McCornick v. Friedman

76 P. 762, 9 Idaho 754, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 94
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 P. 762 (McCornick v. Friedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCornick v. Friedman, 76 P. 762, 9 Idaho 754, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 94 (Idaho 1904).

Opinion

STOCKSLAGEB, J.

This is an appeal from the final judgment of the district court, fourth judicial district, Blaine county. Plaintiff’s action was in ejectment to recover lot 1, [758]*758block 41, town of Hailey, basing his right to recover upon execution sale upon a judgment of' the fourth judicial district court entered and docketed of the seventh day of December, 1893, in favor of the Salt Lake Milling and Elevator Company v. S. M. Friedman. Plaintiff received the sheriff’s deed on the eighth day of April, 1899. Plaintiff also claims mesne profits from the date of his deed. The defendant S. M. Friedman disclaimed any and all interest in the premises described in the complaint. Defendants Henry M. Cohn and Emil H. Friedman answered denying that on the seventh day of December, 1893, or at any time prior thereto, or thereafter, S. M. Friedman was the owner of the property in controversy, and aver that on the thirteenth day of December, 1895, defendant Cohn was the equitable owner of said real estate, and that defendant S. M. Friedman, was the mere conduit through which title passed from Alexander Willman to said Henry M. Cohn; defendant S. M. Friedman only held the naked legal title, but in trust for the leal owner, Henry M. Cohn. That on the said thirteenth day of December, 1895, said title became cleared through and by virtue of the financial aid and assistance of said Cohn, and through negotiations made by said Cohn said title was then transferred to the said defendant, S. M. Friedman, in trust, however, for the said Cohn, and with the understanding and agreement that the same should be immediately conveyed in pursuance of the terms of said prior agreement of said S. M. Friedman to said Cohn, and the same was immediately conveyed by said S. M. Friedman to Cohn in pursuance of said prior agreement. That afterward, and before the commencement of this action, said Cohn for value by him received, by deed conveyed said premises to defendant, Emil M. Friedman, who is now the lawful owner and entitled to the possession. That said Cohn now- has no interest or title to the property. That the other defendants, the Hailey Mercantile Company and the Friedman Company, Limited, never had any interest in or title to said premises, except as lessees of said Cohn and said Friedman.

Defendants further answering say plaintiff and his predecessors in interest never acquired any claim upon or interest in or to said premises by virtue of the judgment or execution, [759]*759certificate of sale or sheriff’s deed. Deny that plaintiff is entitled to the sum of $30 per month, or any sum whatever, from these defendants from the occupancy of said premises; deny that said deed of conveyance to Henry M. Cohn, and from him to Emil M. Friedman are or were subsequent to the alleged lien of said judgment mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint, or that said defendants Cohn and Emil M. Friedman, or the other defendants, were fully or partially aware of any alleged lien or claim of the plaintiffs against said premises or have wrongfully withheld possession, etc.

A jury was impaneled to try the ease, and the verdict was for the defendants. It is shown that a question was submitted to the jury, to wit:

“Gentlemen of the jury, at the request of the plaintiff, the court instructs you to answer the following question: What is the value of the rents, issues and profits of the property described in the complaint from April 8, 1899, to November 30, 1902? Answer: $30 per month.

“GEORGE H. CHOATE, Foreman.”

Hpon this verdict a judgment was entered for the defendants for their costs.

The facts in this case are so closely interwoven with a former action in the district court of Blaine, then Alturas county, that it seems necessary to relate some of them here.

Alexander Willman sold his mercantile business in the town of Hailey to S. M. Friedman; a part of the transaction was the proposed sale of the premises in controversy. Willman placed a deed in escrow with the First National Bank of Hailey for Friedman, to be surrendered to him upon the payment of five promissory notes aggregating about $4,500. The notes were given as evidencing the purchasing price of the property agreed to be paid as the purchase price of the property as shown in a-contract accompanying the same. Before the maturity of the last two notes Willman commenced his action in the district court of that county, and by an affidavit that he had no security for the payment of the debt, procured an attachment and levied upon the goods and chattels of Friedman. This action [760]*760on the part of Willman resulted in many other actions against Friedman, among them the action of the Salt Lake Milling and Elevator Company, the party from whom plaintiff claims title, he having succeeded to the judgment of the S. L. Milling and Elevator Company. Friedman answered in the action of Will-man and by way of cross-complaint claimed damages in the sum of $50. Upon the issues thus joined the case was tried with a jury and a-verdict rendered in favor of the defendants as follows: “We, the jury in the above-entitled action, find for the defendant over and above the amount claimed in this action by the plaintiff, damages in the sum of $2,500.” Upon this verdict a judgment was entered by the court in favor of the defendant against plaintiff in the sum of $2,500, and this judgment recites that the amount offset in the verdict for damages over and above the $2,500 is $4,943.62, the amount claimed to be due plaintiff from defendant. The demand of the defendant Friedman in his cross-complaint was for $50 damages which he claimed he sustained by reason of the wrongful attachment, destroying his business and ruining his credit in the business-world. In other words, he did not ask that plaintiff be required to deliver the deed then in escrow as part of the damages; so far as the record in either case shows, Friedman was willing that Willman should take up the escrow agreement. (See Willman v. Friedman, 4 Idaho, 209, 95 Am. St. Rep. 59, 38 Pac. 937.)

These facts are related to show the reason for the alleged' contract between S. M. Friedman and Henry M. Cohn. Cohn, testifies that after the attachment proceeding he went to Hailey and in a conversation with Friedman, Friedman informed him he was a ruined man and that the only way Cohn could save himself was to furnish money to carry on the litigation on his cross-complaint' for damages, and he would assign the cause of action to him, Cohn. This was agreed upon and thereafter Cohn assumed the payment of attorneys’ fees and other costs- and expenses and followed the case at his own expense to a final determination. Cohn testified that Friedman was at that time indebted to him $5,000 or more.

[761]*761Thirty-seven errors are assigned, bnt an examination oí this record leads us to the conclusion that the questions upon which this case must rest are: 1. Was the assignment of the supposed cause of action set out in defendant Friedman’s cross-complaint in the action of Willman v. Friedman to defendant Cohn, and the judgment thereafter rendered in favor of said Friedman and assigned to defendant Cohn, valid? 2. Did the assignment of such claim and the judgment come within the statute of frauds?

Counsel for appellant insists that when Willman resorted to the attachment proceeding to recover the amount due him from Friedman he waived his right under his escrow agreement, and the title to the real estate in controversy vested in Friedman. We cannot give our assent to this proposition.

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Related

Anderson v. Ferguson
57 P.2d 325 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 P. 762, 9 Idaho 754, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccornick-v-friedman-idaho-1904.