MacDonald v. Krause

362 P.2d 724, 77 Nev. 312, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 126
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1961
Docket4363
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 362 P.2d 724 (MacDonald v. Krause) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacDonald v. Krause, 362 P.2d 724, 77 Nev. 312, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 126 (Neb. 1961).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, C. J.:

Two questions are presented for determination in this appeal: (1) In an action to quiet title to real property must the defendant plead as a compulsory *313 counterclaim defendant’s demand for a money judgment against plaintiff arising out of the same transaction that is the subject matter of plaintiff’s claim, or be thereafter barred from a separate suit therefor? We answer this question in the affirmative. (2) Is this conclusion affected by the fact that the defendant did not appear in the action but suffered judgment to be entered against him by default? We answer this inquiry in the negative. 1

We refer to the MacDonalds, appellants herein, as MacDonald, and to the Krauses, respondents herein, as Krause.

Krause entered into a written contract to sell the property to MacDonald for $35,000. The district court filed a decision reciting the facts in part as follows: (We have substituted the names MacDonald and Krause for the court’s use of the designation of plaintiffs and defendants.) “MacDonald paid a deposit of $500 to Krause and a down payment of $11,000 as provided by the terms of said contract and thereupon took possession. MacDonald failed to make the subsequent payments that were due under the contract, and seeks relief upon the theory that the difference between the money paid to Krause and the actual rental value is $9,500. The contract was recorded in the office of the county recorder * *. The filing of the document created a cloud upon Krause’s title * * *. Krause filed suit requiring MacDonald to eome forth and assert any interest he may have in said premises * * *. MacDonald failed to answer or otherwise plead in said cause and a judgment was entered in favor of Krause quieting title to the lands in dispute in said controversy. This judgment * * * is set up as a bar to the litigation at hand upon the ground that the matter is res judicata.”

*314 Krause had moved for a summary judgment. The court granted the motion, holding that under NRCP Rule 13(a) MacDonald was barred by reason of his failure to set up his counterclaim in the prior quiet title action and that the judgment in that action was res judicata.

MacDonald’s assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in its ruling that an action to recover a penalty under a real property purchase and sale agreement, must be pleaded as a compulsory counterclaim in an action to quiet title to the property involved.” He further says: “The problem in this case is whether by virtue of appellants herein failing to counterclaim upon the theory of unjust enrichment in the quiet title action, they are now precluded from maintaining this action in an independent suit.” Although we do not base our conclusions upon the duty of the court, in such case, to do complete equity, it adds emphasis to the conclusions hereinafter reached.

(1) In support of his assignment that the court erred in holding that MacDonald’s action against Krause was barred by the provisions of NRCP Rule 13(a), MacDonald places his main reliance on two New Mexico cases and one California case. They are Lanehart v. Rabb, 63 N.M. 359, 320 P.2d 374; Clark v. Primus, 62 N.M. 259, 308 P.2d 584; and Zainudin v. Meizel, 119 Cal.App.2d 265, 259 P.2d 460.

Lanehart v. Rabb depends entirely upon the earlier Clark v. Primus, which it follows. Clark v. Primus was *315 a proceeding brought by a bill to quiet title to realty formerly owned by decedent, against decedent’s first wife. The first wife counterclaimed, seeking an accounting of rents and profits from the premises. The trial court dismissed her counterclaim and, in affirming this action, the Supreme Court of New Mexico simply disposed of the matter as follows: “Appellee assigns as error the action of the court in dismissing her counterclaims. We have considered this assignment and find no error. The counterclaims, in the main, seek an accounting of the rents, profits, etc., received from the premises. Hence, the issues raised by the counterclaims are unrelated to the title to the premises. This being a statutory proceeding, counterclaims are not within the purview of the quiet title statute, § 22-14-1, N.M.S.A. 1953 Compilation. Petrakis v. Krasnow, 54 N.M. 39, 213 P.2d 220, 222; Albarado v. Chavez, 36 N.M. 186, 10 P.2d 1102; Otero v. Toti, 33 N.M. 613, 273 P. 917. Compare McCarthy v. Kay, 52 N.M. 5, 189 P.2d 450.” The authorities relied on for this holding are all decisions by the same court. It is necessary to refer to them. Otero v. Toti, it may be noted, was decided in 1928, some 14 years before New Mexico adopted the federal rules. As we read the case, the holding was simply that under the facts the plaintiff had no cause of action to quiet title, but that she should have sued to establish a trust. The court said that both actions to establish a trust and actions to declare a deed an equitable mortgage entitling the grantor to redeem are well known to equity. The court.then held [33 N.M. 613, 273 P. 918] : “But they are not to be had in a statutory proceeding to quiet title, the only issue in which is whether plaintiff has an interest or estate in the property superior to the adverse claims. * * * But in our statutory suit to quiet title we have created a form of action. * * * In such suits, however, the relief is limited by the statute. A title may be quieted against an adverse claim, but a trust may not be decreed, or a deed declared a mortgage.” The case is of no assistance.

Nor is Albarado v. Chavez helpful. The Supreme Court of New Mexico sustained the judgment of the trial court dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint with *316 prejudice. The holding was simply that a vendor who had been paid the purchase price of realty, which was the sole condition precedent to delivery of an escrow deed, could not maintain an action to quiet title as against the vendee in possession to cut off the latter’s equitable estate.

In Petrakis v. Krasnow the lower court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint and this dismissal was reversed on appeal, the supreme court holding [54 N.M. 39, 213 P.2d 224] : “The plaintiff herein seeks * * * to quiet the title to lands to which he holds the record legal title and is in possession as against liens claimed by others which cloud that title. The dismissal of his complaint was not justified * *

The last notation of authority in Clark v. Primus is “Compare McCarthy v. Kay * * *." The headnote in that case reads as follows: “The res judicata doctrine and rule against splitting causes of action did not bar lessor’s action against lessee for expenses incurred by lessor in exposing forgery of lease set up by lessee to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
362 P.2d 724, 77 Nev. 312, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-krause-nev-1961.