Healy v. Wostenberg

38 P.2d 325, 47 Wyo. 375, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 29
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1934
Docket1824
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 38 P.2d 325 (Healy v. Wostenberg) 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
Healy v. Wostenberg, 38 P.2d 325, 47 Wyo. 375, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 29 (Wyo. 1934).

Opinion

*379 Riner, Justice.

In this case, a judgment of the District Court of Washakie County directing the issuance of a writ of restitution of the possession of certain real property located in said county is brought here by direct appeal. The judgment was entered on the application of Effie Isadora Wostenberg, as administratrix of the estate of Henry August Wostenberg, deceased, subsequently generally referred to herein as the “petitioner” or as the “administratrix,” and ran against the appellant Alex Healy and “any and all persons holding and in possession under him.” Healy may conveniently be mentioned at times in the course of this opinion as the “plaintiff.” The facts shown by the record before us appear to be these:

On December 21, 1920, Henry Wostenberg and Isa-dora Wostenberg, husband and wife, executed and delivered to one B. T. Joslin their promissory note for $3,780, payable in seven installments of $540 each, the last payment being due December 25, 1927. The makers of the note agreed therein that, in case the payment of any installment was defaulted when due, all the unpaid balance should at the holder’s election become at once due and payable without notice. This note was secured by a mortgage of even date therewith, given by the Wostenb'ergs to Joslin, upon some 394.38 acres of land in Washakie County, Wyoming, said mortgage containing a clause relinquishing all rights under and by virtue of the homestead exemption laws of this state, the acknowledgment thereof by the mortgagors also stating that each of them “expressly waived and released” all their rights under said exemption laws. This note and mortgage were, on December 21, 1921, assigned to Alex Healy by Joslin. The mortgagors fail *380 ing to meet one of the payments required by the note aforesaid, Healy instituted foreclosure proceedings by advertisement under the power of sale clause contained in the mortgage, with the result that, on September 25, 1922, he received a sheriff’s deed to the property above mentioned. It appears there was a prior mortgage on the land for $18,000, and the deed was made subject to it.

Meanwhile and on November 29, 1921, the husband Henry August Wostenberg died, and on December 31 of that year, by court, commissioner’s order subsequently confirmed by the District Court of Washakie County, his widow Effie Isadora Wostenberg was appointed administratrix of his estate; she duly qualified as such, and letters of administration were issued to her March 2, 1922. An inventory was filed in said estate in which the appraisers set forth that they valued a portion of the property aforesaid, to-wit, 160 acres more or less, describing it by section, subdivision, township, and range, together with its improvements, at the sum of $12,000, and stated additionally that:

“We are informed that Effie Isadore Wostenberg claims homestead exemption rights in this real estate, and we find that the value thereof exceeds $2500.00, and that same cannot be divided without material injury in value to the separate parcels thereof.”

The administratrix having declined to surrender possession of the premises covered by the mortgage and subsequent deed aforesaid, in consequence Healy, on December 16, 1922, brought action in the District Court of Washakie County to obtain it. His petition was in the usual form prescribed in actions to recover realty, and named “Effie Isadora Wostenberg, individually, and Effie Isador Wostenberg, Administratrix of the Estate of Henry August Wostenberg, Deceased, and Henry Wostenberg,” as defendants therein. Henry Wostenberg, as appears by his answer in the case, *381 seems to have leased the premises thus in litigation from the administratrix on March 8,1922, for a period of one year, and, hence, was made a party to the action.

The administratrix, in her answer, after denying all of the allegations of the petition, except as “specifically admitted,” admitted its averment as to her official character relative to said estate, and then set forth as affirmative matter, in substance, that her husband owned the lands in question prior to his death, and she and he with their minor children lived upon the land described in plaintiff’s petition for many years, as their home; that her husband died November 29, 1921; that she is in possession of said lands as administratrix; that since her husband’s death, she and the children have been living upon said land; and that the defendant, the widow of Henry August Wostenberg, “has and claims homestead and homestead exemption rights therein for the benefit of herself and her minor children.” The answer concluded by referring to the plaintiff’s title, as claimed under mortgage foreclosure and sheriff’s deed thereunder, and affirmatively charged:

“That if such foreclosure, sale and deed were in fact made, the same were and are entirely fraudulent, oppressive, unfair, illegal, void, voidable and of no effect and should be set aside and held for naught.”

The answer of Effie Isadora Wostenberg, individually, was in substance similar in character. The new matter alleged in the several answers was put in issue by the plaintiff’s replies.

The case was tried before a jury, and its verdict, directed by the court, was returned on March 29, 1923, awarding possession of the property described in plaintiff’s petition, to him. The same date, judgment was entered upon this verdict. April 3, 1923, Effie Isa-dora Wostenberg, individually and as administratrix, filed her motion for a new trial on the grounds: 1. That the verdict, decision, and judgment rendered in *382 the action were not sustained by sufficient evidence and were contrary to law, and 2. That errors of law occurred at the trial, to which exception was duly taken by the “above named defendant.”

Possession of the premises was yielded by the admin-istratrix to plaintiff or his agent, under the judgment aforesaid, without the issuance of any writ pursuant to it, about a week after its rendition. He took over the property involved and, as he says in his testimony, farmed it for one year himself, and then rented it for two or three years. When Healy took possession, he found the lands badly seeped, parts of it unfit for cultivation, and he put in about a $10,000 expenditure for drainage of the land in an endeavor to keep it from bogging. It seems this drainage benefited also some other lands owned by him. He also paid delinquent taxes on the premises, and continued to pay the taxes thereon until the property was sold.

On July 18, 1927, he sold a portion of the land to one Frank Kikuchi by a written. contract for a warranty deed, and at a named consideration of $14,000, payment to be made by “the customary crop share each year that is customarily paid by a tenant to a land owner ,in the vicinity of Worland, Wyoming,” and full payment being required to be made on or before ten years from January 1, 1928. Kikuchi entered into possession March 1 of that year, and has since remained so, making improvements on the land to the extent of some $1,500. The contract shows endorsed credits thereon paid by the vendee beginning December 8, 1928, to and including November 15, 1930, totaling $4,151.76.

On July 18, 1927, Healy also sold a part of the remaining portion of the land to one J. M.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Grose v. Sauvageau
942 P.2d 398 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1997)
Van Patten v. Van Patten
784 P.2d 218 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1989)
Arndt v. Sheridan Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses, Inc.
429 P.2d 326 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1967)
Hursh v. Weliever
265 P.2d 372 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1954)
Redwood Hotel, Inc. v. Korbien
80 A.2d 28 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 P.2d 325, 47 Wyo. 375, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healy-v-wostenberg-wyo-1934.