Larkin v. Folsom Town and Investment Company

301 P.2d 1091, 61 N.M. 441
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1956
Docket6069
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 301 P.2d 1091 (Larkin v. Folsom Town and Investment Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larkin v. Folsom Town and Investment Company, 301 P.2d 1091, 61 N.M. 441 (N.M. 1956).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The appellant, who was the plaintiff below, complains before this Court of a decree rendered by the district court of Union County, New Mexico, dismissing with prejudice his complaint to quiet title to certain town lots described therein, located in the village of Folsom. While numerous parties were joined as defendants in the original complaint, as the issues finally developed, the controversy eventuated into one between the plaintiff and a single defendant, namely, Magdalena V. Uharriett, a daughter of the defendants, T. M. Vigil and Mary D. Vigil, the latter having failed to appear in the case.

The suit involves the ownership of three town lots in the village of Folsom, Union County, New Mexico. They are Lots 16, 17 and 18 in Block 27 in the village of Folsom in said county. They were owned originally by T. M. Vigil and Mary D. Vigil his wife who had been residents of Folsom, New Mexico. While so residing they became indebted to George Larkin, also a resident of Folsom, in the sum of $277.09, for groceries purchased at his store. In the meantime, they removed to Denver in the state of Colorado.

Following their change of residence, George Larkin brought suit against the Vigils on the open account mentioned, the complaint being docketed as civil cause No. 11,121 in the district court of Union County. The plaintiff caused an attachment to be issued out of said suit and levied on the lots mentioned as the property of the Vigils, to abide whatever judgment should be entered therein. Attempted service on the Vigils outside New Mexico of notice of the attachment suit, begun as aforesaid, was made and the Vigils having defaulted therein, judgment was rendered against them. In due course, a sale of the lots as the property of the Vigils was had to satisfy the judgment rendered therein. The plaintiff Larkin’s bid for the lots for the amount of his judgment, interest and costs was accepted and the property knocked off to him as the purchaser. Special Master’s deed was issued to him in due course and the sale confirmed by the court.

In the meantime and while these attachment proceedings were pending, the Vigils conveyed by warranty deed the lots in question to their daughter, the said Magdalena V. Uharriett, one of the defendants in the quieting title suit. It was following the acquisition by Larkin of whatever title he received under the Special Master’s deed that he began this suit to quiet title to the lots, joining as defendants numerous parties, including the Vigils and their daughter, Magdalena V. Uharriett. The defendants Vigil defaulted again as they had in the attachment suit. Their daughter, however, Magdalena V. Uharriett, having taken title to the lots mentioned through a warranty deed as above set forth, answered in the case and defended actively.

At the trial, when the plaintiff sought to introduce in evidence the Special Master’s deed conveying the lots to him as purchaser at the judicial sale, the defendant, Uharriett, objected to its admission upon the following grounds, set forth in a stipulation upon which the case was tried, to wit:

“(a)' It affirmatively appears from the proceedings which have been placed in evidence by plaintiff from Union County District Court action No. 11,1211 that no valid attachment was ever levied upon the property then owned by Mary D. Vigil and T. M. Vigil, nor was personal service in New Mexico had upon said Vigils or either of them; that the court did not acquire jurisdiction in said action to render a valid judgment.
“(b) It affirmatively appears no order by the court was ever entered authorizing and directing the issuance and service upon said Vigils, or either of them, of a notice of suit stating the nature and amount of plaintiff’s demand and further notifying said Vigils their property had been attached and that unless they appeared at the return day named in such notice of suit judgment would be rendered against them and their property sold to satisfy such judgment.
“(c) No notice of suit was ever issued or served in any manner upon said Vigil defendants or either of them.
“(d) The required notice of suit not having been issued and served in said attachment suit No. 11,121, the court did not acquire jurisdiction therein to render a valid judgment of any character.
“(e) The purported judgment against the Vigil defendants and the land in question having been void, the sale attempted thereunder likewise was void and the deed issued pursuant thereto was absolutely void and hence is not admissible in evidence in the present case as proof of title in plaintiff, nor is it admissible for any other purpose.”

As already indicated, the cause was tried upon a stipulation of the parties, the closing paragraphs 5 and 6 whereof read as follows :

“5. It is further Stipulated and Agreed that unless the special master’s deed to which defendant Magdalena V. Uharriett has objected is valid and admissible in evidence, plaintiff cannot recover herein and thát defendant Magdalena V. Uharriett is entitled to an order dismissing plaintiff’s action with prejudice. On the contrary, it is Stipulated and Agreed that if the special master’s deed which has thus been offered in evidence and whose admissibility has been objected to for the above stated reasons is a valid conveyance of such title as the Vigil defendants had, then and in such event plaintiff is entitled to an order quieting his title against Magdalena V. Uharriett, as well as other parties to this quiet title proceeding not represented herein. In other words, for the purpose of this stipulation it is agreed that Mary D. Vigil and T. M. Vigil were the owners and seized of the record fee title to the property in question at the time plaintiff George Larkin initiated said action No. 11,121, although it is not stipulated that they were the owners of said property at the time the special master’s deed was executed; on the contrary it is stipulated that at a time during the course of said attachment proceedings, namely, on July 17, 1953, all of the right, title and interest of the Vigils was conveyed to Magdalena V. Uharriett, unless prevented by a valid attachment.
“6. It is further Stipulated and Agreed the following instruments, and no others, were served upon the Vigil defendants in the State of Colorado in said cause No. 11,121, to-wit: complaint, affidavit in attachment, writ of attachment.

“Howard B. McClellan,

Clayton, New Mexico, Attorney for Plaintiff.

“Krehbiel & Alsup, By Adolf J. Krehbiel, Clayton, New Mexico, Attorneys for Defendant Magdalena V. Uharriett.”-

Pursuant to the stipulation, the parties attached thereto true, full and correct copies of every pleading, process, writ, return of service, order, note, or other proceeding of any character whatsoever had or action taken in said cause No. 11,-121, the attachment suit on the civil docket of the district court of Union County, New Mexico. It perhaps should be added at this point that the stipulation mentioned was the outgrowth of a pretrial conference as recited in paragraph one (1) thereof, reading:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
301 P.2d 1091, 61 N.M. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larkin-v-folsom-town-and-investment-company-nm-1956.