Milford State Bank v. West Field Canal & Irrigation Co.

162 P.2d 101, 108 Utah 528, 1945 Utah LEXIS 147
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1945
DocketNo. 6806.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 P.2d 101 (Milford State Bank v. West Field Canal & Irrigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milford State Bank v. West Field Canal & Irrigation Co., 162 P.2d 101, 108 Utah 528, 1945 Utah LEXIS 147 (Utah 1945).

Opinion

TURNER, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District in and for Beaver County, Utah. The action was commenced by the Milford State Bank against the West Field Canal and Irrigation Company and William T. Blackner to compel the defendants as conflicting claimants to interplead and litigate their respective claims. The plaintiff Bank alleges that a certain agreement together with two water stock certificates and other papers were deposited with the Bank as part of an escrow under stated terms and conditions; that the Irrigation Company had made a demand upon the Bank, under penalty of it being held liable in damages, for the delivery of one of the water stock certificates held by the Bank. The *530 parties to the escrow contract are Saraessa Harris Baker and William T. Blackner.

Both defendants answered the Bank’s complaint, admitting the allegations contained therein. Blackner filed with his answer a cross-complaint against the Irrigation Company and alleged the escrow transaction growing out of a deal with Mrs. Baker wherein she agreed to sell and he agreed to buy for $6,000, payable $1,000 in cash and the balance within eight years, certain premises together with all water and water rights thereunto belonging; that the water right sold with the land consisted of water rights represented by Certificate No. 65 of the Irrigation Company; that a copy of the agreement together with an assignment of said water certificate were placed in escrow with the plaintiff Bank to be delivered when final payment should be made. A copy of the assignment is set forth in the pleading.

Blackner then alleges that he entered into possession of the premises on January 1, 1941, and has ever since been in possession and is entitled to the use of the water represented by said certificate No. 65 for forty-nine (49) shares of the Company’s water. He asks for delivery of 49 shares of water, 21 shares more than that which had theretofore been delivered to him by the Irrigation Company; also that his right to 49 shares be declared and that he be awarded damages.

The Irrigation Company answered Blackner and alleged that stock certificate No. 65 for 49 shares of stock is spurious and void and its issuance was surreptitious, wrongful, and without consideration; that said Saraessa Harris Baker ignorantly, mistakenly and inadvertently endorsed and deposited with the escrow papers the purported stock certificate No. 65 purporting to represent 49 shares of water stock; and that such endorsement and deposit was without consideration and that she did not intend to pass, convey or transfer any water in excess of that belonging to the land. It is alleged that on February 13, 1943, Mrs. Baker sold all of her right and equity in the contract between *531 herself and Blackner to the Irrigation Company, which is now the owner of the same. The Irrigation Company admits that it had refused to furnish any water at any time to Blackner under the “so-called” certificate and that it would continue so to refuse, and claimed the right to have certificate No. 65 returned to it.

To the Irrigation Company’s answer was added a counterclaim to the cross-complaint of Blackner. It is therein alleged in substance that the Irrigation Company was organized March 3,1898, for the purpose of taking, conveying and distributing water of the Beaver River to certain .lands aggregating 689 acres belonging to the incorporators; that the lands were those upon which said water had been used and theretofore appropriated for; that the water rights conveyed by the incorporators to the Company were sufficient to properly irrigate 689 acres of land and the Company had divided its capital stock into 689 units or shares; that each unit or share entitled the owner, to sufficient water to properly irrigate one acre of land. It is also alleged that the value of a share of the capital stock of the Company had been fixed and established since the organization of the Company, as aforesaid, which the defendant Blackner at all times well knew.

Among the numerous allegations of the counterclaim is one that no assessments have ever been levied upon or against certificate No. 65 by the Irrigation Company and none has been paid thereon by anyone and no water has been supplied to anyone by virtue of the certificate and no one has claimed ownership of any rights under it from the time of its issuance to the time of the inadvertent endorsement and deposit of the same in escrow. Blackner filed a reply to the Company’s counterclaim.

The pleadings of the parties to this action are extremely lengthy. In this statement relating to them we do not pretend to set forth all of the allegations either in form or substance. We think it unnecessary to recite lengthy pleadings if the determinative issues of the case are clearly presented. The trial court, after hearing the evidence and ar *532 guments of counsel, made and entered its findings, conclusions and decree. It found the facts in favor of the Irrigation Company. We find the judgment to be consistent with the court’s findings and legal conclusions.

Appellant, for reversal of the lower court’s judgment, relies upon numerous assigned errors. They are presented under three headings: (1) Errors relative to the admissibility of evidence; (2) that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the findings and decree; and (3) failure to find the issues in favor of cross-complainant Blackner.

We shall not attempt to treat these, with their sub-headings, separately, but shall discuss some of the legal problems presented along with our statement and dissertation of facts. We turn attention first to the transaction between Saraessa Harris Baker and William T. Blackner. The litigation is the product of this transaction. If the record justifies the trial court’s finding that Mrs. Baker sold Mr. Blackner her property with the appurtenant water and that the appurtenant water was 28 shares of the capital stock of the Irrigation Company and not 49 shares as represented by stock certificate No. 65, then the problems presented by the Company’s counterclaim are secondary. According to the record, by far the greater weight of evidence supports the court’s findings, conclusions and decree.

Because of appellant’s first assignmnt of error, we shall examine the record to determine whether the court erroneously admitted evidence relating to the transaction between Mrs. Baker and Mr. Blackner, and if we find that the court erroneously admitted evidence regarding their deal, whether, with the improper evidence excluded, the court’s findings and judgment relative thereto should stand or be set aside.

When Blackner, cross-complainant, was called to testify he stated in substance that he was acquainted with Saraessa Harris Baker; that he had purchased a farm from her and that in connection with the transaction he had signed- a written contract, the one which was placed in escrow and involved in this action. The witness was asked if, prior to the execution of the contract, he had had a connversation *533 with Mrs. Baker. Then, over objection of counsel, Blackner, was allowed to answer and, in substance, said that he had talked with Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
162 P.2d 101, 108 Utah 528, 1945 Utah LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milford-state-bank-v-west-field-canal-irrigation-co-utah-1945.