Stroope v. Potter

151 P.2d 748, 48 N.M. 404
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1944
DocketNos. 4770, 4771.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 151 P.2d 748 (Stroope v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stroope v. Potter, 151 P.2d 748, 48 N.M. 404 (N.M. 1944).

Opinions

MABRY, Justice.

By stipulation of parties and with consent of the trial court, the two cases herein were combined for trial and for purposes of appeal. In Cause No. 4771 (No. 4933 in the District Court) we have a proceeding instituted in the District Court of Lincoln County by Florence Stroope Potter, the stepmother (hereinafter to be referred to as Appellee, or Mrs. Potter) as guardian of Velma Livina Stroope (hereinafter to be referred to as Appellant, or Velma), a minor, for the sale of such minor’s interest in certain patented land and a forest permit appurtenant to such real estate. In Cause No. 4770 (No. 4945 in the District Court) we have a proceeding instituted in the District Court of Lincoln County on behalf of the said minor, Velma, by her guardian ad litem, against the said guardian, Mrs. Potter, and the latter’s present husband, John W. Potter, to whom the stepmother was married after the death of the minor’s natural father, Albert Stroope. This latter action is one seeking an accounting from Mrs. Potter during the time she was administering the estate of her deceased husband, Albert Stroope, and as guardian of the said Velma Stroope, from the time of the death of Albert Stroope until the time of the hearing of the Cause in the District Court. The cases present many facts in common and can be appropriately considered here together.

Briefly stated, there is involved in the first appeal hereinbefore mentioned, No. 4771, the question of whether certain patented land and a forest permit used in connection therewith is the separate property of Mrs. Potter or whether it is either of the separate estate of Albert Stroope, deceased, or the community property of the deceased and Mrs. Potter. The trial court held that such real property, including the forest permit employed in conjunction therewith, was the sole and separate property of Mrs. Potter; that it was purchased by the husband and conveyed to her as a gift at the time of the purchase; and that the said minor child, Velma, had no interest in such property. The land and forest permit involved in this appeal were ordered sold and by stipulation of the parties a sufficient amount of the purchase price placed in escrow to be held for disbursement by the escrow holder under order of the District Court as the interest of the parties, Mrs. Potter and Velma, might appear as a result of the decision of this Court flowing from the appeal. By agreement entered into by all parties, confirmed by the trial court, it was shown to be for the best interest of the minor ward that the portion of the ranch in which she admittedly had an interest should be sold together with the other portion, that claimed, and found by the court to be, exclusively the property of Appellee, that a better price could be obtained. There is no disagreement over the fact of such sale or the price received for all tracts of land covered thereby, and the grazing permits going with the sale.

As to the appeal in Cause No. 4770 there is involved, as we have said, an accounting whose correctness is challenged on the part of the stepdaughter, Velma. This dates from the time of the death of Appellee’s former husband and her appointment as administratrix, July 1, 1932, to March 23, 1942, a period of some ten years. The court held as to Cause No. 4771, as we have noted, that the ranch property was the separate estate of Appellee, Mrs. Potter, both as to the patented land and the forest permit appurtenant thereto, so far as it pertained to the 160 acres of patented land and permit purchased from the brother of Albert Stroope, one Ab Stroope, and allegedly conveyed to Mrs. Potter, the wife of Albert Stroope, at the time. And, as to another and separate portion of the ranch consisting of 240 acres, and a similar acreage of forest permit appurtenant thereto and supported thereby, this was, in that cause, held to be the separate estate of Albert Stroope, the deceased husband and father of the minor, in which Velma, one of the two children, would share to the extent of a three-eighths interest. There is no dispute concerning the correctness of the court’s holding in respect to this latter ranch with the forest permit appurtenant being the separate property of Albert Stroope in which the wife would participate to the extent of only one-fourth interest, 1941 Comp. Sec. 31-110, with the two children receiving the remaining three-fourths interest. Incidentally, the other sister, Hivana, upon becoming of age, sold her entire interest and right to participate in the estate to her stepmother, Mrs. Potter, and such interest is not involved in either appeal.

There are seventy-one assignments of error, reduced, when combined for notice and argument, to five specific points. These are: (I) The findings and conclusions do not comply with the rule of this court. (II) The land and forest permit acquired from Ab Stroope by Albert Stroope were the separate property of the latter and Appellant was entitled to an undivided three-eighths interest therein; and the court erred in holding this land and permit to be the separate property of Appellee. (Ill) The court erred in holding that all the sheep and other personal property owned by Albert Stroope at the time of his death were community property, (IV) The court erred in refusing to require the Appellee to account for the sheep, to bring the account down to date, and in refusing to appoint a receiver of the sheep or require additional security for the protection of the ward. (V) The question of the accounting.

We notice first Point I, and hold that the findings of fact and conclusions of law, as here made by the trial court, are in sufficient compliance with our rule in this respect. 1941 Comp. Sec. 19-101(52) (B). The findings of ultimate facts could have been more conveniently set out with the omission of many findings which are, unquestionably, of evidentiary facts only. Yet these suits involved a lengthy and intricate accounting, but for which, the findings would doubtless have been more briefly stated and limited to findings of clearly ultimate facts. What are the ultimate and what are evidentiary facts often presents a close question, as this court heretofore observed. Christmas v. Cowden, 44 N. M. 517, 523, 105 P.2d 484. At least it may be said that the decision is contained in a single document and that there are findings of ultimate facts necessary to determine the issues in the case and that each finding and •conclusion is separately stated and numbered.

Point II involves the appeal in Cause No. 4771, the land and forest permit acquired from Ab Stroope, the brother. Error is assigned to the court’s holding that the land and permit were the separate property of Appellee, Mrs. Potter. Appellant urges upon us consideration of the circumstances that the deed to the 160 .acres of land purchased from Ab Stroope and conveyed to her stepmother, was first made to her father, Albert Stroope, as grantee and thereafter the name of the grantee was erased and the stepmother’s name inserted in lieu thereof. And this assignment is well taken. While it might be said there is sufficient evidence to support the theory that the intention of both the grantor, Ab Stroope, and Albert Stroope, the grantee first named, was that the conveyance should go to Appellee as her separate property, the evidence is not sufficiently substantial to support the finding that it was actually conveyed to her, rather than to Albert Stroope as attempted by the first draft.

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151 P.2d 748, 48 N.M. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stroope-v-potter-nm-1944.