Rolapp v. Ogden & Northwestern Railroad

110 P. 364, 37 Utah 540, 1910 Utah LEXIS 77
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1910
DocketNo. 2116
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 110 P. 364 (Rolapp v. Ogden & Northwestern Railroad) 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
Rolapp v. Ogden & Northwestern Railroad, 110 P. 364, 37 Utah 540, 1910 Utah LEXIS 77 (Utah 1910).

Opinions

FRICK, J.

On March 13, 1908, appellant, as trustee, began this action in the district court of Weber County, Utah, to foreclose two mortgages in the form of trust deeds, which, it was alleged, were executed and delivered to the trustee by the Ogden & Northwestern Railroad Company, a corporation, hereinafter1 styled Railroad Company, to secure the payment of certain bonds issued by said company. The first one of the trust deeds was dated February 20, 1904, and was given to secure eighty bonds of five hundred dollars each, which were dated' January 1, 1904, made payable in twenty years from date with five per cent, interest, payable semi-annually on the first days of July and January of each year, interest payments to begin with July 1, 1904. The second trust deed bore date September 15, 1904, and was executed and delivered by said Railroad Company to the trustee to secure forty bonds of five hundred dollars each, dated January 1, 1904, payable in twenty years from date with five per cent, interest, payable semi-annually on the first days of July and January of each [545]*545year, interest payments to begin on July 1, 1905. The complaint is in the usual form in foreclosure proceedings and conforms to the statute of this state, and each set of bonds, and the trust deeds securing the same, are set forth in separate causes of action in the complaint.

The property that was included within the trust deeds is in each of said deeds described as follows: “AH of the real estate and buildings of the Ogden & Northwestern Railroad Company, all tracts, rails laid, sidings, turnouts, bridges, depots and stations, cars, motors, engines, and other stock and equipment, snowplows, tools, implements, easements and privileges, materials on hand, furniture, and fixtures, all franchises and rights of way, and all personal property used in connection with the said line of railway, now owned or hereafter acquired, used on the present mileage by this company, and to be used in connection with said line of railroad, being located in the counties of Weber and Box Elder, state of Utah.”

The only parties who were made defendants to the action when it was commenced were the railroad company aforesaid and one A. R. C. Smith, who, it was alleged, claimed “some interest or lien upon the aforesaid mortgaged property.” Mr. Smith died after he had filed his answer, and the executors of his last will and testament were substituted as defendants. We shall treat the case as if Mr. Smith were defending in person.

Mr. Smith, in his answer, after various admissions and denials, affirmatively averred that he, on January 30 and April 22, 1908, obtained judgments against said company in the district court of Weber County, Utah, amounting in the aggregate to $3781.25, which were wholly unpaid; that said judgments (one for costs and the other for damages) were obtained in one action instituted against said company by said Smith to recover damages for the destruction of his property by fire negligently set by the Railroad Company. We remark that the property was destroyed, and said action was commenced several years after the bonds and trust deeds [546]*546in question were executed and delivered. Mr. Smith also averred that the trust deeds set forth in the complaint were made and delivered “without any consideration moving to his codefendant from the plaintiff or any other person.” He further averred as follows: “He further alleges upon information and belief that said mortgages were recorded by his said co-defendant with the purpose and intent to hinder, delay, and defraud any and' all creditors that it might thereafter have, and he further, upon his information and belief, alleges: That said mortgages were delivered to the plaintiff as aforesaid, and accepted by him, with the purpose and intent of hindering, delaying, and defrauding this defendant, and preventing him from enforcing the collection of his said judgments.” Mr. Smith also denied that the trust deeds were ever delivered to the trustee. There was a special demurrer interposed to the answer, but this demurrer did not in any way refer to or assail any of the matters affirmatively pleaded, and hence is of no importance now.

At the hearing the court found the issues against the appellant on the first cause of action and held the first issue of bonds and trust deed void as against the judgments of Mr. Smith on various grounds, but valid as against the company. The second issue of bonds and trust deed the court held valid, and also held them to be a prior superior lien on the mortgaged property, as against Mr. Smith’s judgments. The court entei’ed a decree of foreclosure, ordered the mortgaged property sold and the proceeds applied as follows: (1) To pay the amount found to be due on the second trust deed; (2) to pay the amount found due on the judgments of Mr. Smith, and (3) the remainder to be paid to appellant as trustee under the first deed. The trustee alone appeals.

Some of the findings of fact are vigorously assailed. It is also contended that the allegations of the answer were insufficient in some particulars to authorize the relief granted by the court. The pleadings and findings are very voluminous, covering over eighty pages of the printed abstract. It is impracticable to set any of them forth even in condensed form, and we shall not attempt to do so. Moreover, the view [547]*547we take of the whole case makes it unnecessary for us to make an extended statement of the evidence adduced at the hearing.

We shall therfore confine ourselves to a statement of what we deem to he the material and controlling facts, as we have .determined them from a careful reading of the evidence contained in the original bill of exceptions, from which it is made to appear that in June, 1901, one William A. Paxton, of Omaha, Neb., as the owner, by proper deed conveyed to David Eccles, of Ogden, Utah, certain lands specifically described in said deed, and on which lands were situated what was commonly known as the Ogden Hot Springs, all of which, together with the improvements surrounding them, as well as the line of railroad between Ogden City and said springs, and all property of every kind and description, including all franchises and rights of all kinds connected with said springs and railroad, were conveyed by said deed to said Eccles for the sum of $20,000, which sum was then and there paid by said Eccles to said Paxton for all of said property, rights, and franchises. At or about the time said property was purchased and paid for by said Eccles, he and a number of certain individuals, whom we shall refer to hereafter, entered into an agreement among themselves whereby it was agreed that the railroad property aforesaid should be segregated from the springs property and should be incorporated, and that each one of said individuals then agreed to and did contribute a certain amount to a fund which was to he used to repay Mr. Eccles for the amount he had paid to Mr. Pax-ton for all of the property. Mr. Eccles himself agreed to and did contribute to this fund. It was also understood that each person who had contributed to the fund aforesaid should1 receive stock in the railroad corporation which was to be formed, in the amount that he had contributed to said fund. In other words, the railroad property was to be conveyed by Mr. Eccles to the. corporation when organized as payment in full for two hundred shares of one hundred dollars each of its capital stock, and each one of the persons aforesaid was to receive one share of said stock for each one hundred dol[548]*548lars that he had contributed to the fund aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 364, 37 Utah 540, 1910 Utah LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolapp-v-ogden-northwestern-railroad-utah-1910.