Mochel v. Cleveland

5 P.2d 549, 51 Idaho 468, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 38
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1930
DocketNo. 5641.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 549 (Mochel v. Cleveland) 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
Mochel v. Cleveland, 5 P.2d 549, 51 Idaho 468, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 38 (Idaho 1930).

Opinions

*472 LEE, J.

In 1899, one Holcomb and his wife dedicated certain platted lots and streets to the city of Lewiston. The dedication was known as “Holcomb’s First Subdivision of Lot 10 of Acres, Lewiston, Idaho.” Prospect Avenue, an integral part of the tract dedicated, consisted of a strip, eighty feet wide, running north and south, the west boundary line thereof constituting the west boundary of said subdivision.

In 1922, the city of Lewiston by Ordinance No. 97Ó vacated the west twenty feet of Prospect Avenue and authorized the mayor and the city controller to execute quitclaim deeds “to the abutting landowners of the strip of Prospect Avenue hereby vacated and abandoned.” There was no sidewalk along the west side of Prospect Avenue, but there was a curb approximately thirteen feet east of the new, west boundary line of said avenue, some thirty-three feet east of the original west boundary.

Plaintiffs and respondents, Leonard E. Mochel and wife, Blanche E. Mochel, representing themselves to be the owners *473 of certain residence property situate west of Prospect Avenue and abutting thereon, entered into a conditional sales contract with defendants and appellants, Charles Cleveland and wife, Christine, on or about May 2, 1927, whereby they agreed to sell appellants the said property for a consideration of $4,600, $700 to be paid down, and the remainder on December 1st, following: they also agreed that upon appellants’ full compliance with the terms of the contract they would furnish appellants an abstract of title “showing good and merchantable title” to the premises.

In September, 1927, appellants sued respondents for rescission of the contract, alleging that they had been induced by certain false and fraudulent representations to undertake the purchase. Of the several false and fraudulent representations alleged, one only is material here. Appellants, then plaintiffs, charged that respondents, then defendants, “told and represented to them that the east property line of said premises and the west boundary line of Prospect Avenue was at the curb, pointed out the east corner of the said premises conveyed as being located at the curb, and stated to these plaintiffs that the area deeded to them began at the curb and extended west a distance of 142' feet,” whereas, “the east property line of the said premises conveyed to these plaintiffs is not located at the curb of the street as pointed out upon the ground by the defendants but is in fact located approximately thirteen feet to the west thereof, and the City of Lewiston owns the intervening space, it being a part of said Prospect Avenue.” This, coupled with the fact that the house was built on the crest of the hill overlooking the Snake River*, the Clevelands complained forced them to “have practically no level yard whatsoever:” they prayed to be put in statu quo. The answer denied all material allegations; and, upon issue joined, the trial court found for defendants on all issues. While no issue had been joined thereon, the court found that the then defendants were the owners in fee simple of the entire property contracted to be conveyed. The court simply adjudged that plaintiffs “take nothing by their action” and that defendants recover costs. Upon appeal to the supreme court, *474 the decree entered was affirmed July 12, 1929. (Cleveland v. Mochel, 48 Ida. 37, 279 Pac. 410.)

On October 30th following, respondents instituted the action at bar, seeking specific performance and praying that, in case appellants fail to perform, the property be sold and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s demand, and that judgment be entered for any deficiency. Appellants answered, denying performance on the part of respondents, and by way of cross-complaint alleging that respondents had agreed to furnish them a good and sufficient warranty deed together with an abstract showing good, merchantable title; that the title tendered was not “good valid and merchantable,” but was on the contrary “un-merchantable and unmarketable.” In support of this they averred that the east twenty feet of said premises formerly constituted a part of Prospect Avenue, that respondents had “attempted” to acquire title thereto under and by virtue of City Ordinance No. 970 aforesaid and a quitclaim deed from the city of Lewiston, dated September 28, 1929. They further charged that at the time respondents tendered them title on October 3, 1929, there was then pending in the district court a suit instituted by one, John R. Becker, against the city of Lewiston and others, which said action brought on July 16, 1927 “directly challenged,” the validity of said Ordinance No. 970, sought to have the same declared null and void and the city restrained from issuing deeds thereunder. In addition, they claimed that third persons owning property abutting on Prospect Avenue immediately east of and opposite the property described in the contract were asserting an interest in and to the said disputed east twenty feet, that respondents had never acquired title thereto, and there was “grave and justifiable doubt, as to whether the ordinance was valid, whether or not the city had authority to pass the same and quitclaim this particular east twenty feet to respondents or that the latter ever did or could acquire title thereto under and through such ordinance and deed. ’ ’ They prayed for rescission, that plaintiffs take nothing by their complaint and that defendants recover the $700 theretofore paid. All this respondents denied.

*475 The trial court found that respondents had fully performed their contract; that appellants had formerly brought against respondents the aforementioned suit in rescission, knowing at the time or having available to them all the defenses which they had set up in their cross-complaint; that on appeal from the ensuing, adverse judgment, that judgment had been affirmed by the supreme court, and had become res judicata, the parties and issues in both actions having been identical; that appellants, notwithstanding their knowledge of all the facts affirmatively plead by them, had remained in possession of the premises until December, 1929, and that all equities were with respondents. Judgment was accordingly entered in respondents’ favor for the remaining purchase price and interest together with certain taxes, assessments, fire insurance premiums paid by them and costs. It was ordered that in the event of appellants failing to comply with the decree, the property should be sold at public auction, the proceeds applied to the satisfaction thereof, and judgment entered for any deficiency. Appeal followed.

Appellants attack practically all the findings for want of evidence, urge that the judgment and decree is contrary to law and that the court erred in overruling their motions for nonsuit and in the admission of certain evidence. First, they contend that their motions for nonsuit should have been sustained for the reasons that respondents failed either to plead or prove .that the consideration to be paid was adequate or fair, and that they could not proceed for specific performance and at the same time demand foreclosure of a vendor’s lien. There is nothing in the first contention. The California cases to this effect cited by appellant, notably White v. Sage, 149 Cal. 613, 87 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
5 P.2d 549, 51 Idaho 468, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mochel-v-cleveland-idaho-1930.