Shafer v. Killpack

173 P. 948, 53 Utah 468, 1918 Utah LEXIS 25
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1918
DocketNo. 3202
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 173 P. 948 (Shafer v. Killpack) 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
Shafer v. Killpack, 173 P. 948, 53 Utah 468, 1918 Utah LEXIS 25 (Utah 1918).

Opinion

GIDEON, J.

The complaint in this action contains the usual allegations for the foreclosure of a mortgage and for a deficiency judgment against the makers of the note secured by the mortgage. None of the defendants answered except James S. W. Frame and his wife, Frances Elizabeth Frame. These defendants filed a counterclaim alleging ownership of the premises in question and possession for more than ten years; that [470]*470their codefendant John D. Killpaek, Jr., through fraud, succeeded in obtaining possession of a deed executed on or about July 9, 1910, by Frame and wife conveying title to the premises. Judgment was entered foreclosing the mortgage and directing the sale of the premises. From that judgment Frame and wife appeal.

The facts, as disclosed by the record, briefly stated, are these: Frame was the owner of and, with his family, occupied the land in question as a home in the year 1910 and for some years prior thereto. During the early part of 1910 negotiations were had by and between Frame and Killpaek with a view of trading the premises belonging to Frame for certain lands situate in the state of Idaho. The premises owned by Frame were incumbered with a mortgage in the sum of $1,500. The premises to be received in exchange were also incumbered with a mortgage for the sum of $3,500, and Frame agreed to 'give a second mortgage on the same premises to Killpaek for $3,000 additional. The. grantee in each deed assumed the respective mortgages. Negotiations had proceeded to the point that on July 9. 1910, Frame and wife executed a deed to Killpaek for the premises in question. That deed was left in. the possession of an attorney in Salt Lake City to be delivered to Killpaek whenever such attorney found the title to the premises in Idaho to be as represented. Thereafter, on or about August 20, 1910, the attorney, having satisfied himself ■ as to the title of the Idaho property, delivered the deed to Killpaek, and the same was immediately recorded. Prior to that date, and some time during the month of July, 1910, Killpaek, accompanied by plaintiff, Shafer, visited said premises, and found the same in possession of appellants, Mrs. Frame being present that day. At the request of plaintiff and Killpaek she showed them through the house and explained the cost of constructing it. At the trial Mrs. Frame testified that she then understood that Shafer was there with.a view of either buying or making a loan, on the property. No inquiry was made by Shafer as to whether Frame or his wife had any interest in the property, and neither of them indicated or intimated to Shafer that they,' or either of them, claimed any interest or ownership in said [471]*471premises. On August 20, 1910, plaintiff loaned Killpack $3,000, taking a note and mortgage on the premises executed by Killpack and wife to secure that loan, and out of the money paid off the preexisting mortgage of $1,500. Shafer then gave the balance of the $3,000 to Killpack. It is admitted that at the time of the loan Frame with his wife and family still occupied the premises, and did for some time thereafter.

At the trial a jury was impaneled at the request of appellants. After the testimony was practically all in the court discharged the jury and determined the issues without the assistance or findings of the jury. The appellants insist that that was error, claiming that they were entitled to have the judgment of the jury upon the question of fraud raised by their counterclaim. The court made findings of fact determining all the issues .on the question of fraud against appellants.

1 It is not pretended or claimed in this court that there was any evidence in the record which in any way sustained the allegations of the counterclaim that plaintiff was a party to any fraud, if any fraud was practiced, on the part of Killpack. It is conceded that, so far as plaintiff was concerned, he acted entirely in good faith in making the loan, and had no knowledge or information as to the dealings or nature of the contract between Frame and Killpack. While it is true that the court in its findings determined all of the issues on the question of fraud against appellants, holding there was no evidence to sustain the allegations, still, as we view the record, that becomes immaterial, and it was not error to refuse to submit such issues to the jury.

2 Furthermore, these proceedings were equitable and the findings of the jury were only advisory to the court. It was in the power of the chancellor to direct such findings as in his judgment the facts warranted. Escamilla v. Pingree, 44 Utah, 421, 141 Pac. 103, L. R. A. 1915B, 475. Counsel for appellant in their brief state that they rely wholly upon the doctrine or principle that the Frames being in the open possession of the premises was sufficient notice to put Shafer upon inquiry, and it was his duty to ascertain by some investigation what interest, if any, they retained or had [472]*472in tbe premises occupied by them. In support, of that contention counsel cite and rely upon two former decisions of this court, namely, Toland v. Corey, 6 Utah, 392, 24 Pac. 190, and Land & Live Stock Co. v. Dixon, 10 Utah, 334, 37 Pac. 573. We have no intention of departing from the rule laid down by this court in the case first above cited “that an occupant’s possession is actual notice of his title, and all persons with notice of such possession must at their peril take notice of his full title in the premises, no difference what the record shows, ’ ’ under facts similar to the facts in that case or to the facts as found in the case last above cited. But the facts in the case at bar do not bring it within the rules announced in. those cases. In the Toland Case the defendant there founded his rights upon a foreclosure sale based upon mortgages executed by one who hold’ the repord title, but who was not in possession of the premises. It appears that the plaintiff in that ease acquired from the party giving the mortgage a deed to the premises prior to the execution and delivery of the mortgages, but did not record such deed. During all of that time, however, the plaintiff was in the open and actual possession of the premises, and in an action to quiet title to the premises the court held that the mortgagee was charged with notice of any interest that plaintiff had in the premises by reason of her occupancy. In Land & Live Stock Co. v. Dixon, supra, the plaintiff obtained titl.e from one not in possession of the premises, and obtained such title while the defendant was in the actual and open possession of the premises, which possession had been continuous for some years. In neither of those cases was the party asserting title adverse to the occupant claiming title by deed or conveyance from the occupant.

3 To the general rule that any one occupying land is notice to every one of any interest the occupant may have in such premises there is an exception recognized by the great weight of authority, namely, that a vendor having by deed conveyed the title to the premises and remaining in possession for a short time is not constructive or actual notice to purchasers of any interest claimed by the grantor in such premises, and unless the occupancy continues for such [473]*473length of time as would be inconsistent with the idea of retaining possession at the sufferance of the grantee, the presumption will be that he is in possession of such premises with the permission of the grantee and subordinate to and consistent with the grant.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P. 948, 53 Utah 468, 1918 Utah LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shafer-v-killpack-utah-1918.