Scott v. Sullivan

244 P. 466, 79 Colo. 173, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 15, 1926
DocketNo. 11,234.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 244 P. 466 (Scott v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Sullivan, 244 P. 466, 79 Colo. 173, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 317 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The action is one to quiet title to real estate. At the first trial the findings were in favor of the plaintiff and a decree passed adjudging title to be in her. Upon a review of that decree in this court, Sullivan v. Scott, 73 Colo. 451, 216 Pac. 515, the same was set aside and the cause remanded for a new trial. This court in its opinion said that the plaintiff based her title upon two separate tax deeds: One executed in 1889; the other in 1906. The opinion further states that the trial court made no findings as to the 1906 deed, but made its findings under the allegations respecting the 1889 deed. The parties are not in accord as to the reason for remanding the cause generally without specifying upon what issue a new trial was to be had, or without directing a specific *175 judgment. We are inclined to the view that the plaintiff’s contention that the case was sent down for trial on the issues as to the 1906 deed is correct, but the reason for remanding is immaterial since, at the second trial which we are now reviewing, the court found that both tax deeds were void, the earlier one so declared by the Supreme Court, the later one by the trial court under the evidence, and thereupon adjudged the title to be in the defendant upon his proofs of his own title. The proceedings in the district court, after our remittitur was sent down were unusual. It appears that the plaintiff had suggested to Judge Stephenson, one of the judges of the district court of this district, that he call in a judge of another district to try the case because the plaintiff did not wish Judge Stephenson to try it. Thereupon Judge Stephenson requested Judge Hersey of the Second District to try the case and it was set down for trial on two or three different days, but because of the inability of Judge ITersey to be present at either time, all the trial orders were vacated and the cause was continued by stipulation until the term of court which convened April 15, 1924. On the preceding day, the 14th of April, the plaintiff filed in the court the following voluntary dismissal: “Comes now Minnie K. Scott, the plaintiff herein, in her own proper person, and without prejudice, and at her costs, dismisses this action.” She did not appear in person thereafter during this term. On the following day, the first day of the April term, Coen, Mallory & Paynter entered their appearance as her attorneys. John P. Mail appeared as attorney for the defendant. When the attention of the court, Judge Stephenson presiding, was called to this alleged dismissal, defendant’s counsel stated that he neither agreed to nor resisted it, but demanded a hearing upon the question of his own title. The court granted the demand, heard defendant’s proofs, made findings of fact in his favor and entered a decree ad *176 judging the title of the lands to he in him, and further adjudged that both of the tax deeds upon which the plaintiff had relied in her complaint were void. The court made other findings and recitals in its decree that several months before the opening of the term the plaintiff had conveyed all of her title in the premises to Walter Hultquist, who, after giving a trust deed upon the premises to secure the payment of certain promissory notes, conveyed the property by quitclaim deed to one Anna F. Jones, such transactions having taken place long after the notice of lis pendens had been filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder of the county where the land is situate and after the mandate of the Supreme Court reversing the decree at the first trial, had been entered, which lis pendens and mandate have ever since been on file. The foregoing facts appear from the orders of the' court and the recitals of the decree contained in the record proper. None of the evidence that was offered by the defendant at the trial or any other proceedings, if any, that occurred at the trial have been embodied in a bill of exceptions which was authorized at the April term.

In May, 1924, the plaintiff, who was joined by Hultquist and Jones, filed a verified motion in the case to vacate the decree and therein they say that they, and each of them, separately move the court to vacate the same and set it aside. This motion was not traversed by affidavit or formal pleading, but the court, in the exercise of its inherent discretionary power, permitted the defendant to offer evidence upon the hearing, which, together with proceedings in connection with the vacation motion, are embodied in defendant’s bill of exceptions relating to the hearing on the motion to vacate, which bill contains some of the proceedings that took place at the trial, which we have examined on the assumption that we may properly do so, without stopping to inquire if the contents of the bill are properly before us. There is no claim here that the evidence produced *177 by defendant was not sufficient to sustain the findings of the court upon which the decree now being reviewed was rendered. This judgment must be affirmed, irrespective of the showing made by the defendant. The verified motion to vacate, even if not contradicted, and if the defendant’s evidence is ignored, is insufficient to justify a reopening of the case, as we now proceed to show.

1. Although in an ordinary equitable or legal action a plaintiff, under section 184 of our Code, O. L. 1921, p. 139, may, before trial, dismiss his action if a counterclaim has not been made, he may not in an equitable action to try title to real estate, by a voluntary dismissal of the action, prevent or preclude the court from granting affirmative relief to the defendant and adjudging title to the lands to be in him if he has set forth in his answer, though not in the form of a counterclaim, the title which he claims. In this case the answer contained no formal counterclaim but therein the defendant set forth that he was the owner in fee of the premises. In Empire R. & C. Co. v. Herrick, 22 Colo. App. 394, 124 Pac. 748, which was an action to quiet title to real estate, after the plaintiff’s title was held by the court to be void, the defendant was permitted to establish his title after plaintiff had suffered a nonsuit. That case was not in its facts exactly like this but the principle is the same. The plaintiff, having brought the defendant into court to assert any title or claim that he may have in the lands in question, should not be permitted, after dismissing his action before trial, to say that the defendant may not have the aid of the court in ascertaining if his own title is good. No counterclaim had been filed in the Herrick case; no counterclaim was filed by the defendant in the present case. In each case the defendant asserted in his answer title in himself. There is no difference between the Herrick case and this case as to the form and contents of the answer, or as to the question we are now considering. In Phares v. Don Carlos, 74 Colo. *178 356, 221 Pac. 883, which was an action to quiet title, the defendant in his answer claimed an interest in the property. Held, that it was error to dismiss the action on motion of plaintiff without notice to the defendant, the latter being entitled to have his claim adjudicated. In McMillen v. Hayman, 74 Colo. 300, 221 Pac. 893, it was.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 466, 79 Colo. 173, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-sullivan-colo-1926.