Johns v. Wilson

53 P. 583, 6 Ariz. 125, 1898 Ariz. LEXIS 118
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1898
DocketCivil No. 621
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 P. 583 (Johns v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johns v. Wilson, 53 P. 583, 6 Ariz. 125, 1898 Ariz. LEXIS 118 (Ark. 1898).

Opinion

DOAN, J.

On the twenty-fourth day of April, 1893, one John S. Armstrong executed a mortgage on certain real es[128]*128tate to James Wilson, to secure the payment of two notes therein described, each for $3,250 and interest. Afterwards, on the eighteenth day of December, 1893, the said Armstrong sold the premises thus mortgaged to one R. E. Daggs, and conveyed the same by a deed of conveyance, in which the said defendant R. E. Daggs agreed and bound himself, his heirs, executors, and assigns, to pay or cause to be paid to the said Wilson the aforesaid notes and mortgage, under which sale and transfer the said R. E. Daggs entered into the possession of the premises by one W. A. Daggs as his tenant. On the twenty-sixth day of April, 1894, default having been made in the payment of the notes thus secured by the mortgage referred to, the said Wilson commenced an action in the district court of Maricopa County against the said Armstrong and R. E. Daggs for the recovery of the amount due upon the notes and for the foreclosure of the mortgage upon the premises aforesaid, and on the same date filed a lis pendens in the office of the recorder of said county. At this time the defendant W. A. Daggs was in possession of the premises, supposedly as the tenant of R. E. Daggs, in whom, so far as disclosed by the record, the title then appeared to be. After personal service upon defendants R. E. Daggs and J. S. Armstrong, and default made and entered therein, said action proceeded to judgment in the said district court on the eighth day of May, 1894, against defendants J. S. Armstrong and R. E. Daggs for the full amount due, with costs, and for the foreclosure of the mortgage. Thereafter, on the sixth day of June, 1894, the property was sold by the sheriff of Maricopa County under execution and order of sale issued upon the said judgment, and was bid in by the plaintiff for the full amount of his judgment. Thereafter, and on the twelfth day of December, 1894, the sheriff of said county, there having been no redemption, executed a deed conveying.or purporting to convey, the premises aforesaid to the plaintiff by virtue of said foreclosure sale; and thereafter, upon a demand for pos-' session of the premises by the purchaser under said sheriff’s deed, the aforesaid W. A. Daggs was found in possession, and refused to surrender the same, and claimed to hold possession thereof as the tenant of one A. L. Johns, and has from that time to the present continued to hold and keep said premises and property as such tenant of A. L. Johns, to the total ex-[129]*129elusion of the plaintiff, Wilson. The record further discloses that on the twenty-eighth day of April, 1894, after the summons had been served upon the said R. B. Daggs and the lis pendens had been filed in the action aforesaid, a deed had been placed on record transferring the property in question from R. E. Daggs to one A. L. Johns, of Chicago, and on the demand for possession as aforesaid it was claimed by the defendant W. A. Daggs that on the first day of April, 1894, he ceased to be the tenant' of R. E. Daggs, and thereupon became the tenant of the said A. L. Johns, and took possession of said property for said Johns at that time, and held possession from that time forward as the tenant of the said A. L. Johns, and not as the tenant of the said R. E. Daggs. Thereafter, on the twenty-second day of June, 1895, the plaintiff, J ames Wilson, filed his complaint in the said court in the nature of a bill in equity, setting up the facts aforesaid and alleging that at the time he commenced the action for the foreclosure of the mortgage the said J. S. Armstrong and R. E. Daggs were the only persons known to the plaintiff to be liable upon said notes or to have any interest whatever in said mortgaged property, and alleging that the said defendants R. E. Daggs and A. J. Daggs, conspiring together to hinder and obstruct the plaintiff in the collection of his said mortgage debt, did procure the said deed of conveyance of said property from the said R. E. Daggs to the said A. L. Johns for the sole purpose of hindering, delaying, and obstructing him in the collection of the said mortgage debt; that said pretended deed of conveyance, though dated on the seventeenth day of March, 1894, was withheld from the record until the twenty-eighth day of April, 1894, after the summons in said action upon the defendants Armstrong and R. E. Daggs had been served, after the said Us pendens had been filed for such purpose of delaying and defrauding the said plaintiff; that in said deed to A. L. Johns aforesaid said A. L. Johns expressly agreed and bound himself to pay this plaintiff’s mortgage debt as aforesaid; that the plaintiff was not advised by the said W. A. Daggs of his surrender of the premises as the tenant of R. E. Daggs, or of the taking possession of the said premises by the said W. A. Daggs as the tenant of the said A. L. Johns, but that such abandonment and release of said property, or such asserting and taking pos[130]*130session thereof, if done at all, was done secretly, without any notice whatever to the plaintiff herein, with intent to deceive this plaintiff into the belief that the said R. E. Daggs was the owner of the said premises, and possessed thereof by the said ,W. A. Daggs as his tenant; and that the plaintiff, on account of said secret transfer of possession, if any was made, was so deceived, as above alleged the defendant intended him to be, and that said action therefore proceeded to judgment without his joining or making the said A. L. Johns and W. A. Daggs defendants therein; that the plaintiff had no knowledge or information whatsoever when he commenced his said action and filed his said notice of lis pendens that any other person than the said R. E. Daggs and J. S. Armstrong had any claim whatsoever to said premises. Plaintiff further set up the refusal of the said W. A. Daggs to surrender the said property under the sheriff’s deed aforesaid, and his claims made on said property as the tenant of said A. L. Johns, the exclusion of the plaintiff therefrom, and alleged damages thereby in the sum of one thousand dollars, and alleged that the real holding of said A¥. A. Daggs was in trust for the benefit of the said R. E. Daggs by and through the acts, bargains, and contrivances of the said R. E. Daggs and the said' A. J. Daggs, who was the agent and attorney of the said A. L. Johns; that the property consists of farming lands, buildings, and improvements, and that defendants have neglected and refused to pay the taxes or keep up repairs on the said property, and have otherwise permitted waste thereon, and threatened so to do; that said property was inadequate security for debt of plaintiff against the same; that the defendants who resided in this territory, and were liable to pay such mortgage debt, were insolvent, and that all others who were liable to pay the same were beyond the jurisdiction of this court; that the plaintiff had no other security or means of collecting his said debt than through his lien upon said property, and was in danger, therefore, of losing the same, or the larger part thereof. A¥herefore plaintiff prayed that he might have judgment against said R. E. Daggs and A. L. Johns, who, as aforesaid, have assumed and agreed to pay such mortgage debt, for the sum of sixty-five hundred dollars, with interest thereon from the date of said note, with attorney’s fees and costs of suit, and for the sum of one thousand [131]

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

Related

Brightwell v. United States
805 F. Supp. 1464 (S.D. Indiana, 1992)
Deming National Bank v. Walraven
651 P.2d 1203 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1982)
Tuttle v. Jockmus
149 A. 785 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1930)
Hagan v. Cowan
278 P. 68 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1929)
Metcalf v. Phoenix Title & Trust Co.
261 P. 633 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1927)
Williams v. Williams
256 P. 356 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1927)
Lewis v. Hornback
237 P. 952 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1925)
Sherman v. Goodwin
95 P. 121 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1908)
Kastner v. Fashion Livery Co.
85 P. 120 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1906)
Daggs v. Wilson
59 P. 150 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 P. 583, 6 Ariz. 125, 1898 Ariz. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johns-v-wilson-ariz-1898.