct appeal, was instituted by the unsuccessful litigant to obtain a review of the record made in the case.

The facts developed and material to be considered here, as we view them, are these:

On the 3rd day of June, 1920, the Eden Irrigation and Land Company, a Wyoming corporation, hereinafter usually referred to as the “Irrigation Company,” having previously acquired water rights for certain lands in Sweetwater County — said lands being approximately 11,-640 acres — to be disposed of to settlers in accordance with the provisions of the Federal law generally known as the “Carey Act” and the regulations thereunder, contracted with Charles E. Howell, Augustine Kendall and John P. Boyer, as co-partners, and thereby gave them the exclusive right “to settle and colonize any of said lands and to sell the water rights” therefor until November 1, 1920. This contract provided maximum and minimum prices per acre at which such water rights might be sold by the co-partners, the net amount of money which the Irrigation Company was to receive for such sales, the amounts it should pay to the co-partners for making the sales and, quoting from the contract:

“When any payment is made under the terms of this agreement the application or applications, and all moneys appertaining to the same or to the purchase of water rights, or in reference to this agreement are to be deposited in the FIRST NATIONAL BANK, of Green River, *502 Wyoming, to the credit of the EDEN IRRIGATION AND LAND COMPANY, party of the first part, and all settlements between the said first party, and the said second parties under this contract shall be made at the said FIRST NATIONAL BANK, of Green River, Wyoming, which said bank will deliver on behalf of the said first party to the said second parties, or to the applicants for and purchasers of water rights, all water contracts and water deeds when such applicants and purchasers are entitled to receive the same.”

It was further agreed that the Irrigation Company, as the first party to the contract, should not be bound to third parties, except in accordance with its customary water right contract with them, a blank form of which was attached and made a part of the agreement with the co-partners aforesaid, the second parties thereto. This form of water right contract used between the Irrigation Company and the purchasers of water rights, among other things, provided that the money paid by such purchasers should be delivered to the Irrigation Company, its successors or assigns, in nine yearly specified installments, the duty of collecting the payments to accrue necessarily resting upon that corporation.

With some modifications relative to extending the time within which the purchasers of water rights should make their first payments therefor, the contract of June 3rd aforesaid was, by a supplemental arrangement between the parties, of date March 1, 1922, extended until February 28, 1923.

A few days before the execution of the first contract above described and on May 20, 1920, an agreement was signed between “A. Kendall and J. P. Boyer, doing business under the firm name and style of Kendall and Boyer ’ ’ and I. D. Putnam and H. C. Flaherty, also a co-partnership, wherein it was recited that Kendall and Boyer had ‘ ‘ a contract with the Eden Irrigation and Land Company, a corporation, to dispose of certain land and water rights *503 owned and controlled by” that company and “located in Sweetwater County, Wyoming.” By this agreement, Kendall and his partner gave to Putnam and Flaherty “the exclusive right to sell and dispose of water rights owned and controlled by said Eden Irrigation and Land Company in connection with not less than twelve thousand (12,000) acres of land in Sweetwater County, Wyoming, now segregated and being under the ditch of said Eden Irrigation and Land Company, in accordance with the laws, rules and regulations of the ‘Carey Act’ so called.” This privilege was given by Kendall and Boyer in consideration of certain sales work and other things to be done and certain payments to be made by Putnam and Flaherty to the former, details not here important. This agreement, by a subsequent contract of the parties under date of March 6,1922, was also modified and extended for a period of one year.

It appears that Putnam and Flaherty undertook the performance of the duties incumbent upon them under this contract and made sundry sales of water rights in consequence of which they subsequently asserted against Kendall and Boyer a claim for moneys alleged to be due them on account of such sales.

The Irrigation Company encountered financial difficulties and, in September 1922, Charles E. Howell, one of the co-partners mentioned above, was appointed receiver of the corporation by the District Court of Sweetwater County, and conducted its affairs for a number of years. On August 10, 1926, Howell, as such receiver, signed a contract with one George H. Ennis, one of the respondents herein, for the sale by said receiver to Ennis, as stated in the instrument:

“Without right of redemption and free and clear of all claims, clouds, liens and encumbrances of whatsoever, nature, and under and by the order of the said District *504 Court, first obtained, all of the assets, properties and rights, real, personal and mixed, of said Eden Irrigation and Land Company, whether heretofore specifically described herein or not.”

In the preliminary recitals of this contract, in the course of which the property of the Irrigation Company then in the receiver’s hands was undertaken to be described, appears the following:

“All the company’s interest in contracts for water and water rights heretofore made by said company or by the receiver herein, and appertaining to two thousand four hundred twenty-one and 06/100 (2,421.06) acres of land, more or less, with divers persons and entrymen, now totaling approximately some Seventy Thousand Dollars ($70,-000.00); the company’s interest, however, in said Seventy Thousand Dollars ($70,000.00) being approximately Forty-five Thousand Dollars ($45,000.00); and it is the intent to sell and transfer, by this contract, all and whatever the company’s interest is in this above mentioned Seventy Thousand Dollars ($70,000.00).”

The agreed purchase price was the sum of $170,000. The contract also required the receiver to do certain things to expedite the sale among which were the procurement of an approval and confirmation of the contract by the court in charge of the receivership, and

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 201, 44 Wyo. 497, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-green-river-v-ennis-wyo-1932.