Pace v. Pace

559 P.2d 964
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1977
DocketNo. 14542
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 559 P.2d 964 (Pace v. Pace) 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
Pace v. Pace, 559 P.2d 964 (Utah 1977).

Opinions

WILKINS, Justice:

This action was commenced as a mortgage foreclosure suit by Plaintiff Archie Clarence Pace (herein Plaintiff Pace) against Defendant Brookfield Products, Inc. (herein Defendant Brookfield) and others including Defendants Larry C. Pace and Sharee F. Pace, Plaintiff Pace’s son and daughter-in-law, respectively (herein Defendants Pace). Plaintiff Pace claimed that Defendants Pace had defaulted on a promissory note and mortgage on property executed in favor of Plaintiff Pace who joined in this action, among others, Defendant Brookfield as, the second mortgagee on said property. Defendant Brookfield counter claimed against Plaintiff Pace alleging that said plaintiff had acquired from said defendant, on an open account, certain merchandise and has owed thereon the sum of $15,434.45 since March 1, 1973. Plaintiff Pace asserted in his answer to this counterclaim the defense of accord and satisfaction.

The Plaintiff Pace on the basis of the pleadings, answers to interrogatories and requests for admission on file brought a motion for summary judgment in the lower court arguing that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact and that Plaintiff Pace was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The lower court granted judgment in favor of Plaintiff Pace on said counterclaim, which is the only issue before this court on appeal.

Plaintiff Pace contended, through counsel, at the hearing in the lower court on his motion for summary judgment that said plaintiff was originally operating an egg business, which he sold to his son, Larry C. Pace, and at the time of this sale, viz., March 1, 1973, Plaintiff Pace had a balance owing to Defendant Brookfield of $15,-434.45, the basis of subject counterclaim. Said plaintiff’s counsel further contended at this hearing that the son operated this business after March 1, 1973, continued to make payments and charges and “. . . this thing went on until the account got up to $29,000 when Brookfield then took the note and mortgage . . .” from said son.1 Defendant Brookfield’s counsel at this hearing contended at the time of this sale there was an outstanding account of approximately $15,000; and that Plaintiff Pace and his son, on several occasions, asked Defendant Brookfield if it would look to the son for responsibility of the account, and said Brookfield “. . .on several occasions advised them that we were not going to accept the substitution of parties and that we would continue to look to plaintiffs (sic) for payment of that original $15,000, and indeed on several occasions continued to make demand for payment .of that $15,000. Merely all that happened was that there was another obligor that came [966]*966into the picture and we were looking to both of them for payment.”2

In answer to Plaintiff Pace’s interrogatories, Defendant Brookfield answered specifically that no payments had been received on this indebtedness of $15,434.45 although demand for payment had been made.

The five requests for admission from Plaintiff Pace and answers thereto by Defendant Brookfield, which said plaintiff considers critical in this matter, are shown below:

1. That the defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc., has in its possession ledger cards or ledger sheets showing charges, payments and balance on the Pace Account.
Admits paragraph 1 of Request for Admissions.
2. That defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc. holds a mortgage with Larry C. Pace and Sharee F. Pace, his wife, as mortgagors, said mortgage given to secure a Promissory Note in the sum of Twenty-Nine Thousand ($29,000) Dollars, said note and mortgage bearing the date of January 31, 1975.
The only reason defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc., took the mortgage from Larry C. Pace and Sharee F. Pace, his wife, was because defendant, Larry C. Pace, advised defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc., he was securing a loan to clear off the balance of the account, which he failed to do; therefore, defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc., felt it was necessary to secure some kind of security to try to force payment of the account.
3. That said note and mortgage for Twenty-Nine Thousand ($29,000) Dollars includes the Fifteen Thousand Four Hundred Thirty-Four and 45/100 ($15,434.45) Dollars which defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc., claims is due them from the plaintiff.
On several occasions, defendant, Larry C. Pace, and plaintiff, Archie Clarence Pace, requested defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc., to give plaintiff, Archie Clarence Pace, a release which defendant, Brookfield Products, Inc., refused to do inasmuch as defendant, Brook-field Products, Inc., knew nothing of the contract between plaintiff, Archie Clarence Pace and defendant, Larry C. Pace.
4. That the ledger cards or sheets show that the balance on the Archie Pace Account as of March 1, 1973, of Fifteen Thousand Four Hundred Thirty-Four and 45/100 ($15,434.45) Dollars was continued in the name of Larry Pace and that the purchases, payments and credits were continued forward from March 1, 1973 the same as they had been prior to March 1, 1973.
See above answer to admission No. 2.
5. That on the theory of first in first out the obligation claimed by defendant Brookfield Products, Inc. has long since been paid and there is nothing due and owing from the plaintiff to defendant Brookfield Products, Inc.
See above answer to admission No. 3.

From an examination of the whole record in this matter including these requests for admission and answers thereto, Defendant Brookfield would not quarrel — nor could it — that it took a promissory note and mortgage bearing the date of January 31, 1975 from Defendants Pace in the sum of $29,-000, that the debt of $15,434.45 was included therein, and the ledger cards of Plaintiff Pace after March 1, 1973 were continued in the name of his son. Plaintiff Pace in essence contends that the answers to these requests, coupled with the failure by Defendant Brookfield to specifically deny the matters set forth particularly in requests number 4 and 5 above as required by Rule 36(a), Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, entitle him to a summary judgment.

An analysis of answers to requests number 4 and 5 is required, and especially the statements in request number 4 that the account “. . . was continued in the name of Larry Pace and that the purchases, payments and credits were continued for[967]*967ward from March 1, 1973 the same as they had been prior to March 1, 1973,” and in request number 5 “that on the theory of first in first out the obligation has long since been paid . . .’’by Plaintiff Pace.

Answers to these last two requests, among others, are not denied with the specificity that Rule 36(a) requires. But, the impact of a nonspecific denial must be measured with the clear denial of payment of this account which appears in an answer to interrogatories by Defendant Brookfield alluded to above. It therefore appears, assuming the full adoption of Plaintiff Pace’s contention of the establishment of admissions against Defendant Brookfield, that at minimum an inconsistency with regard to payment exists as reflected in two modes of discovery, viz., the requests for admission and the interrogatories.

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

Related

Golden Key Realty, Inc. v. Mantas
699 P.2d 730 (Utah Supreme Court, 1985)
Bill Brown Realty, Inc. v. Abbott
562 P.2d 238 (Utah Supreme Court, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
559 P.2d 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pace-v-pace-utah-1977.