Schulz v. Fox

345 P.2d 1045, 136 Mont. 152, 1959 Mont. LEXIS 103
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1959
Docket10033
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 345 P.2d 1045 (Schulz v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schulz v. Fox, 345 P.2d 1045, 136 Mont. 152, 1959 Mont. LEXIS 103 (Mo. 1959).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES:

This action was brought to have a certain promissory note and chattel mortgage, given as security, declared void and unenforceable and to enjoin the sheriff from proceeding with a threatened foreclosure sale of the mortgaged property. The parties were married on November 24, 1947, in Nogales, Arizona. The defendant was a mature person, apparently in his fifties, and was employed by the Fish and G-ame Department of Arizona in winter months. The plaintiff was a mature person, apparently in her forties, and apparently having- been previously married. At the time of the marriage, the plaintiff occupied a tract of land in the Beaverhead National Forest in Montana. Later the tract was surveyed and a permit issued to her for a fishing and hunting camp.

Beginning in 1948, and continuing every summer, the parties improved the camp- by their labor. At the outset there were no buildings thereon, but there was a camp of sorts. By spring or early summer of 1952 the camp was completed and they were receiving paying guests.

At the time of the marriage, it seems that the dream of the parties in their marital bliss was to build up a fishing and [154]*154hunting camp for the summer and fall months in Montana and a winter business of somewhat similar sort in Arizona and Nevada for the winter months. The defendant, then the husband, was a man of some means and put up the first money, some $3,000, and later more. Both parties obviously worked extremely hard on the venture. As related before, the permit from the Forest Service went to the plaintiff, then wife, in her own name. During the time of building the camp, the defendant’s mother gave each of the parties $12,000. The $24,000 was apparently used by the parties for their living expenses both in Arizona and in Montana and also to build the hunting camp. There is no question from the record that the parties considered themselves as fifty-fifty partners in the hunting camp venture.

Finally, some time before completion of the camp in 1952, the marriage had rocky passage. In the summer of 1952, the defendant was disabled and spent some time in Basin, Montana, and some time in Arizona. During this interval the parties were not living together as man and wife. During the summer of 1952, the plaintiff had the sole responsibility and effort of running the camp.

During the time the defendant was in Arizona, he received a letter from the plaintiff dated September 23, 1952. The letter submitted into evidence is a devastating homespun epistle. It establishes several facts concerning the situation and the subsequent events which cannot be disputed. It establishes that she intended to get a divorce. It establishes that she felt she owed the defendant considerable money and would pay it off in due time. It establishes that she was trying to sell the camp property.

Some time after receipt of the letter, the defendant returned to Montana from Arizona and the parties set about to adjust their business affairs and she to get the divorce. They spent some time, between the end of September and October 14th, in going over the property and their respective rights. Defendant had owned some land in Arizona, which he obtained as a World War I homestead. The property had been held by him for [155]*155some time prior to their marriage. In a renegotiation of contracts concerning the property the plaintiff’s name, as the defendant’s wife, had been pnt on the note for a balance. In the settlement of their affairs she turned this back to him. The defendant also had a Mercury car and a pickup truck which were turned back to him. The parties together had a cruiser in Arizona which was sold at a gain of $1,500 prior to this negotiation and the defendant had received that. He also had some bank accounts which the plaintiff at the time obviously respected as his personal property. In 1952, in the early summer, the defendant withdrew $4,500 from their joint account. This withdrawal was considered by the parties in their negotiations for settlement. She kept the balance of the account, about $1,000. The plaintiff had a house in Melrose, Montana, which cost $900 and which was sold for $3,500. She kept that. The negotiations between the husband and wife seemed to be one of an accounting, settling their business matters. The conferences were apparently quite extended and covered all angles of property, including all bank accounts. Apparently nothing was omitted. After a complete canvass of the situation and in agreement upon the subject matter, they went together to a lawyer in Billon, Montana, and instructed him to prepare a contract; also to draft a promissory note for plaintiff to execute to defendant a mortgage to secure payment of the same. The plaintiff also instructed the attorney to proceed with her divorce case. The attorney inquired if she knew fully what she was doing and she replied in the affirmative and directed him to go ahead.

Later that same day the parties signed the agreement, a copy of which was attached to the defendant’s answer in this suit and was in evidence. She executed the note and mortgage and verified her complaint for divorce that same day. Her complaint for divorce did not seek nor mention any property settlement, alimony, nor attorney fees. The divorce action was not contested and later went to judgment; the judgment not mentioning property settlement, alimony, nor attorney fees. It did provide for restoration of plaintiff’s former name. Following this time, [156]*156in the fall of 1952, the plaintiff paid the interest as provided in the note for a period of tiro years.

After two years the plaintiff refused to pay any further interest and insisted that the contract, note and mortgage were void. Finally, after a summary foreclosure was attempted by defendant, the instant action was commenced by plaintiff.

The complaint alleges in part that plaintiff “resolved to seek a divorce from defendant Fox because of faults # * *. That upon her advising defendant Fox of such resolution he stated he would contest any such divorce action unless said plaintiff * * * executed the * * * promissory note. That to facilitate the obtaining of said divorce, plaintiff did sign and deliver * * * [the note in question for $7,500].”

And further:

“That there was no consideration supporting said promissory note aforesaid other than the purported and intended consideration of bringing about and facilitating said divorce * * *. That while said note and mortgage appear on their faces to be valid and enforceable, in truth and in fact the same are entirely void and unenforceable at law. ’ ’

The answer put in issue the material allegations of the complaint and pleads a counterclaim in which the defendant alleges the making of the note and mortgage and that he has elected to declare all of the debt due because of plaintiff’s default. He seeks foreclosure of the mortgage. The reply put in issue the affirmative allegations of the answer.

The court’s findings and judgment were in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant appeals.

The specifications of error can be divided into two parts. Those that deal with rulings on evidence, this being an equity case, will not be reviewed. With all the evidence before the court we shall consider the cause of action stated with the evidence which was introduced to support it.

First off, we should note that this is not a divorce action nor does either party make any attack on the divorce decree.

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Schulz v. Fox
345 P.2d 1045 (Montana Supreme Court, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 P.2d 1045, 136 Mont. 152, 1959 Mont. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schulz-v-fox-mont-1959.