Roy E. Hays Co. v. Pierson

234 P. 494, 32 Wyo. 416, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 14
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1925
Docket1167
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 234 P. 494 (Roy E. Hays Co. v. Pierson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roy E. Hays Co. v. Pierson, 234 P. 494, 32 Wyo. 416, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 14 (Wyo. 1925).

Opinions

*422 Blume, Justice.

This is an action brought by W. S. Pierson and Dorothy Pierson, plaintiffs below and defendants in error here, against Roy E. Hays & Co., The Riverton State Bank, and another. The object of the action was, in brief, to have the court cancel certain mortgages given by Fred Primm to defendants in error on Lot 16 in Sec. 2 and Lots 13 and 14 in Section 10, T. 1 S. of R. 4e, Fremont County, Wyoming, to enjoin the attempted foreclosure under one of said mortgages, to declare said land to be the property of the partnership of Lawrence & Primm, and to subject it to the payment of a certain judgment theretofore rendered in" favor of respondents for an indebtedness of said partnership. A preliminary injunction was issued to stop such foreclosure, a trial on the merits was had to the court without the intervention of a jury, and on June 22, 1922, the court entered judgment declaring the said land to be the property of the partnership of Lawrence & Primm, cancelling the mortgages aforesaid, holding that plaintiffs are judgment creditors of said firm and as such entitled to have said land subjected to the payment of this judgment and making the injunction theretofore issued in the cause permanent. From this judgment so rendered the said Roy E. Hays & Co., and the Riverton State Bank, plaintiffs in error herein, have brought proceedings in error.

*423 The said partnership was composed oí one Arthur Lawrence and Fred Primm, and it condneted its business in Fremont County. Two mortgages are in controversy here, both executed by said Fred Primm personally on the aforementioned lands as if his own. One of these was made to Roy E. Hays & Co. on July 20, 1920, the description in which was corrected by a correction mortgage of March 11, 1921. This mortgage covers only an undivided one-half interest in said land. The original of this mortgage was filed for record on July 21, 1920, and the correction mortgage on March 11, 1921. The second of these mortgages in controversy here was made to said bank on November 10, 1920, filed for record on November 12, 1920, Breniman, the cashier, acting for the bank. The indebtedness of respondents seems to have arisen by reason of the fact that, commencing with 1918, W. S. Pierson was employed by said partnership to care for some cattle of said partnership on shares. The patent to the land hereinbe-fore described was issued by the Government of the United States' to Fred Primm on April 15, 1918, filed for record March 9,1921. When this land was purchased or entered does not appear. On February 4, 1918, said Fred Primm executed to Arthur Lawrence a quit-claim deed to an undivided one-half interest in and to Lot 16 in Section 2, and Lot 7 in Section 10, in Twp. 1, S. of Range 4, E. of the Wind River Meridian. This deed was kept at least a portion of the time in a safety deposit box in said bank, but neither of the plaintiffs in error are shown to have had any knowledge of its existence. It was not filed for record until September 20, 1921. What relation, if any, Lot 7 in Section 10 above mentioned has to the land in controversy does not appear,- Lot 16 above mentioned alone seems to be a part of the premises contained in the mortgages to the appellants herein. In the spring of 1918 Arthur Lawrence, who Was a British subject, left Fremont County, joined the army in the World War, and was killed about October 1 of that year. After he had left, the part *424 nership business was conducted by Fred Primm alone. Before his departure, however, and on February 4, 1918, Lawrence had executed a power of attorney to Primm “to take charge of and manage my interest in the partnership now existing between myself and the said Fred Primm, which consists of an interest in the Legal Tender Saloon of Riverton, in real estate, live stock, oil locations, ranch and live stock business, and all other business in which the said Fred Primm and myself are interested jointly,” and giving full power to Primm to do all necessary things. At that time the partners owned what was called the “Crowheart Ranch,” evidently some distance from the lands in controversy, and some cattle, the headquarters for which seem to have been on said ranch. An account was carried by the partnership in the Riverton State Bank. Some mortgages appear to have been executed at different times to said bank and to other parties on said cattle and on said Crowheart Ranch, but the land for which Primm held said patents was never mortgaged except by the mortgages here in controversy. The partnership affairs evidently became involved and the mortgages on the chattels as well as the Crowheart Ranch were foreclosed in the summer of 1920, and at that time the partnership apparently had no property left unless it be the property in controversy. The account of the partnership in the bank was closed on November 14, 1919, and whatever business was left to be done for and on behalf of the partnership was then conducted by said Fred Primm without keeping, apparently, a separate account of it for and on behalf of said partnership, of which fact the cashier of said appellant bank was aware. The cattle of said partnership were wintered, during the winter of 1919-1920, at and around the lands in controversy. The exact time when they were taken from said land does not appear, but it would seem to have been in the spring of 1920. No other use appears to have been made of said land by said partnership. It was occupied by said-Fred Primm during the summer of *425 1920, although the manner of his occupancy does not clearly appear. He seems to have had a tent on the land, in which he was living, had some chickens which he cared for, and apparently had the intention at that time to make permanent improvements upon the land.

M. J. Martin was the vice-president of said bank during 1917, 1918, and up to October 1st, 1919, when he severed his connection with that institution. He was manager and apparently had charge of all of the loans made. He testified that Fred Primm and Arthur Lawrence talked with him at various times about their affairs, including times when loans were made to them, in ivhich they both stated that they held an equal interest in everything they owned, that they were in partnership in the land business, and “in all other dealings of every kind and nature;” that some of these talks were had in the presence of A. J. Cunningham, the president of the bank, and "W". F. Breniman, the cashier; that he and said president and cashier talked this fact over a number of times; and that the bank always considered the land in controversy to be a part of the partnership property. The conversations with, and statements, to, Mr. Cunningham and Mr. Breniman are not fixed as to time. The talks which the witness had with said partners when they were together must have been before March 1st, 1918, about which time Lawrence joined the army. Cunningham and Breninam both deny any of such conversations with, or statements to them, and the latter testified that at the time he took the mortgage for said bank in controversy, he had no knowledge whatever that said land was partnership property. Mrs. Carberry, the former wife of Arthur Lawrence, testified that she had a talk with both of said partners in which they stated that they owned the land “fifty-fifty” and that they were “in partnership in everything that they had.” The members of the firm of Roy E. Hays & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
234 P. 494, 32 Wyo. 416, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-e-hays-co-v-pierson-wyo-1925.