Moody v. Crane

199 P. 652, 34 Idaho 103, 1921 Ida. LEXIS 79
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 199 P. 652 (Moody v. Crane) 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
Moody v. Crane, 199 P. 652, 34 Idaho 103, 1921 Ida. LEXIS 79 (Idaho 1921).

Opinions

LEE, J.

This action was commenced by respondent Moody against appellant Crane for specific performance, to compel the conveyance of 1,150 shares of the capital stock of the Morton Realty Company, a domestic corporation, and 20,000 shares of the capital stock of the Buckeye Ranch Company, also a domestic corporation, according to the terms of a contract entered into between the parties on March 18, 1916, which, with its modifications and amendments, is pleaded haec verba in the complaint. Appellant represented in this contract that he owned 1,150 shares of the capital stock of the Morton Realty Company, which was capitalized for 2,000 shares, and that its property consisted of farm property known as the Buckeye Ranch, situate near Hagerman, in Lincoln County, and certain personal property in the way of farm implements, and was free from indebtedness except for a mortgage of $50,000, which he owned, but which was being foreclosed. Respondent was to take all risk of the foreclosure proceedings, and appellant agreed to pay the [106]*106costs and expenses of such litigation up to the entry of the final decree. Following the execution of this agreement, additional conditions were added thereto, whereby respondent guaranteed to appellant the payment of a certain balance due on a contract for the sale of certain real estate in Umatilla county, Oregon, which was to be taken by appellant as part payment of the $31,000 which respondent was. to 'pay for said 1,150 shares of corporate stock. In addition to this sale contract for the corporate stock, appellant attached an order thereto, directing the Boise City National Bank to deliver all papers pertaining to the transaction to respondent nr order, upon payment to it, for the use and benefit of appellant, of $21,760.75, evidenced by ten interest-bearing notes, aggregating that amount. These several agreements covering this transaction were drawn by appellant’s attorney, who with the consent of both parties retained the original papers for the purpose of depositing all documents pertaining to the transaction with the Boise City National Bank, after respondent had executed a conveyance of his interest in the Oregon property and furnished an abstract showing merchantable title thereto, to the satisfaction of said attorney.

Appellant’s answer admits the execution of said sale agreement, but by way of legal conclusion denies that he sold respondent said 1,150 shares of the stock of the Morton Realty Company or 20,000 shares of the stock of the Buckeye Ranch Company, and alleges that he was not the owner of the stock in question at the time he entered into the agreement to sell the same, and also denies that respondent executed and delivered to him nine negotiable promissory notes in the sum of $20,000. That is, while the answer admits the execution of all of the instruments set out by respondent’s amended complaint, it then attempts to specifically deny all of the material allegations of said complaint, except the signing of said sale agreement, and affirmatively pleads that at the time appellant signed the same he owned only 855 shares of said Morton Realty Company’s corporate [107]*107stock; that prior to making said agreement be bad fully informed respondent that all of said stock mentioned in said sale agreement in excess of 855 shares was involved in litigation with third parties; that prior to completing said sale agreement with respondent such litigation had resulted adversely to his claim, and that he was not able to secure more than 835 shares; and therefore by its terms, conditions and nature this was not such a contract as the court could specifically enforce.

Upon issues thus joined the cause was tried to the court. Respondent offered his proof and rested, and thereupon appellant moved for a nonsuit, on the ground that respondent’s evidence showed that he was not entitled to specific performance, because respondent was bound to both allege and prove appellant’s ownership of a majority of the capital stock of said corporation, and also for the reason that respondent had not complied with the conditions of said agreement on Ms part to be kept and performed. The motion was denied, and appellant stood on the same and failed to offer any evidence in support of his answer. Findings, conclusions and decree were entered, awarding specific performance, from which decision this appeal is taken.

Respondent moved to strike the reporter’s transcript from the record on appeal, on the ground that said reporter’s transcript had not been prepared, lodged and served, settled and filed in the manner and within the time required by law and the rules of this court. This appeal was perfected August 27, 1917, and on the same day the trial court ordered the reporter to prepare Ms transcript, giving him forty days within which to do so; this order was made upon application of appellant, who deposited the estimated cost of such transcript. No further orders were applied for or made by the trial court until February 9, 1918, when it gave an additional sixty days. On May 13th thereafter it extended the time to July 13, 1918. The reporter’s transcript was lodged on July 14, 1918, and was settled on August 8, 1918, by the Hon. James R. Bothwell, who had been presiding judge at the [108]*108trial of said cause. On July 9th respondent’s counsel objected to the settlement of the transcript, particularly relying on the ground that appellant had not kept alive the orders of the district court extending the time to prepare the reporter’s transcript, and that all such orders for extensions of time had been made after the time given by a former order had lapsed. To rebut any presumption of negligence, appellant filed a certificate of the judge, stating that the reporter’s transcript was prepared in its regular order and lodged in the shortest possible time that could be done under existing conditions; that there had been no unnecessary delay in its preparation; and that the delay was caused by the preparation of other transcripts which had been previously ordered. The reporter makes an affidavit to the same effect, and states that at the time of obtaining the first order, appellant’s counsel was advised that said transcript could not be prepared for some five or six months. Appellant, being so informed, on September 6, 1917, applied to the chief justice of this court, who signed an order giving appellant sixty days after completion of the reporter’s transcript within which to file, in this court, his transcript on appeal.

It appears from this record that the reporter’s transcript was prepared, lodged and served as soon as the reporter could prepare the same, without displacing the preparation of other transcripts which had been previously ordered. Appellant’s negligence, if any, consists in his not applying to the trial court for an extension of time, in each ease, before the time given by the previous order had expired. Respondent contends that it was the duty of appellant to keep these orders for an extension of time alive, and that any subsequent order extending such time, after the time granted by the previous order had lapsed, is ineffective.

The motion to strike the reporter’s transcript from the transcript on appeal will first be considered.

Subdivision 1 of C. S., see. 6886, requires any party desiring to procure a review on appeal to the supreme court of any ruling of the district court, or of the sufficiency of the [109]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 P. 652, 34 Idaho 103, 1921 Ida. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moody-v-crane-idaho-1921.