McDougall v. McFall

215 P. 847, 37 Idaho 209, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 127
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 215 P. 847 (McDougall v. McFall) 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
McDougall v. McFall, 215 P. 847, 37 Idaho 209, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 127 (Idaho 1923).

Opinion

WILLIAM A. LEE, J.-

— This action was commenced in August, 1918, on behalf of Isabella McDougall by her daughter, Nina Hurst, guardian of her person and estate, upon two causes of action, the first being to set aside an alleged fraudulent conveyance of real property executed by appellant McDougall to respondent McFall, and the second count as amended being to recover the value of the use and occupation of said premises for the year 1913 and for the years 1915 to 1918, inclusive, alleged to be $12,000. Since the taking of 'this appeal Isabella McDougall has died, and by stipulation the action is continued by the guardian.

The property in question came to the deceased by distribution from a deceased daughter’s estate. It is commonly known as the Crooks Stock Ranch, on Fish Creek, in Blaine county, Idaho, and consists of about 760 acres, of which 360 acres are meadow-land and the remainder pasture, with the water rights appurtenant to such lands. The prayer is to set aside the deed and to recover a money judgment for the value of the use and occupation.

The first cause of action alleges the value of the premises at the time of the conveyance in December, 1917, to have been $50,000; that the consideration which respondent McFall agreed to pay appellant for the same was his note for [213]*213$10,000 at six per cent interest, secured by a mortgage upon the premises; that the appellant was above ninety years of age, infirm of body and mind, and incapable of understanding the nature of the transaction; that she was making her home with respondent and his family; that the conveyance was obtained by undue influence and for an inadequate consideration, while respondent occupied a fiduciary relation ■toward her; and that the same was fraudulent and void.

The answer specifically denies fraud and undue influence, and contends that the transaction was fair and that a reasonable consideration had been paid, and prays -that the title be confirmed in respondent. The answer as amended at the beginning of the trial pleads a total consideration of $21,000, consisting of the $10,000 note, the assumption of a $5,000 mortgage upon the premises, and a balance claimed by respondent against appellant of $6,086.80 for expenditures made on her behalf in operating the farm during the years mentioned. The denials in the answer as to the value of the premises, and also of the use and occupation, are in form negatives pregnant, and according to settled rules of pleading admit the value of the farm to have been anything less than $50,000 and the value of the use and occupation thereof to have been anything less than $12,000. However, the cause was tried upon the theory that these denials placed in issue both the value of the land and respondent’s occupation of the same, much of the testimony being directed to the question of values.

The first cause of action, to set aside the fraudulent conveyance, is clearly in equity, and the second cause of action, to recover a money judgment for the value of the occupation of the premises, is at law. The case was tried in January, 1920, to a jury, in the usual manner of the trial of an action at law. However, the issues tendered by the pleadings were submitted to the jury in the form of special interrogatories, and no general verdict was rendered.

The jury found that the plaintiff Isabella McDougall, at the time of making the conveyance to respondent, was not men[214]*214tally capable of understanding the nature and effect of the same. It failed to find that there was any improper or undue influence used to induce the conveyance, and found that the value of the premises was $30,400 and the value of its use and occupation for the years of 1915 to 1919, inclusive, was $7,500, fixing the amounts according to years. This verdict was filed in January, 1920, and the court, apparently with the consent of counsel on both sides, treated the same as advisory and took the cause under advisement. In November following, counsel appeared before the court at .chambers at. Blackfoot and orally argued the same, after which findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and entered by the court and judgment thereon rendered, whereby the court found and concluded that the conveyance was not fraudulent, that the title should be confirmed in respondent, subject to his paying the $10,000 note executed contemporaneously with the conveyance and the payment of the $5,000 mortgage against the premises at the time of the convejmnce, and further that appellant McDougall was entitled to a good and sufficient home with respondent McFall and his family for the remainder of her natural life, provided she wished to accept the same and reside with respondent, which was not an issue in the case, and awarded respondent costs.

No specific reference is made, either in the conclusions of law or the judgment, as to the second cause of action, to recover for the use and occupancy of the premises in question. The findings, however, are to the effect that about 1911 or 1912 appellant McDougall executed to respondent McFall a general power of attorney for the purpose of closing up- the estate of Mrs. Crooks, her daughter, from whose estate Isabella McDougall obtained the premises in question; that such power of attorney had never been revoked; that respondent had closed up this estate and obtained this loan upon these premises with which to pay off the debts against said estate and obtain possession; that respondent had leased the premises from Mrs. McDougall during the years mentioned in the complaint and prior to the conveyance, and [215]*215had expended on that account $16,269.30 and had received a net return of. $9,462.50; that appellant was indebted to respondent for the balance of $6,086.80 as claimed in said answer. The court also finds that no improper or undue influence was used by respondent to induce the execution of the deed; that about the time of the conveyance ' of the premises to respondent the same were of the value of $30,400; that while the consideration paid by the respondent to Mrs. McDougall was not the full market value of the lands conveyed, considering the circumstances and the relation of the parties, and the treatment accorded to Mrs. MeDougall by the respondent McFall while she was a member of his family, such consideration was not inadequate, nor was the transaction improvident on the part of appellant.

From the judgment thus entered this appeal is taken upon ten assignments of error, which it will not be necessary to consider severally, further than to say that while they do not specifically refer to a number of errors which appear in the record, they are sufficient to raise the principal questions relied upon for a reversal.

The record discloses such an intermingling of procedure at law and in equity that it is difficult to determine the exact character of this action. Clearly, the second cause of action is at law, and if the question was seasonably raised, appellant would have been entitled to a verdict of a jury as to the reasonable value of .the use and occupation of these premises. The jury appears to have been impaneled and instructed upon' the theory that its verdict was to be- mandatory, not directory. It is well settled, of course, that where a jury is called to advise the conscience of the chancellor', the court may disregard such advice, but the practice of calling juries to sit in protracted trials wherein issues both of law and equity are submitted, with disregard of the jury’s action thereafter, is not to be commended.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Country Cove Development, Inc. v. May
150 P.3d 288 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2006)
Blaine County National Bank v. Timmerman
245 P. 389 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 P. 847, 37 Idaho 209, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdougall-v-mcfall-idaho-1923.