Jackson v. Jackson

192 P.2d 397, 113 Utah 249, 1948 Utah LEXIS 158
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1948
DocketNo. 7087.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 192 P.2d 397 (Jackson v. Jackson) 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
Jackson v. Jackson, 192 P.2d 397, 113 Utah 249, 1948 Utah LEXIS 158 (Utah 1948).

Opinion

WADE, Justice.

This action was brought by plaintiff Leland Jackson against defendant Violet M. Jackson, his deceased brother’s wife, personally and as administratrix of Thomas K. Jackson her deceased husband, for possession of a tractor, plow and alfalfa crowner. Charles F. McNeely who had purchased the tractor from her was made a defendant but he made no answer and is not involved in this appeal.

The complaint is separated into two causes of action. The first alleges that decedent sold the property in question to plaintiff on February 8, 1944, who received a bill of sale therefor but that possession thereof was in deceased at the time of his death on December 6, 1946, and that about January 20,1947, defendant refused to surrender possession thereof to plaintiff. The second cause of action alleges that on February 8,1944, decedent, Thomas K. Jackson, executed and delivered a bill of sale to plaintiff for the property in question to secure a loan of $2,368.39 which plaintiff loaned and advanced to decedent at that time. That such loan has never been repaid but this defendant sold and delivered the tractor to defendant McNeely on or about December 30, 1946. By her answer defendant denied that decedent ever executed or delivered the bill of sale to plaintiff or that he conveyed or delivered such property to him, and denied that decedent ever borrowed $2,368.39 or any sum of money which was not repaid prior to his death.

*252 There is practically no dispute in the evidence as to what happened between these parties nor as to the surrounding' facts and circumstances. There is a disagreement as to what was the intention, particularly of the deceased, at the time of. these transactions and as to what was the legal effect thereof. The facts are as follows:

For more than 13 years prior to the trial of this case in 1947, decedent and Violet M. Jackson were husband and wife, they had no children, they owned and operated a large tract of dry farm land near Blue Creek in the Northern part of Box Elder County, together with trucks, tractors, a combine harvester and other tools and implements and they lived in a trailer cabin. Shortly after the war broke out in 1942, they went to San Francisco and worked for a while in the ship yards where Violet met and had a love affair with another man. In the spring they returned to their farm but Violet was dissatisfied and returned to San Francisco where she lived with her sister apparently to be near her boy friend. From then on, for the next several years, she spent a large part of her time there, but occasionally she returned and lived for a few weeks with her husband being with him each year during the harvest time. During this time, her husband maintained a checking account in the Bear River State Bank at Tremonton on which she was authorized to draw checks.

This affair of his wife with another man was a hard blow to Thomas. He had a heart ailment of long standing and did not expect to live long. He wrote her long endearing letters importuning her to return to him, and pleaded with her to at least write him oftener. Shortly before Christmas in 1943 he visited with her in California. Before going he arranged for plaintiff and his brother Merlin to deliver some wheat to the Farmer’s Grain Cooperative, at Ogden, Utah, and for plaintiff to deposit the check which he would receive in payment therefor in plaintiff’s name in the Bear River State Bank, and then for plaintiff to draw from that account sufficient money to pay decedent’s current expenses and deposit the same in decedent’s bank account. To pay these *253 accounts, decedent signed six blank checks and left them with plaintiff with the understanding that he should see that they were filled out with the correct amounts and deliver each check to the proper payee in payment of decedent’s debts. It was understood that the balance of the money which plaintiff should receive in payment for decedent’s grain and deposit in plaintiff’s account, over and above the amount which he was directed to deposit to decedent’s account to pay his current bills and sufficient to keep a small balance on deposit in decedent’s account, should remain on deposit in plaintiff’s name and that he would pay the same back to decedent from time to time at decedent’s request. In accordance with these arrangements on January 6, 1944, plaintiff received checks as the purchase price of decedent’s grain in the sum of $2,821.05, this he deposited in his own name in the Bear River State Bank, on January 7, 1944 and on that day he drew a check on that account in favor of decedent for $2,168.39' which he deposited to decedent’s account. He then filled in the six checks which decedent had left with plaintiff in the proper amounts which decedent owed to his creditors and delivered them to decedent’s creditors in accordance with their understanding, leaving only enough money in decedent’s account so that if Mrs. Jackson wished to return home there would be enough money remaining in the bank so that she could draw a check for that purpose.

Soon after January 7th, decedent returned to his home without his wife. Early in February he had a real estate and insurance man, James Brough in Tremonton, draw up four bills of sale covering his personal property which he signed on February 8, 1944. One of these instruments was the one here in question, wherein decedent purported to sell and transfer to plaintiff his tractor, plow and crowner. Another was made to his brother Merlin purporting to transfer to him decedent’s truck, another purported to transfer to C. V. Lilenquist, a farm implement dealer in Tre-monton, his combine harvester, and the fourth purported to transfer to a man in Burley, Idaho, his automobile and *254 the trailer cabin. When he had these instruments drawn he told Mr. Brough that he did not owe any of the grantees therein anything, and that he did not intend to surrender possession or ownership of the property therein purported to be transferred, to the transferees therein named, but that he had the instruments made to create an appearance in case of divorce that he did not own such property. About that time decedent got permission of Lilenquist to make out the bill of sale to him and made the same statement to him of the reasons therefor and the purpose and intention thereof as he had made to Brough. But he did not ever deliver the bill of sale to Lilenquist. When it was time to renew his truck license deceased did deliver to his brother Merlin the bill of sale for the truck and the license was taken out in his brother’s name, until after decedent’s death when Merlin transferred it to Violet. Merlin testified that decedent told him that his purpose in making the bill of sale to him was the same as Brough testified, and that there was no intention to transfer ownership or the right of possession of that truck to him.

After these bills of sale were made and signed, decedent took them to his trailer home and shortly thereafter his wife returned from California and found them there. She gave them to her brother’s wife so that her husband would not get them, but her sister-in-law told her husband, Violet's brother, of what had happened and he returned them to decedent.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P.2d 397, 113 Utah 249, 1948 Utah LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-jackson-utah-1948.