Gustin v. Byam

240 P. 600, 41 Idaho 538, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 132
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 240 P. 600 (Gustin v. Byam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gustin v. Byam, 240 P. 600, 41 Idaho 538, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 132 (Idaho 1925).

Opinions

*540 BUDGE, J.

— At the time appellant commenced her action in the district court she was the wife of respondent R. D. Byam. In the interval, some four years, between the commencement and trial, she had secured a divorce and had remarried. She brought this suit against her former husband, his brother Bert Byam, Erb Hardware Company, a corporation, and the sheriff of the county, to set aside a judgment procured by the hardware company against her husband, and to recover the value of the community personal piuperty levied upon and sold at sheriff’s sale under an execution issued upon said judgment, and for $5,000 damages for alleged malicious taking of such property, and for mental and bodily pain and suffering alleged to have been caused by the levy upon the personal property and its sale depriving her of the necessaries of life. The complaint alleges that all of the respondents conspired to cheat and defraud appellant out of the personal property sold at the sheriff’s sale, all of which property she claims was exempt from execution, and that at such time she was abandoned by her husband and left in destitute circumstances.

Appellant and R. D. Byam married in 1915. In 1916 she and her husband lived upon land of about 550 acres owned by her father, Joe Hermann, under an arrangement by which the husband was to farm the land during that year and give one-half of the crop for the use of the land. On July 28, 1916, R. D. Byam gave to his brother Bert a note for $750 secured by a chattel mortgage covering the whole of the crops, including the landlord’s share. Appellant did *541 not join in the execution or acknowledgment of this mortgage. At the insistent request of Joe Hermann this mortgage was released by the mortgagee on September 26th, by an instrument which recited that the indebtedness secured was fully paid.

Prior to September 30th Bert Byam indorsed to the hardware company a note for $750, signed by R. D. Byam, dated July 28, 1916, payable on demand, contended to be the same note theretofore secured by the chattel mortgage. On September 30th the hardware company brought suit on this note, together with one for $61.60 given to it by R. D. Byam, praying judgment for principal, interest and a total of $100 as reasonable attorney fees for the prosecution of the action. On the same day a summons was served on R. D. Byam, a demurrer filed by his attorney, and a notice served upon such attorney that the demurrer would be called up for hearing October 2d. On the latter date an order was made by the district judge in chambers overruling the demurrer and giving the defendant to October 3d to answer. No answer being filed, the clerk .of the court on October 5th entered the default of R. D. Byam, and immediately thereafter entered a judgment against him for the principal amount of the notes, together with interest, costs and $100 attorney fees, and issued an execution thereon. Under such execution the sheriff of the county on October 6th levied upon Byam’s share of the grain, wheat straw and hay raised and then upon the premises, and on October 13th sold such one-half share to the hardware company for the sum of $1,200.

It further appears that on September 29th R. D. Byam left the farm and did not again return. According to appellant’s testimony, he left her without means of support, and did not make or offer to make a home elsewhere for her and their infant child. On October 20th she made a demand upon the sheriff for the return of the personal property sold by him or for its value, alleging that the whole thereof was exempt from execution, but this demand was not complied with.

*542 Upon the trial, at the close of appellant’s testimony, the court on motion of respondents instructed the jury that the evidence produced by appellant did not warrant a verdict in her favor. Thereupon the jury returned a verdict in favor of the respondents. From judgment entered upon such verdict this appeal is prosecuted. No evidence was offered by appellant as to the amount claimed by her as damages for the alleged malicious taking of her property or for mental and bodily pain and suffering; therefore, outside of errors alleged to have been committed by the trial court in the rejection of evidence, this ease presents only the question of appellant’s right to recover the value of the community personal property sold at sheriff’s sale.

Appellant’s third and fourth assignments of error are that the court erred in not specifying the points stated in respondent’s motion for a directed verdict, and erred also in overruling the appellant’s demurrer, general and special, to respondents’ answer and separate affirmative defenses. No propositions of law are stated, authorities cited, or reasons given or argument made in appellant’s brief as to why the ruling of the trial court was erroneous, therefore they will not be considered.

Appellant first contends that the trial court erred in not admitting in evidence the chattel mortgage offered by appellant, being the one given by R. D. Byam to his brother securing the payment of the $750 note. Appellant offered this instrument in evidence to show a conspiracy of all the respondents to defraud the appellant out of the community personal property exempt from execution, and by its admission sought to prove that such chattel mortgage was the 'basis of the hardware company’s action, contained a copy of the note sued upon in that case, showed that the pretended indebtedness had been paid, and that it covered community personal property claimed to be exempt from execution without the concurrence of the wife in its signature and acknowledgment. Counsel for appellant seems to insist that proof of these matters would establish a concerted undertaking on the part of at least the two Byams *543 and the hardware company to defraud appellant out of the exempt personal property, as there is no evidence or offer of any evidence to show joint action other than the chattel mortgage and its release, and a probable identity of the copy of the promissory note therein contained with the note sued upon by the hardware company. The hardware company’s action was not a foreclosure of a chattel mortgage. That mortgage was released and no lien there» under attempted to be enforced. It might be inferred from the record that the release was executed not because the indebtedness was paid but because the mortgage covered the landlord’s as well as the tenant’s share of the crops. It also appears that Bert Byam was not the only creditor intended to be secured by such mortgage. Appellant’s offer of proof falls short of showing that the hardware company had not given value for the promissory note, or that it did not take it in good faith and before maturity, or that there was on its part any fraud or conspiracy to defraud. The trial court ruled that before the chattel mortgage would be admitted in evidence some testimony must first be produced implicating the company in fraud or conspiracy to defraud the appellant. Considering the record and the time and purpose of the offer of this mortgage, we are unable to say that the trial court committed reversible error in sustaining respondent’s objection to its admission in evidence.

Appellant attacks the judgment entered by the clerk upon the default of B. D. Byam to answer in the original action, and contends that the judgment so entered is void.

C.

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Bluebook (online)
240 P. 600, 41 Idaho 538, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gustin-v-byam-idaho-1925.