Peterson v. Hague

4 P.2d 350, 51 Idaho 175, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 111
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1931
DocketNo. 5710.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 350 (Peterson v. Hague) 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
Peterson v. Hague, 4 P.2d 350, 51 Idaho 175, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 111 (Idaho 1931).

Opinion

*177 VARIAN, J.

—Respondent Carl G. Peterson brought this action to quiet title to certain real property situate at Lava Hot Springs, in Bannock county. On December 21, 1918, respondent and his wife, Ermina Peterson, executed their promissory note to the Lava Hot Springs State Bank for $600, and to secure the same executed a mortgage covering the property in controversy, which mortgage was duly recorded. Thereafter, on July 13, 1920, respondent was adjudged insane and confined to the State Asylum at Blackfoot. On December 30, 1921, he was paroled from said *178 asylum but not discharged as cured. Thereafter, on December 3, 1928, the probate court denied respondent’s petition to be restored to sanity, and adjudged him still insane. On August 9, 1920, Charles M. Bell was duly appointed guardian of respondent’s estate, and was thereafter duly discharged as such guardian on August 14, 1924, since which time respondent has had no general guardian.

On February 3, 1923, said Bell, as guardian aforesaid, executed and delivered to one Jane It. Hague his promissory note for $600, and his mortgage upon the premises involved in this action, to secure the same, without authority of the probate court as provided by statute. (Sess. Laws 1919, chap. 57, p. 167.) No release of the mortgage of the Lava Hot Springs State Bank was ever recorded, although a release executed February 5, 1923, was received in evidence.

About the time he petitioned for his discharge as guardian, Bell filed his final account in- the probate court and duly accounted therein for the $600, received from Mrs. Hague, which said account was approved and settled by the probate court.

On February 8, 1924, respondent and his wife, Ermina Peterson, were divorced, the wife afterwards marrying one Smack. On June 4, 1925, the said Jane 3⅞. Hague brought suit against respondent, his former wife, and others claiming some interest in the property, setting forth in detail the foregoing facts and alleging in substance that the loan so made to the guardian was made for the purpose of paying off the said note and mortgage to the Lava Hot Springs State Bank; that the amount paid by her to said guardian became part of the guardianship estate and was used by the guardian to pay off the note and mortgage to said bank, and that all of it was so used. This complaint prayed that the mortgage to the bank be revived to the amount of plaintiff’s debt, and interest, and that she be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee bank therein; that the satisfaction of said mortgage made by the bank be canceled; that a conveyance by Peterson, to defendants B. C. Madill, and A. W. Miller, made without authority *179 during disability, be adjudged fraudulent and void; that plaintiff have judgment against Peterson; and that the property be sold, etc., to satisfy the same. Peterson, by his guardian ad litem, denying the material allegations of the complaint, alleged that the note and mortgage given by Bell, the guardian, were executed without authority and were void; denied that the sum so loaned ever became part of the guardianship estate, or that the same was expended for the payment by the guardian of the note to the Lava Hot Springs State Bank, and admits that the conveyance by Peterson to Madill and Miller was made without authority and therefore void. Madill and Miller, defendants, defaulted, and the action was dismissed as to the remaining defendant, John Murer. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were waived and the court decreed subrogation and that the property be sold as prayed for. Plaintiff Hague became the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, and on November 5, 1926, sheriff’s deed to the property herein involved issued to her. Mrs. Hague, on May 5, 1926, conveyed said premises by warranty deed to Charlie and Sadie John, appellants, said warranty deed being filed for record September 24, 1927.

Bespondent Peterson brings this action by P. C. O ’Malley, his next friend and guardian ad litem, being thereunto authorized by order of court. The amended complaint sets out in great detail the facts above related and charged that the money borrowed from Mrs. Hague was never employed in paying off the debt and mortgage to the Lava Hot Springs State Bank, and that said debt was fully paid and the mortgage released, though still standing unreleased of record, in the year 1919, and prior to the execution of the mortgage to Mrs. Hague, and asked that title be quieted in respondent and for damages for detention of the premises. The court found for plaintiff and ordered title quieted in him but denied his claim for damages, this being an action to quiet title.

The defendants, Jane B. Hague, Lava Hot Springs State Bank, Ben C. Madill, A. W. Miller and Charles M. Bell, *180 defaulted, and the defendants Charlie and Sadie John answered denying generally the allegations of the amended complaint, and appeal from the judgment' quieting title in the plaintiff.

The fundamental question presented by this appeal is whether the district court had jurisdiction to enter the decree of foreclosure in Hague v. Peterson. It is conceded that it had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter of that action but respondent contends that it did not have jurisdiction of the question it assumed to decide, i. e., the right of Mrs. Hague to be subrogated to the rights of the Lava Hot Springs State Bank and to the relief granted her. Therefore, unless the decree in that case was void upon the face of the record the. court was not justified in this case in concluding that the sale under said decree passed no title to appellants’ predecessor, Mrs. Hague. (Nixon v. Tongren, 33 Ida. 287, 193 Pac. 731. See Gile v. Wood, 32 Ida. 752, 188 Pac. 36; Miller v. Pront, 33 Ida. 709, 197 Pac. 1023.)

Respondent contends that at the time Mrs. Hague loaned $600 to his general guardian on February 3, 1923, the debt for that amount to Lava Hot Springs State Bank had been fully paid and discharged, and testimony offered by him tends to show that a note for $600 to said bank, dated December 26, 1918, was fully paid by him during the year 1919, and before he was adjudged insane.

The principal objection to the foreclosure decree in Hague v. Peterson is that the allegations of the complaint are not sufficient to tender the issue of the right to subrogation because the allegations are merely that plaintiff is “informed and believes,” without further alleging the facts to be, etc. The rule undoubtedly obtains that in addition to the averment as to information and belief there must be a direct averment of the fact or facts, otherwise no issue is raised. (Standard Encyclopedia of Procedure, vol. 12, p. 901; 49 C. J. 148, sec. 163; Swank v. Sweetwater Irr. Co., 15 Ida. 353, 98 Pac. 297; Warburton v. Ralph, 9 Wash. 537, 38 Pac. 140; Nichols & Shepard Co. v. Hubert, 150 Mo. 620, 51 S. W. 1031.)

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 350, 51 Idaho 175, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-hague-idaho-1931.