Fisher v. Bylund

93 P.2d 737, 97 Utah 463, 1939 Utah LEXIS 83
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1939
DocketNo. 6034.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 P.2d 737 (Fisher v. Bylund) 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
Fisher v. Bylund, 93 P.2d 737, 97 Utah 463, 1939 Utah LEXIS 83 (Utah 1939).

Opinions

PRATT, Justice.

Thomas L. Fisher owned a bungalow in Bountiful, Utah. He conveyed it to one Apostolis, who in turn conveyed certain property to one Rasmussen, who in turn conveyed certain property in Westminster Heights, Salt Lake County, Utah, to Eric 0. Bylund.

Mr. Bylund owned a note and second mortgage executed by his son Leslie, one of the defendants herein, upon property called a dry farm, which the son had purchased from the father. Mr. Fisher would not accept this note and mortgage as his consideration for the transfer of the bungalow. At the request of his father, Leslie Bylund and his wife executed and delivered direct to Mr. Fisher, a new note and a new second mortgage upon the dry farm. This was substituted for the instruments Fisher refused to accept. The father signed the new instruments, though he did not, at the time, have title to the dry farm, nor did he make an acknowledgment of his signature to the second mortgage.

*465 Fisher foreclosed upon the dry farm and bid it in. There was a deficiency. As summons was served upon Leslie By-lund and his wife by publication only, the clerk of the court credited upon the note the amount of Fisher’s bid and returned the note to the latter.

The present suit by Fisher against the son and his wife is based upon the balance due on the note. The record and the pleadings are involved and confused. It appears that subsequent to the above recited transactions, Eric 0. Bylund conveyed the Westminster Heights property to his son, and the latter conveyed his interest in the dry farm to his father. When plaintiff instituted this suit, he attached the Westminster Heights property. His first complaint was for the balance due on the note only. He amended (?) to include fraud and deceit charged against the Bylunds, and sought a decree declaring them to be trustees for him of said Westminster Heights property on the theory that the consideration with which he had parted — his bungalow — was in effect traceable into the Westminster property.

The Bylunds filed a petition for debtor’s relief in the Federal Court, which was held in abeyance to enable the parties to settle their rights in the State Court. Plaintiff, at the beginning of the trial in the state court, again amended his pleadings setting out that the Bylunds, in the Federal Court, claimed a homestead exemption, and alleging that they had no such right. He amended his prayer to include a request that it be adjudicated that they could not declare a homestead as against the indebtedness on this note as it was part of the purchase price of the bungalow with which Fisher had parted.

The only pleadings filed by the defendants consist of a general denial, coupled with some admissions, of the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint as first amended. After the second amendment, the defendants made no further answer; but for some reason which does not appear in the record, the plaintiff filed an unverified reply to an amended answer. In none of their pleadings before this court, do defendants *466 set up a claim to a homestead exemption. Thus the issue (?) upon this point is one found solely within the plaintiff’s pleadings.

The lower court found in favor of the plaintiff upon the note and against him upon the fraud and the homestead right. Plaintiff appealed this case.

Defendants have moved to dismiss the appeal. The record as to this shows the following: Judgment was entered December 21,1937. On February 19,1938, an appeal bond was filed. Notice of appeal was served March 5, 1938, and filed March 10,1938. On March 10, defendants filed an exception to the sureties and to the form and sufficiency of said appeal bond, requiring that the sureties justify. This matter was heard March 15. On the same day a new bond was filed by plaintiff. This filing was late so far as the service of notice of appeal is concerned. Section 104-41-6, R. S. U. 1933. According to the minute entry of March 15, the bond filed that day was approved and the plaintiff was permitted to withdraw the bond filed February 19, 1938. The clerk’s certificate to the transcript recites that the bond on appeal was filed March 15, 1938, and was approved by the court that day. The record is silent as to what was covered by the objection to the “form and sufficiency” of the February bond. Nothing is disclosed as to why the later bond was permitted and the withdrawal of the former authorized. For all we know, this question of premature filing may have been passed upon.

The authorities are divided upon the question of the sufficiency of a premature filing of a bond upon appeal. 4 C. J. S., Appeal and Error, p. 1028, § 565 subd. c. A difference in statutes accounts for some of the decisions. It is our opinion that under our statutes a filing before service of notice of appeal, is a nullity. Under our Code, no notice of filing an undertaking is required, thus, unless a definite time is fixed for that filing, respondent may lose his right to except to the sureties as permitted by Section 104-41-13, R. S. U. 1933. This section gives him ten *467 days after filing the undertaking to take his exceptions. This is a substantial right. Hoyt v. Stark, 134 Cal. 178, 66 P. 223, 86 Am. St. Rep. 246. If we permit a filing of the undertaking before service of notice of appeal, then appellant may defeat respondent’s right to except by filing more than ten days prior to service of notice of appeal. Respondent would be lulled into a feeling of safety by reason of a lack of knowledge that an appeal was contemplated. The service of the notice of appeal, however, warns respondent that he must check the record for the filing of the undertaking within five days thereafter. See the discussion in American Surety Co. v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County, 218 Cal. 377, 23 P. 2d 508; Isaak v. Journey, 52 Idaho 274, 13 P. 2d 247; People’s Savings & Trust Co. of Pittsburgh v. Rayl, 45 Idaho 776, 265 P. 703; Healy v. Taylor, 37 Idaho 749, 218 P. 190. An adverse party is not required to watch the record for more than five days to see whether an appeal bond is filed. See Hoyt v. Stark, supra, cited in Provo Reservoir Co. v. Tanner, 68 Utah 21, 249 P. 118.

In the present case, the February bond was a nullity. The hearing upon it amounted to nothing. But the parties being present by their counsel at the hearing, must certainly have known what trend those proceedings were taking— toward an approval and filing of a new bond. We do not believe they had the right to sit quietly before that court and tacitly consent to an approval of that bond and its filing out of time, then raise the question here by the present motion.

The filing of the undertaking is not jurisdictional. Obradovich v . Walker Bros. Bankers, 80 Utah 587, 16 P. 2d 212; Hoagland v. Hoagland, 18 Utah 304, 54 P. 978. If defendants failed to make this motion for a dismissal, this court could proceed.

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Bluebook (online)
93 P.2d 737, 97 Utah 463, 1939 Utah LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-bylund-utah-1939.