Pence v. Sweeney

28 P. 413, 3 Idaho 181, 1891 Ida. LEXIS 35
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 P. 413 (Pence v. Sweeney) 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
Pence v. Sweeney, 28 P. 413, 3 Idaho 181, 1891 Ida. LEXIS 35 (Idaho 1891).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment and order dismissing appellants’ complaint and cause of action. The complaint alleges that on the twenty-first day of May, 1888, the plaintiffs were the owners of the Sitting Bull lode mining claim. ■ That the said claim was located by one J. A. Ward and John W. Sebring in the year 1885. That thereafter the said Sebring sold one-half of his interest in said claim, to wit, an undivided one-fourth, to one David Altizer, and thereafter said .persons owned their respective interests .therein as [183]*183tenants in common. That, for the pujóse of developing said, mining claim, they entered into a contract with the plaintiffs, C. G. Pence and one L. J. Starr, whereby the said Pence and Starr agreed to do certain work in the development of said claim, and for which they were to receive an undivided one-half of the respective interests of the said Sebring, Ward, and Altizer. That upon the completion of • such work the said Ward, Sebring, and Altizer were to execute and deliver to said Pence and Starr a deed of conveyance conveying to them an undivided one-half of their respective interests in said claim. That after the completion of said work by Pence and Starr the said Ward, Sebring, and Altizer executed to them a certain deed, but, instead of designating the respective interests to be conveyed by each grantor under the contract aforesaid, they, by mistake and inadvertence, conveyed by said deed an undivided one-half of said mining claim. That thereafter ■Starr sold and conveyed his entire interest in said claim to Pence. That Pence thereafter purchased of said Sebring an undivided one-eighth interest in said claim. That thereafter C. E. Kingman (one' of the appellants) purchased of the. said Altizer an undivided one-eighth of said claim. That thereafter one O. Kingman bought of said Ward all his right, title, and interest in and to said claim, as at that time said Ward believed he possessed an undivided one-quarter thereof. That, by the original deed from Ward, Sebring, and Altizer to said Pence and Starr, it was the intention of the parties to convey to said grantees an undivided one-half of each of their respective interests in and to said claim, to wit, Ward an undivided one-quarter, that being one-half of his interest; Se-bring an undivided one-eighth, that being one-half of his interest; and Altizer an undivided one-eighth, that being one-half of his interest therein. That the mistake was made by conveying an undivided one-half of said lode, and not designating the undivided interest which each was to convey under the agreement with Pence and Starr. That thereafter the defendant Brown, with notice that Ward had already sold all of his right, title, and interest in and to said lode claim to O. Kingman, and knowing that said Ward had no interest therein, [184]*184being so notified by said Ward, procured from said Ward a quitclaim deed for all of his interest in said claim. That said O. Kingman conveyed all of his interest in and to said claim to the plaintiff Charles E. Kingman, and that the plaintiffs-(the appellants in this court) were then the owners of said entire mining claim. That Sweeney, one of the defendants, was, at the date of such conveyances an employee in the recorder’s office of Shoshone county, and that it was by his investigation and suggestion, on information acquired from an inspection of the records of said county, that the apparent interest of said Ward, of the one-twelfth of said mine, was suggested to said Brown, and the conveyance from Ward to Brown' thereafter procured. The complaint further alleges that said Sweeney and Brown have contracted, by bond, to convey to-defendant Evans the one-twelfth interest so obtained from Ward, and to receive therefor $3,000, and for such purpose Brown has deposited with Sweeney his deed to said Evans, to-be delivered upon payment to Sweeney of the sum of $3,000.. That said Brown is to convey to said Sweeney said one-twelfth interest in said mine in the event of Evans not paying said’ $3,000. That Evans is made a party, because he is deemed a-necessary party to the enforcement of the judgment or decree-prayed for. That plaintiffs do not desire to destroy the sale-of said mine, but simply that the proceeds of the sale of said’ one-twelfth interest be paid to plaintiff in event of a sale being consummated. The answer admits the discovery and location of the said claim, and the conveyance thereafter by Sebring of one-half of his interest therein to Altizer. Admits’ the-making of the deed by Ward, Sebring, and Altizer to Pence- and Starr, but explains Ward’s connection with the making of" the contract with Pence and Starr for the development of the claim, and the execution of the deed to them, and denies that, any mistake was made in the execution of said deed.

Prior to the trial of the ease the mine was sold under the-bond referred to, and the parties entered into a stipulation whereby the money for the one-twelfth interest was deposited with the clerk of the court, subject to the adjudication by the-court of the question as to the party entitled thereto. On [185]*185January 16, 1891, one Thomas E. MeLelland was allowed to intervene. The complaint of intervention does not demand any relief in the subject matter of the suit as to the mining claim, but alleges that one-half of the money which had been deposited in court, under the stipulation aforesaid, on June 25, 1888, had been assigned to said intervener by said Sweeney and Brown, on July 30, 1888. To this complaint of intervention plaintiffs filed an answer denying the same. The cause came on for trial on June 3, 1891. The plaintiffs offered in evidence certain paper writings, claimed to have been executed by the defendants, admitting the allegations of the complaint, and consenting that judgment be taken against them as prayed for in the complaint, all of which were, under the objections of counsel for defendants and intervener, excluded by the court. Thereupon certain oral testimony was offered, and for like reason rejected by the court. Plaintiffs thereupon rested. Counsel for the defendants and intervener moved for a nonsuit, which motion was granted, and judgment of dismissal entered. From which order and judgment the appellants bring the case to this court, and demand a reversal thereof, and assign seven specifications of error therefor.

The first error assigned is that “the court erred in allowing MeLelland to intervene at all.” In order to intelligently pass upon this specification of error, we shall need to refer to the pleadings at some length. The plaintiffs allege in the fifteenth paragraph of the complaint that a sale of the mine in controversy is pending for the sum of $36,000, one-twelfth of which sum, by the terms of the bond to defendant Evans, is to be paid to the defendant Sweeney. That said Evans is made a party because plaintiffs deem him to be a necessary party to the enforcement of the decree prayed for. That plaintiffs are not desirous of defeating said sale for said one-twelfth interest of said mine, but that, in the event of a sale being completed, the proceeds should be paid to plaintiffs, and not to said Brown and Sweeney. The second paragraph of the prayer of complaint is, in substance, that said money be paid to plaintiffs, in the event a sale is consummated under said bond. It appears from the record that a stipulation was entered into by-[?]*?the parties, through their attornej's, in regard to the sale of the said one-twelfth interest of said mine, and the deposit of the proceeds with the clerk, which stipulation is as follows:

“[Title of the Court and Cause.]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P. 413, 3 Idaho 181, 1891 Ida. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pence-v-sweeney-idaho-1891.