Kitchen v. Canavan

22 F.2d 116, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3288
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 1927
DocketNo. 7824
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 F.2d 116 (Kitchen v. Canavan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kitchen v. Canavan, 22 F.2d 116, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3288 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by appellee to quiet her claimed title to 159 acres of land in McKinley county, New Mexico. In the first count of her bill she alleged that she is the owner in fee simple and in possession of the land and that the appellants make some claim thereto. She alleged that they had no interest and asked that they be required to set forth the nature of their claims. In the second count she alleged that she is the assignee for value of a judgment recovered April 19, 1919, by Alfred Ruiz and Prank W. Clancy against Stephen Canavan (her husband), in the sum of $2,214.05; that a transcript of said judgment was filed for record with the county clerk of McKinley county on April 24,1919, and became a lien on all of the property of Stephen Canavan in that county; that thereafter on January 19, 1920, the land was conveyed to her and her husband by warranty deed of Christopher and Elizabeth Canavan, and said judgment thereupon became a lien on the undivided one-half interest of her husband in said property; that defendants, or one of them, have acquired the title of her husband to said undivided half-interest subject to said judgment; that she' became assignee of said judgment on April 15, 1921, and she prayed in the second count that her title to an undivided half-interest in the property be quieted and that the judgment lien be foreclosed upon the undivided half previously belonging to her husband and that said lien be adjudged superior to any lien, title or interest held by the defendants or either of them. The answer, barring a few formal admissions, is a denial of any interest of appellee in the land. The court entered a decree in her favor as prayed in the second count.

Appellant Kitchen was the owner of the 159 acres in 1910. On July 15th of that year he conveyed it to Rocky Cliff Coal Company, a corporation. That deed was not filed for record until September 20, 1917. Some time in 1910 the Caledonian Coal Company recovered a judgment against the Rocky Cliff Company and Stephen Canavan, from which they took an appeal to the state Supreme Court. Canavan was president of the defendant company, and at his solicitation appellant Kitchen signed the supersedeas bond. The judgment was affirmed and Kitchen was required to pay it because of his obligation on the bond. He brought an action in August, 1918, against the Rocky Cliff Company and Canavan (who was not served) on their liability over to him and recovered judgment against the company for $7,819.73 in February, 1921. Kitchen, in an effort to secure himself after paying the judgment, deeded the land to appellant Dobson in November, 1914, and that deed was filed for record in the recorder’s office of McKinley county on the 19th of that month. The warranty deed which he had given to the Rocky Cliff Company had not then been filed for record. In 1918 Dobson brought a suit in the state district court for McKinley county against the Rocky Cliff Company, Stephen Canavan, Christopher Canavan and Elizabeth Canavan, to quiet the title which Kitchen had conveyed to him in 1914. Kitchen intervened as a party in that cause and after setting up the facts that have been stated in reference to his becoming surety on the supersedeas bond in the action brought by the Caledonian Coal Company, his payment of that judgment in 1912 and his recovery over against the Rocky Cliff Company, he alleged that his judgment against the latter company remained wholly unpaid; that on July 15, 1910, he conveyed the land to the Rocky Cliff Company; that it kept his deed to it from record until September 20, 1917; that shortly before he paid the judgment in favor of the Caledonian Company Stephen Canavan was adjudged to be in contempt of an order of the district court for McKinley county, in failing to discharge a judgment that his then wife, Kate Canavan, had recovered against him and because thereof ho was committed to jail; that Kitchen visited Canavan while he was in jail and requested and demanded that the Rocky Cliff Company either reconvey the land in question to him or turn the unrecorded deed over to some person to be held in trust until the Rocky Cliff Company or Canavan should reimburse him on account of his having paid the judgment in favor of the Caledonian Company; that Canavan promised on two occasions that [118]*118he -would get the deed, -which he stated was among his papers in El Paso, Texas, and turn it over to appellant Dobson to hold until the Rocky Cliff Company and Canavan had reimbursed Kitchen; - that Canavan did not purge himself of said contempt, but remained in the county jail for the full period of two years; that he failed to deliver the said deed which Kitchen had made, either to Kitchen or to Dobson,,as he had promised to do; that after Canavan was released from. jail he immediately left the state of New Mexico and went to El Paso, Texas, where he has since resided; tha,t Kitchen made repeated demands that Canavan as president of the company return the deed or cause the property. to be reeonveyed to .him as. security and in trust until he should be reimbursed on account of his;payment of said judgment; that Kitchen waited for oyer eight months after Canavan had been out of jail, expecting him to make good -his promise, but he failed to do so and believing that the Rocky Cliff Company and Canavan as its chief officer -were endeavoring to. defraud him and prevent him from collecting the-amount he had paid in discharge of the Caledonian Company’s judgment, and in order to prevent Canavan and the Rocky Cliff, Company from accomplishing that purpose; he executed and delivered a deed conveying the property to E. W. Dob-son on November 19,1914, which was placed of record that day; that the deed to Dobson was for the purpose of holding the title to the property in trust until Kitchen might be reimbursed; that the land in controversy, constituted all of the assets of the Rocky Cliff Company and that it and Canavan were insolvent; that Canavan caused the deed which Kitchen made to the Rocky Cliff Company to be withheld from record as a part of the fraudulent scheme in preventing Kitchen from collecting what was due him and that it was finally taken to the county seat of McKinley county and. placed of record by appellee Bertha Canavan, who was then the wife of Stephen Canavan; that Stephen Canavan was the president of the Rocky Cliff Gompany and his wife, appellee here, was its secretary; that when he paid the judgment in favor of the Caledonian Company it assigned .said judgment to him; that he brought his action against the Rocky Cliff Company and Canavan in August, 1918, to recover what -he had paid and on August 4, 1919, while that, action was pending • the Rocky Cliff Company deeded the land, to Christopher. Canavan and Elizabeth, his wife, the former being the brother of Stephen, for the purpose of preventing Kitchen in the collection of his judgment, said deed being signed on behalf of the Rocky Cliff Company by Stephen Canavan as president and Bertha Canavan as secretary, that said deed recited a consideration of $2,500, but in fact neither Christopher nor Elizabeth Canavan paid anything for said conveyance and received the-same with full knowledge of the facts that have been stated, and of the pend-ency of the suit brought by Kitchen to-recover ag-ainst the Rocky Cliff Company and' Stephen Canavan, and with full knowledge of the pendency of the suit brought by EW. Dobson against said Rocky Cliff Company, Stephen Canavan, Christopher Canavan. and Elizabeth Canavan, and that neither Christopher nor Elizabeth Canavan were purchasers for a valuable consideration but ■ that the conveyance made to them was for the express purpose of defrauding and preventing Kitchen from reaching said property in satisfaction of his claim.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F.2d 116, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitchen-v-canavan-ca8-1927.