Lee v. New York Life Insurance

145 P.2d 843, 61 Ariz. 177, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 104
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1944
DocketCivil No. 4542.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 843 (Lee v. New York Life Insurance) 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
Lee v. New York Life Insurance, 145 P.2d 843, 61 Ariz. 177, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 104 (Ark. 1944).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

This is an action to quiet title, on appeal from the Superior Court of Maricopa County, Arizona, before the Honorable Howard C. Speakman, Judge.

*178 The complaint alleges that plaintiff is the owner in fee simple and entitled to the possession of property in said county and state,'described as:

“All that portion'of the Northwest Quarter of Section 10, Township 2 North, Range 3 East, of the Gila & Salt River Base & Meridian, lying South and West of the Arizona Canal, except the west 1584. feet thereof, and also excepting that parcel of said Northwest quarter described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at a point 264 feet east from the southwest comer of the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter.of said Section 10, Township 2 North, Range 3 East, of the Gila & Salt River Base & Meridian, on the quarter section line; running thence east 76 feet, thence north 300 feet; thence west 76 feet; and thence south 300 feet to the place of beginning, together with all improvements thereon and all water rights appurtenant thereto.”

All defendants except John C. Lee and Bess Mc-Ginnis Lee, his wife, and John C. Lee, Trustee, and Pope IJixon and Belle W. Hixon, his wife, defaulted, and those defendants answering denied the ownership in the plaintiff and also denied that it was entitled to the possession of the premises. The answer also’alleged that since December,. 1919; the Hixons

“ . . . entered into adverse possession of the whole of said premises described in' plaintiff’s complaint and have . since, together with their lessees and grantee, remained in peaceable and adverse possession, resided upon, collected rent therefrom, paid taxes and water assessments, improved, used, cultivated and enjoyed the whole of said property described in plaintiff’s complaint, . . . that said defendants their lessees and grantees have been in peaceable and adverse possession "of the-premises described in plaintiff’s complaint for more than twenty years before the commencement of plaintiff’s action.' '
“Wherefore, defendants demand judgment that the complaint herein he--dismissed with -costs- and-that- if plaintiff be entitled to recover possession of said *179 premises that the defendants claim for improvements, taxes, water assessments be tried.and that defendants recover same as provided by law. ’ ’

On the 6th day of November, 1941, at the close of the trial a motion was made by the plaintiff for judgment and the same was granted and formal judgment was signed on the 17th day of said month.

The facts show title of appellee was procured by judgment received by it against J. W. Walker and Beatrice A. Walker, his wife, and then by execution of sale of the premises by Sheriff’s Deed dated December 5, 1940. The Walkers derived their title by warranty deed from C. E. Harris and Forrest D. Harris, his wife, July 26, 1929.

In said Superior Court there was filed in May, 1931, and tried in May, 1933, the case of J. W. Walker and Beatrice A. Walker, His Wife, Plaintiffs, vs. John C. Lee and Bess Lee, His Wife, and S. W. Howard, and the court on January 20, 1936, quieted title in plaintiffs in that action for the lands now claimed by the appellee herein, and quieted title in appellant Lee for a tract of land 76' x 300' deeded to him by the Hixons in 1931.

During the pendency of the last-mentioned action, there was commenced in said Superior Court in September, 1935, an action by Blanche B. Barlow and Lillian J. Barlow, also known as Lillian Barlow, incompetent, by her guardian ad litem, Fred Y. Moore, as plaintiffs, and. J. W. Walker and Beatrice A. Walker, his wife, defendants, in which action one of the defendants herein, John C; Lee, was the attorney; said action asked for the quieting of title in the aforesaid premises herein involved in plaintiffs, and on December 12, 1938, judgment was rendered in said court finding the title in the defendants, J. W. Walker and Beatrice A. Walker, his wife.

*180 The evidence shows, and the briefs of appellants admit, that on February 15, 1940, the Hixons gave Lee a quit-claim deed to the whole of the land involved, but it is the contention of the appellants that that deed was given for the sole purpose of allowing Lee to procure irrigation water.

The facts also show an unrecorded quit-claim deed from Blanche B. Barlow, wife of Yernon J. Barlow, deceased, to John P. Hixon, son of Pope Hixon, dated August 3, 1935. In that connection the record shows an agreement between Blanche B. Barlow and John C. Lee and J. P. Hixon dated August 3, 1935, which agreement reads as follows:

“That the undersigned Blanche B. Barlow for value received hereby agree with Jno. C. Lee and John P. Hixon; that the title to that certain tract of land described in quit-claim deed of even date hereof may be perfected in my name and for my benefit as the real party at interest, but at the expense of the said Jno. C. Lee and John P. Hixon, at no cost to me; that I will lend my cooperation and assistance, except; that I will not pay costs or bills of any character and this authority shall not be construed as the right to contract an obligation against me for which I may become liable.
“In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seal this 3rd day of August, 1935.
“Blanche B. Barlow
“Jno. C. Lee
“John P. Hixson.”

After trial of the above styled case of J. W. Walker and Beatrice A. Walker, His Wife, vs. John 0. Lee and Bess Lee, His Wife, and S. W. Howard, between the trial and entry of formal judgment on the 20th day of January, 1936, John C. Lee, the attorney for defendants in the Barlow Case, knowing of the existence of the unrecorded deed from Barlow to Hixon, *181 as will be seen by tbe agreement, failed to make any disclosure to the court of the existence of same.

John C. Lee testified in the trial of the instant case as follows:

“Q. I will show you a deed marked Plaintiff’s Exhibit D in evidence, in Case 43207, recorded in Maricopa County, Arizona, signed Pope Hixson and Belle Hixson, dated the 7th day of November, 1933. Is that one of the deeds that you are claiming under in this suit? A. That is correct.
“Q. That deed was recorded by you when? A. December 31, 1935. Is that what that is?
“Q. Yes. Now you got that deed on the date which it bears? A. I wouldn’t know that.
“Q. Approximately that date? A. I would say something like that.
“Q. And you held it a couple of years before you recorded it? A. Whatever the record shows, I don’t remember. ’ ’

Now this deed affects both of the suits herein referred to that were tried in the Superior Court of Maricopa County, mainly the Walker vs. Lee and Howard case, which was tried in May, 1933, but in which the judgment was not rendered until January 20,1936.

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Related

Lee v. Johnson
216 P.2d 722 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 843, 61 Ariz. 177, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-new-york-life-insurance-ariz-1944.