Oatman v. Hampton

256 P. 529, 43 Idaho 675, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 231
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 256 P. 529 (Oatman v. Hampton) 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
Oatman v. Hampton, 256 P. 529, 43 Idaho 675, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 231 (Idaho 1927).

Opinions

*680 T. BAILEY LEE, J.

John and Mary Oatman, Nez Perce Indians, husband and wife, otherwise known as Zeloon Was and Pe-Yah-Na-Halt-Pa-Wit, residing upon the reservation in Idaho county, complained that on November 9, 1921, they were the patent owners of two allotments aggregating 160 acres of land in said county, of the value of $12,000;. that on or about said date the defendant, Luther Hampton, agreed to make them a $3,000 five year six per cent loan, taking a mortgage on said land as security; that on November 9, 1921, said defendant brought to their residence a certain paper writing which he declared to he a mortgage on their said land, containing the loan agreement theretofore made; that being wholly uneducated, unable to read English or to speak or understand it, except very imperfectly if at all, and knowing nothing of business matters, they relied upon defendant’s assurances and signed such paper by affixing their marks thereto, believing the same was a mortgage, as represented; that they continued in possession of said lands cultivating and cropping the same without any request or notice to vacate until August, *681 1922, when they discovered that the said defendant had, on November 12, 1921, filed for record in said county a purported deed dated as of said November 9, 1921, bearing their signatory marks, and conveying to him in fee their aforesaid land. They further plead that the defendant Hampton deeded said lands on November 26, 1921, to the defendant Schiffer, who reconveyed them to said defendant three days later; that on December 31, 1921, said defendant Hampton mortgaged the premises for $3,000 to the defandant George G. Thiessen, who later assigned to defendant Gus D. Thiessen; that thereafter the said defendant, Hampton, deeded the land to defendant Lilly Thiessen, ° who in turn conveyed it to defendant Schiffer; these two latter conveyances being considered mortgages to secure a $2,200 loan made Hampton by Lilly Thiessen, and later taken over by Schiffer. Upon these facts plaintiffs prayed that all of such conveyances, mortgages and assignments be canceled and that plaintiffs be adjudged the owners of such land, or failing in this, that the original deed be declared a mortgage, and that they be given such other relief as should be deemed equitable.

Defendant, Hampton, defaulted after appearance. The other defendants answered, denying plaintiffs’ charges; and the defendants, Gus. D. Thiessen and Schiffer, by cross-complaint, prayed foreclosure of their mortgage liens. After the commencement of the action defendant Hampton quitclaimed the premises to the defendant Schiffer. The court found that plaintiffs, knowing it to be such, executed the deed in question, but that between them and Hampton it was understood that the deed should operate as a mortgage. It further found that the remaining defendants were liona fide encumbrancers, and ordered the premises sold to satisfy, according to priority, the mortgage liens of defendants Gus D. Thiessen and Schiffer. Subsequent to judgment a sale was had, and later upon application of defendant, Gus. D. Thiessen, the court ordered the sale set aside and a new one held. Plaintiff, John Oatman, died before the entry of judgment, and Mary Oatman has ap *682 pealed from the judgment and order both in her own right and as administratrix of her deceased husband’s estate.

Respondents moved to dismiss these appeals. As grounds for dismissing the appeal from the judgment it is contended that Mary Oatman could not appeal in her own right, without joining her deceased husband’s personal representative ; that this latter she failed to do, since she served her notice before having been substituted as administratrix. It is not suggested that at the time she served her notice as such she was not the administratrix. In the absence of an affirmative showing, the notice will be presumed to speak the truth. It is not necessary that an acting administrator be substituted in order to carry on litigation affecting the property of the deceased. (Webster v. Hastings, 56 Neb. 245, 76 N. W. 565; Jefferson County Bank, v. Robbins, 67 Wis. 68, 29 N. W. 209.)

It is further alleged that the appeal from the order vacating the sale constitutes an adoption of the judgment and a waiver of the appeal therefrom. With this we cannot agree. In order to affect a waiver, there must be some intent to enjoy a benefit from, or base some interest on the judgment appealed from. Here, the appellants are fighting in sheer defense; they feel they have been sufficiently injured by the judgment and sale already suffered, and they object to having their liability increased. Such protective measures do not constitute waiver. (Schoonover v. Osborne, 108 Iowa, 453, 79 N. W. 263, where the judgment debtor sold his equity of redemption; Kling v. Sajour, 4 La. Ann. 128, where defendant purchased from plaintiff in ejectment; First Nat. Bank v. Hesdorffer, 107 Miss. 709, 65 So. 507, where the judgment debtor purchased after sale; Lott v. Davis, 262 Ill. 148, 104 N. E. 199, where the execution debtor redeemed from execution sale.)

As to the appeal from the order vacating the sale, respondents contend that the order is not appealable, and that appellant has failed to set out proper specifications of error. The order is appealable. (Dahlstrom v. Portland Min. Co., 12 Ida. 87, 85 Pac. 916.) Before argu *683 ment, appellants asked leave to file submitted amendments to their specifications of error. This practice has heretofore been allowed and will be followed here. The motions to dismiss are denied.

Among the many errors assigned upon appeal from the judgment is the charge that the court erred in admitting in evidence over objection Defendants’ Exhibit 1, the same being a certified copy of the record of the alleged deed from John and Mary Oatman to defendant Hampton. This record was objected to by plaintiffs’ counsel, “as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial; and on the further ground that the original has not been accounted for, and that it has not been shown that the deed was voluntarily assented to by these parties or been shown that they knew what they were signing.” Whereupon, counsel for defendants Schiffer, George and Lilly Thiessen stated: “With reference to the original deed, before the court rules, I would like to state that that was a deed to Hampton and has never been in my possession. Mr. Schiffer advises me it has never been in his possession. We have no knowledge of where it is.”

The court then observes: “It has already been brought out by Mr. Hardy that this witness (meaning Hampton) is out of the state, — or by Mr. Rehberg. It will be admitted.” The incident referred to by the court was the statement by plaintiffs’ witness, Rehberg, that he had been unable to locate Hampton in the state and had last heard of him at Spokane. O. S., sec. 7969, referring to recorded conveyances of real property, provides that a certified copy of a record of such a conveyance may be read in evidence with the like effect as the original “upon proof, by affidavit or otherwise, that the original is not in the possession or under the control of the party producing the certified copy.” The only proof offered was the statement of counsel upon his own and his clients’ behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
256 P. 529, 43 Idaho 675, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oatman-v-hampton-idaho-1927.