LaFitte v. Salisbury

126 P. 1104, 22 Colo. App. 641, 1912 Colo. App. LEXIS 84
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 1912
DocketNo. 3844
StatusPublished

This text of 126 P. 1104 (LaFitte v. Salisbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaFitte v. Salisbury, 126 P. 1104, 22 Colo. App. 641, 1912 Colo. App. LEXIS 84 (Colo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Walling, J.

The principal action was brought in the district court by defendant in error, as plaintiff, against John A. Cross'and the plaintiff in error, as defendants. The complaint contained the following allegations of facts: On January 8th, 1894, George Salisbury recovered a judgment against the defendant LaFitte, in the district court of Pueblo county, for $3,130 and costs of suit, and on August 28th, 1903, execution issued on that judgment to- defendant Cross, then sheriff of Larimer county. Cross, as sheriff, levied the writ upon the real estate described in the complaint, as the property of the defendant LaFitte, and, after due advertisement, sold the property at execution sale to said George Salisbury, who afterwards assigned the certificates of purchase to the plaintiff Susan E. Salisbury; and, after the statutory time for redeeming the property from the sale had elapsed, Cross, as sheriff, executed to said Susan what purported to be sheriff’s deeds for the property sold, which were set out in full in the complaint. It was alleged that certain clerical errors occurring in the draft of these sheriff’s deeds ought to [643]*643be corrected and the deeds reformed in certain particulars mentioned, so as to furnish perfect evidence of title in the plaintiff thereunder. It was also alleged that plaintiff was in possession of the premises sold at the execution sale described in the sheriff’s deeds, and claimed title in fee to the premises by virtue of those deeds; that the defendant LaFitte claimed an interest therein adverse to the plaintiff, which claim of said defendant was without any right whatever, and that the latter had no estate, right, title or interest in any of the land described in the sheriff’s deeds. The complaint prayed that the sheriff’s deeds be reformed, that the defendant Cross, who was the sheriff of Larimer county when the deeds were executed, be required to execute corrected deeds to the plaintiff; and that any and every adverse claim of the'defendant La Fitte to the property should be determined in the action,, and the title of the plaintiff be quieted as against all such adverse claims. The defendant Cross made default.

The answer of the defendant LaFitte denied the allegations of the complaint, except as expressly admitted. The answer admitted that a judgment was rendered against her on January 8th, 1894, for $3,130 and costs, and alleged that it was an attempt to revive a former judgment in favor of Henry Rups against the answering defendant. That allegation was followed by averments evidently intended to show fraud in procuring the Salisbury judgment, which were repeated in the “counter-claim” hereafter noticed. It was further alleged that the judgment was taken against her in the revival proceedings by default, because she was destitute of means to engage ..counsel to defend her, and that the pro[644]*644ceedings were “void on their face, in that the summons therein purported to seek a recovery by Salisbury against this defendant, while the petition purported to seek a revival of the judgment.” The first defense of the answer contained some other statements, which are utterly immaterial, and require no attention.

For a further and separate answer and counterclaim, the defendant LaFitte alleged that on the 8th day of January, 1894, George Salisbury commenced a proceeding to revive a judgment of Henry Rups against her, in the district court of Pueblo county, as pretended assignee thereof, “and obtained judgment therein in his own name for $3,130 and costs against this defendant”; that Salisbury fraudulently pretended to the court that he was the assignee of the original judgment, and entitled to revive the same in his own name, but that in fact the Rups judgment was never assigned to Salisbury, and he had no authority to revive that judgment, either in his own name or in the name of Rups; and that the pretended assignment of the original judgment from Rups to Salisbury was a forgery. It was further stated that the defendant did not learn that Rups had never assigned his judgment to Salisbury, until the 9th day of September, 1903.

The further answer and counter-claim also set forth, in substance, that the real estate of the defendant described in the complaint was bid in at the execution sale theréof mentioned in the complaint, by George Salisbury, who caused the certificates of purchase to be made in the name of the plaintiff below, his wife, without consideration; that at the time of such sheriff’s sale, the property was [645]*645worth $20,000; and that Salisbury’s attorney, who represented him at the sale, interfered with the bidders thereat, by making statements reflecting on the defendant’s title, which were unfounded in fact, thereby inducing those who had offered more' than was bid by Salisbury to withdraw from the bidding, and warned persons from bidding at the sale; and that, as the result of his language and conduct, Salisbury was enabled to bid in the entire property for the inadequate sum of $5,500. The answer prayed that the complaint be dismissed, and that the levy upon and sale of defendant’s property be set aside, etc.

The cause was tried before the court, who gave judgment for the plaintiff, wherein it was decreed: (1) That plaintiff was the owner in fee simple of the premises described in the complaint, and her title thereto was forever quieted against all claims, demands or pretensions of the defendant Marie La Fitte; (2) that the defendant Cross execute to the plaintiff a good and sufficient sheriff’s deed to the premises, in accordance with the certificates of purchase for the same, or, if he failed to do so, the acting sheriff of Larimer county should execute and deliver such deed; (3) that the plaintiff recover her costs of the defendant Marie LaFitte.

At the trial the plaintiff introduced a large amount of documentary evidence, which it is not deemed necessary to review for the purposes of this decision. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, defendant called George Salisbury to the witness stand, for cross-examination as an interested party. Thereupon plaintiff objected to the introduction of evi[646]*646deuce by defendant, on the ground of tbe insufficiency of tbe answer to state a defense. This objection was sustained by tbe court; and error is assigned here upon tbe exception to that ruling. The purposes of the proposed examination of the witness Salisbury cannot be determined from the record. But he was at least an adversary witness, if not in positive interest, and the objection was broadly to the introduction of evidence under the answer. As stated in the brief for defendant in error, it was in the nature of a demurrer ore terms.

So far as the answer undertook to raise any issue with respect to the regularity of the judgment and proceedings of the district court of Pueblo county, or the execution under which the sale was made, it was plainly insufficient as a defense, and to that extent the ruling of the trial court was right. The judgment was not subject to impeachment in the present case, unless it appeared from the record of the judgment that it was wholly void; in which case, anything done or attempted under it or by its authority, by way of execution, or otherwise, would have been likewise null. The first defense of the answer under consideration admitted the judgment alleged in the complaint, and that admission was repeated by direct averment in the second answer or counterclaim. It cannot be successfully claimed that those positive admissions were nullified or withdrawn by other averments, because there was no allegation tending to show want of jurisdiction to render the judgment.

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Related

Fallon v. Worthington
13 Colo. 559 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1889)
Conway v. John
14 Colo. 30 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1890)
La Fitte v. Salisbury
43 Colo. 248 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 1104, 22 Colo. App. 641, 1912 Colo. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lafitte-v-salisbury-coloctapp-1912.