Fullmer v. Blood

546 P.2d 606, 1976 Utah LEXIS 756
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1976
Docket14082
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 546 P.2d 606 (Fullmer v. Blood) 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
Fullmer v. Blood, 546 P.2d 606, 1976 Utah LEXIS 756 (Utah 1976).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice:

Plaintiffs, Don K. ' Fullmer, his wife Carma M. Fullmer, and his brother Dean Fullmer (the real party in interest), brought this action to quiet title to certain real property near Hurricane, Utah, and to declare forfeiture of certain sums that had been paid under a uniform real estate contract by defendant Ethel W. Blood (and her predecessors). Upon trial to the court, findings were made and judgment entered that there had been such forfeiture and that the plaintiff Dean Fullmer was the owner of the property. Defendant appeals challenging the findings and judgment.

In February of 1969 plaintiff Don K. Fullmer and Keith W. Naylor, his then partner in a business known as Cal-Horizon Products and Imperial Products entered into a Uniform Real Estate Contract to purchase the lands in question from Winford and Mona Spendlove. The price was $47,817, payable $6,000 down, $6,000 on May 16, 1969, and in ten equal annual installments until the principal and interest at six per cent on deferred balance had been paid. Despite some disputed evidence and contentions to the contrary, the trial court found that the property was purchased with partnership funds and was intended to be partnership property. On August 29, 1970, Keith Naylor entered into a contract with his partner, Don Fullmer, to purchase the latter’s interest in the partnership. A month later, September 22, 1970, Mr. Naylor assigned his interest in the real property in question to his mother-in-law, Ethel W. Blood. The stated consideration was that Mrs. Blood canceled a substantial debt ($2,500 or more) Mr. Nay-lor owed her. She made the annual payment for- 1970, but she neither made nor tendered any fuither payments until after receiving the notice to pay or suffer forfeiture as related below.

By December 1971, Mr. Naylor was behind in his payments to Don Fullmer for the purchase of the partnership. On December 26, 1971, Mr. Don Fullmer obtained a judgment in California against Mr. Nay-lor. On April 28, 1972, Don Fullmer filed the California judgment in the District Court of Washington County and obtained a judgment thereon. He proceeded to have an execution issued and levied upon the subject property; then bid in and purchased Mr. Naylor’s interest in it. Shortly thereafter, the defendant Ethel Blood gave plaintiffs notice of the claimed prior assignment from her son-in-law Keith Nay-lor and of her interest in the property.

The next pertinent occurrence is that on August 12, 1973, Don Fullmer and his wife assigned all their interest in the subject property to Don’s brother, plaintiff Dean Fullmer; and on March 9, 1974, Dean Fullmer also acquired by assignment the interest of the original sellers, the Spend-loves. The status of the purchase contract on the property at that time was that the annual payments for 1971, 1972 and 1973 had not been made. On March 26, 1974, Dean Fullmer notified the defendant by certified mail that, if the 1973 payment was not made within five days, all payments previously made would be forfeited and their interest in the property terminated, as provided by the terms of the contract. She recieved this notice on April 1, 1974. When the defendant had not replied by April 12, 1974, Dean Fullmer gave her notice that her interest was terminated, and all sums paid had been forfeited. On June 5, 1974, the defendant tendered the 1973 payment, but that tender was refused; and this lawsuit was filed to resolve the *608 dispute between the parties as to their asserted claims in the property and rights under the contract.

The heart of this controversy is: Defendant contends that the original purchase of the property by Don K. Fullmer and Keith W. Naylor was for them as individuals; that, therefore, their interest therein became as tenants in common; that when Mr. Naylor assigned his interest in the property to defendant Ethel Blood, she likewise became a co-purchaser and tenant in common with Don Fullmer; and that when the latter assigned his interest to his brother Dean Fullmer, the latter then became her tenant in common. Upon this foundation she argues that, because of the duty one co-tenant has to protect and not to impair the interest of his co-tenant (tenant in common), Dean Fullmer could not take an adverse position as seller and de-. mand from her the alternative of payment or forfeiture. The soundness of the defendant’s argument requires an analysis of the facts upon which it is predicated.

One issue in controversy, though not dispositive of this case, upon which we comment preliminarily, is the plaintiff’s contention that the assignment from Keith Naylor to his mother-in-law, defendant Ethel Blood, was but an illusory inter-family arrangement; that neither the claimed debt nor its forgiveness was bona fide, so there was thus no consideration and the assignment was fraudulent and void. In support of the trial court’s rejection of that contention, two observations are pertinent: First, inadequacy of consideration will not generally be deemed to vitiate an assignment. 1 Second, upon evidence differing both as to import and inferences to be drawn therefrom, the trial court was not convinced that the assignment was fraudulent.

Accepting the fact that the assignment was valid, foundational to the defendant’s position is her attack upon the court’s finding that the property was purchased for the partnership. In support of her charge that this finding was in error she points out these propositions: that all of the essential documents, including the original contract, and the assignments from Keith Naylor to Ethel Blood, and from Don and Carma Fullmer to Dean Fullmer, refer to the buyers as Don Full-mer and Keith Naylor as individuals, and not as a partnership; that, similarly, throughout the trial, the property was referred to as that of Don Fullmer and Keith Naylor; that the parties submitted memorandums concerning the issue of co-tenancy; and she argues that that issue could only arise if the defendant had a half interest and the plaintiff had the other half interest.

As to the latter contentions: when a fact is in issue, unless the dispute is resolved by some manner of affirmative agreement or acknowledgment as to what the fact is, it should not be found against a party merely because he talks about it or deals with it upon an assumption in order to meet adverse contentions. That is all that appears to have happened here.

In regard to the more substantial proposition : that the contract was in the name of Don Fullmer and Keitlj Naylor, as individuals without mentioning the partnership, this is to be said: the stipulation of facts entered into by the parties stated that the property was purchased with partnership funds. Our statute provides that when property is purchased with partnership funds it becomes the property of the partnership, unless a contrary intention is shown. 2 This is true regardless of the form of the transaction, including where the purchase is made in the name of one or more of the partners as individuals without reference to the partnership. 3 If the defendant had wanted to be relieved from *609 the stipulation that the property was bought with partnership funds, that should have been done by a motion to the trial court, by her then counsel. Having failed to do so, the record stands as made, and this court cannot grant that relief on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
546 P.2d 606, 1976 Utah LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fullmer-v-blood-utah-1976.