Peterson v. Peterson

141 P.2d 882, 105 Utah 133, 1943 Utah LEXIS 11
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1943
DocketNo. 6606.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 P.2d 882 (Peterson v. Peterson) 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
Peterson v. Peterson, 141 P.2d 882, 105 Utah 133, 1943 Utah LEXIS 11 (Utah 1943).

Opinion

WOLFE, Chief Justice.

On June 3, 1942, the plaintiffs instituted this action charging John 'Charles Peterson and Leon Fonnesbeek with breach of trust and fraud, and prayed for a decree impressing certain described real estate with a trust and for an accounting. Wallace Hurd and Bentley Mitchell, who were alleged to be grantees of the other defendants, were also made defendants. After plaintiffs rested their case, each defendant made a motion for a nonsuit, which separate motions were granted as to all defendants. Plaintiffs appeal.

Counsel for plaintiffs stated that he would not resist the motion for non-suit made by defendants Mitchejll and Hurd. This was tantamount to a stipulation that the motion for non-suit might be granted as to them. Therefore, the order as to them will not be set aside on appeal. Thero v. Franklin, 48 Utah 587, 160 P. 1188; Bancroft’s Code Pleading and Practice, Yol. 1, page 64.

In the complaint, plaintiffs allege that Anton L. Peterson died on May 6, 1930, that defendant John Charles Peterson was appointed administrator on June 28, 1932, and that when Elizabeth Ann Peterson, surviving widow of Anton, *135 died, in January, 1937 plaintiff Golden Peterson was appointed administrator of her estate. It was further alleged that for many years prior to 1930, Anton L. Peterson, Golden Peterson, Leondo Peterson, and John Charles .Peterson conducted a business as a partnership at Snow-ville; that they acquired partnership property which was put in the name of the father, Anton. At the time of Anton’s death part of this real property was involved in litigation with one Worley who claimed ownership of said property. Another tract of this land was involved in litigation with one Davis, who sued as administrator of the Estate of Yerulan Dives to foreclose a mortgage on said property. Charles, as administrator of Anton’s estate, was substituted as party defendant in both of these proceedings. The suit brought by Worley was by stipulation dismissed in 1933; the suit brought by Davis culminated in 1936 in a judgment of foreclosure and the land was sold subject to a right of redemption.

It is also alleged that defendant Fonnesbeck appeared as counsel for John Charles Peterson in the matter of the estate of Anton in May, 1935; that the inventory filed for that estate was based upon false appraisements at considerably below true value; that Charles filed a final account showing money received as $466 advanced by him and showing expenditures for funeral expenses and expenses of last sickness of $466 when in truth the expenses of the last sickness of deceased and funeral expenses were in a large measure paid by the plaintiffs out of partnership funds. In 1935, Charles represented to plaintiffs that because of the litigation involving the land left by Anton “such land could not be saved for the benefit of the estate and the heirs of said deceased, unless the heirs transferred their interest” to him, as administrator; that he would hold the property for the benefit of Elizabeth Ann Peterson for life with a remainder over to the heirs of Anton and Elizabeth Ann; that the plaintiffs because of the fact that Charles was their brother and because of their long dealings with him *136 in the partnership, relied upon said representations and signed quitclaim deeds to Charles. It is also alleged that Charles asked for and obtained from Golden the sum of $300 stating that it would be used to, assist in the redemption of the land sold in the foreclosure suit brought by Davis, and that Golden also gave him $36 and other sums of money for attorney’s fees and expense money to assist in the settlement of said estate.

It is further alleged that in the proceedings for probating the estate of Anton, Charles and Fonnesbeck represented to the probate court that the plaintiffs had quit claimed their interest in one tract of land to Charles and that he had conveye it to Fonnesbeck; that plaintiffs had assigned their interest in the “home property” to their mother, Elizabeth Ann; and that they had quit claimed a third tract of land to Charles; that because of their trust in Charles, plaintiffs made no appearance in the probate proceeding for the estate of Anton; that they procured no copy of the petition for final distribution and did not learn that Charles claimed the absolute ownership of any of this property until May, 1941, nor did they learn of the decree of distribution conveying the land to Fonnesbeck until said date.

Plaintiffs prayed that Charles be adjudged to hold the land still held by him in trust for the heirs of Anton’s estate, that Fonnesbeck and Mitchell be adjudged to hold in trust the land conveyed to Fonnesbeck and by Fonnesbeck conveyed to Mitchell; and that Charles and Fonnesbeck both be required to make an accounting of all moneys and properties received from plaintiffs.

The pleadings and the evidence show that plaintiffs seek to impress a trust upon four separate tracts of land. One tract consisted of the home property of Anton, part of which his surviving widow had been occupying as a homestead. Plaintiffs all signed a quit claim deed to her. After her death the land went to the plaintiffs and her other heirs. Plaintiffs stated that they now claim no further in *137 terest as against the defendants in regard to this land. The remaining portion of this home property is claimed by Charles. Golden testified that Anton and his wife had conveyed this land to 'Charles and that he, Golden, did not deny that Charles owned this portion of the home tract.

A second tract consisted of 160 acres in Haneel Valley which at the time of the trial was in the hands of defendant Mitchell. A third tract at the time of trial was held by Defendant Hurd. In view of the fact that plaintiffs agreed that a nonsuit might be granted as to Mitchell and Hurd, they are now precluded from asserting any interest in that land.

The fourth tract consisted of 40 acres upon which Verulan Dives had held a mortgage. In 1935 Charles obtained a quit claim deed to this land from each of the plaintiffs. Each of the plaintiffs testified that Charles had told them that the land could not be saved unless they deeded it to him so that he could clear up Anton’s estate and hold the land for the benefit of the plaintiffs and other heirs of Anton’s estate. In 1936 the Dives mortgage was foreclosed and the land was sold to Dives’ administrator, Davis. On April 10, 1937, Davis assigned his interest to Maria Peterson, wife of Charles, and in September 1937 after Charles failed to redeem the land, a sheriff’s deed issued to Maria. Golden testified that in May 1937, Charles obtained $300 from him by representing that it was to be used to redeem this land, notwithstanding the fact that Maria had purchased this land some 30 days prior to this date.

On cross-examination, Golden admitted that in the prior foreclosure suit he had testified that this 401 acre tract belonged to Charles and did not belong to Anton’s estate. Elizabeth Ann, wife of Anton, by deposition in the mortgage foreclosure suit, testified that this property belonged to her son Charles and not to Anton. In the face of this testimony we cannot hold that the trial court erred in refusing to impress this land with a trust.

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Related

Haws v. Jensen
209 P.2d 229 (Utah Supreme Court, 1949)
Peterson, Et Ux. v. Morrison
201 P.2d 278 (Utah Supreme Court, 1948)
Peterson v. Peterson
189 P.2d 135 (Utah Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
141 P.2d 882, 105 Utah 133, 1943 Utah LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-peterson-utah-1943.