Thomas v. Stevens

203 P.2d 597, 69 Idaho 100, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 211
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1949
DocketNo. 7419.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 203 P.2d 597 (Thomas v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Stevens, 203 P.2d 597, 69 Idaho 100, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 211 (Idaho 1949).

Opinion

*102 TAYLOR, District Judge.

In April, 1933, the plaintiffs, husband and wife, entered into a written contract with the defendants, by the terms of which they undertook to sell to defendants the following described property in Owyhee County, Idaho, to wit:

Lots 5 and 6 of Section 23, and Lot 7 of Section 22, and the NWJ4 NWJ4 of Section 26, all in Twp. 5 S, R. 5, E. B. M.

The plaintiffs had no title to approximately 12 acres of Lots 5, 6, and 7 lying north of “the Smith, Kerry and Chase line”, the rest of the land was community property of the plaintiffs. The contract was drawn in triplicate. It was fully executed by the defendants, and was signed by plaintiff, Arthur R. Thomas, at the time, but was not signed by Mrs. Thomas nor acknowledged by either of the plaintiffs until January 19, 1938. At which time one copy only was signed and acknowledged. Neither the copy which plaintiff Thomas mailed to defendants, nor the one retained by him were ever signed or acknowledged by Mrs. Thomas. The copy which was ultimately completed was originally sent to the Bru-neau State Bank, at Bruneau, Idaho, where, by its terms, it was to have been placed in escrow. Thereafter the bank returned this copy to plaintiff Thomas because it was not signed by Mrs. Thomas and was not acknowledged. Just when it was returned is not shown. But, Thomas testified “it was probably a couple of years afterward, or it may have been longer, but it laid there on my desk for some time.” And in answer to the question: “And you had it in your desk for a long period of time?” “It was around there among some papers and lying on my desk there.”

The defendant, E. L. Stevens, testified as follows:

“Q. And when did you next hear about the deal? A. Why, when they sent, when they sent us one. Thomas mailed us one with his signature on, but Mrs. Thomas didn’t sign it, and I was on my way out to the Junipers to our homestead and I stopped at the Bank, and the banker had one there, the cashier at the Bank, and a deed of different date, and we looked at the papers, and we sent that back for Mrs. Thomas’ signature and the deed drawed up to date, because we didn’t consider that deed was good.”

And,

“Q. But on the deal in ’33 did you ever find out why Mrs. Thomas didn’t sign? A. No. We were gone out to the homestead several months before we came in, *103 and when we came in, why, I stopped at the Bank and went in, and she said they hadn’t sent any contract back, and we just figured that they had changed their minds and didn’t want to close the deal. That is the way we thought it out.”

This, together with the fact that defendants did nothing with the land itself as required by the contract, would indicate that it was sent back to Thomas shortly after it reached the bank, at least by the spring of the year 1933.

On January 19, 1938, on advice of the attorney, who represented them at that time, the plaintiff, Bertha Thomas, signed, and both plaintiffs acknowledged the contract, and the attorney sent it to the Recorder’s office at Murphy, Owyhee County, where it was recorded on January 22, 1938.

Under date of July 29, 1938, the plaintiffs and defendants entered into a written “Memorandum Agreement” which was a preliminary agreement in which the parties contemplated the execution of a contract for the sale by plaintiffs to defendants of the same land, for $2000.00, payable in four installments of $500.00 each, August 1, 1940, ’41, ’42 and ’44. These installments were to be “Represented by notes in usual form but without interest secured by second mortgage on above described land and all other real estate holdings of second parties.” The Memorandum further provided “Plan of second parties is to execute first mortgage on above land for approximately $1500.00. Incidentally deal requires payment of all delinquent taxes. Deal is merger of all previous» negotiations and waiver of mutual claims; between parties. Formal documents embodying above agreement to be executed and delivered as soon as first mortgage can be arranged.” This document was signed by the parties, but not acknowledged. In keeping with this agreement the defendants made application to the State for a first mortgage loan on plaintiffs’ land for $1500.-00. The Attorney General found the title defective, and required that it be quieted. Defendants prosecuted to judgment an action quieting title in themselves. Plaintiffs were not made parties to that action. In the meantime the State discontinued making loans, and for that reason the loan was not obtained, and the agreement of July 29, 1938, was not consummated.

The contract of 1933 required defendants to pay all taxes, and it appears that they did pay all taxes up to 1945, but not without delinquency. All taxes on the land both north and south of the “Smith, Kerry and Chase line” were allowed to become delinquent from 1932 on. The land north of the line was sold by the county for such delinquency in 1936, and was purchased by defendant E. L. Stevens, in his own name for $12.50. The land south of the line was sold by the county for such delinquency, August 15, 1938, and was purchased by defendant E. L. Stevens, in the name of Arthur R. Thomas. Whether this was done in pursuance of the agree *104 •ment of July, 1938, to clear the title for the '■ contemplated loan from the State is not clear. Being asked how that occurred, the defendant, E. L. Stevens, testified: “Well, we had some taxes that was delinquent, and we happened down to Murphy, and it was put up for sale, and I just bought it in for him to save it for him.” However that may be, it does not appear that defendants paid taxes under the terms of the contract of 1933, or because of that contract.

The evidence is somewhat conflicting as to possession. The plaintiff Thomas testified that the defendants had continuous possession. The record shows that the plaintiffs acquired the property in 1919, and occupied it as their home until 1926, when they moved to Boise. After that the land has continued unoccupied except that the def endants occupied the house thereon during short intervals in the fall of the year “when we came down from the homestead at various times.” The homestead was “proved up on” in 1937, and then the defendants moved into the house, and lived there for “a year and a half” and “then at odd spells, mostly -in the fall of the year” until 1941, when they moved into their present home, seven miles distant, where they have lived continuously since.

The plaintiff, Arthur R. Thomas, testified the house was located on the south side of the “Smith, Kerry and Chase line,” on the property owned by him. Defendants testified it was on the north side of the line, on the property which they purchased from the county. On the other aspects of possession there is no conflict. The contract required defendants to “seed all tillable land this year.” They did not fence, improve, till, seed, graze or otherwise use or occupy any of the land.

On February 22, 1945, the plaintiffs tendered to defendants an abstract of title and warranty deed and demanded payment of the purchase price of $3000.00 fixed by the terms of the contract of April 6, 1933. The defendants ignored the tender, and plaintiffs brought this action for the purchase price and tendered the deed into court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 P.2d 597, 69 Idaho 100, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-stevens-idaho-1949.