Twin Harbors Lumber Company v. Carrico

442 P.2d 753, 92 Idaho 343, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 301
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1968
Docket10048
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 442 P.2d 753 (Twin Harbors Lumber Company v. Carrico) 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
Twin Harbors Lumber Company v. Carrico, 442 P.2d 753, 92 Idaho 343, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 301 (Idaho 1968).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an action by respondent, mortgagee, to foreclose two mortgages on reaL property. Respondent is a foreign corporation which at the time of execution of the mortgages (and notes they secured) had not complied with Idaho’s laws concerning qualification by such a corporation to do business in this state. Not until after instituting this action and proceeding through several preliminary matters, including a summary judgment hearing based in part on appellants, mortgagors, contention that respondent’s unqualified status barred it from bringing-the action, did respondent six days before trial qualify to do business in Idaho.

Appellants resisted the foreclosures on two grounds: (1) the mortgages were executed as a result of respondent’s doing business in Idaho at a time when respondent was not qualified to do business here; and (2) the mortgages, covering land upon which small trees were growing, were in fact part of a scheme arranged by respondent to enable it to-purchase those trees from appellants, both respondent and appellants having contemplated and intended that the notes secured by the mortgages would be satisfied exclusively by a portion of proceeds earned by appellants by delivery of such logs to-a certain mill; and that upon the unexpected closing of the mill, appellants’ obligation to pay the notes secured by the-mortgages was excused.

Finding on both grounds for respondent,, the district court entered a decree of foreclosure and order, of sale. On this appeal from that judgment we find no error and so affirm.

*345 ■QUALIFICATION BY FOREIGN CORPORATION TO DO BUSINESS IN IDAHO

Relying on I.C. §§ 30-504 1 and 30-505, 2 appellants contend that respondent cannot enforce in the courts of Idaho its rights under the notes and mortgages of present concern. However, such is not the effect of those statutes.

Respondent satisfied the requirements of I.C. § 30-504, thereby gaining access to the Idaho courts for purposes of the present action, by qualifying to do business in this state before the time of trial. 3

With respect to I.C. § 30-505, that statute authorizes and establishes procedure for petition to have declared void in certain circumstances deeds or conveyances of real estate made to non-qualifying foreign corporations doing business in this state, upon which petition the court “may decree such deed or conveyance void in the event such [qualification to do business in Idaho] filings are not made prior to the entering of such decree.” Appellants contend that their motion for summary judgment was in fact a petition under I.C. § 30-505, and that upon such motion the district court was required to declare void respondent’s title. We do not agree.

The statute obviously contemplates that before the court enters a voiding decree the non-qualified corporation shall have some opportunity to comply with the laws of Idaho in order to qualify to do business in this state. In the present action, appellants’ motion for summary judgment was based on two separate alleged grounds: (1) respondent’s refusal to make discovery pursuant to Idaho R. Civ.P. 26; and (2) failure to comply with Idaho’s laws 4 for qualification to do business here by a foreign corporation. Concerning the second ground, the district court (Judge Webb) determined:

“I cannot, from * * * the only material actually before me in this respect, dispose of the question of whether the plaintiff is barred from prosecution of its claim by 30-504, I.C. [The motion itself also relied on I.C. § 30-505.] I am, however [,] moved to say that there are strong indications that the plaintiff was 'doing business’ in the state at the inception of the instruments sued upon. [Citing cases.] This question should be more fully developed.”

Thereupon, the court, in accord with appellants’ first ground, “conclude [d] that there ha[d] been a willful failure of discovery by the plaintiff [respondent],” and on this ground it entered a conditional judgment dismissing respondent’s action unless respondent submitted to full discovery within a stated time. Thereafter discovery was had, appellants filed an answer December 7, 1966, repeating their contention that I.C. §§ 30-504 and 30-505 barred prosecution of the action by respondent, and trial commenced (before Judge Dunlap) February 27, 1967, by which time respondent had complied (February 21, 1967) with the qualification laws.

We note appellants’ contention to the contrary, but we agree with the district judge that at the hearing on the summary judgment motion there was insufficient evidence to determine whether respondent had been “doing business in this state” *346 in contravention of' the pertinent statutes 5 at the time of execution of the mortgages of present concern;- therefore, the judge at that time could not decree the mortgages to be void. And appellants did not again request in judicial proceedings that the instruments be decreed void until after respondent had complied with the qualification statutes. 6 Consequently, I.C. § 30-505 is not applicable in the present action.

DISCHARGE OF APPELLANTS’ DUTY OF PERFORMANCE BY CLOSING OF THE MILL -

In May 1960, when the mortgages involved in the present action were executed, a company named Tru-Cut Lumber, Inc., owned and operated in Orofino, Idaho, a “stud mill” which processed small sized timber into “scantlings, usually of the dimension of 2 inches by four inches by 8 feet.” Appellants explain that normal lumber mills require timber at least twelve inches in diameter for economical manufacture and that only at stud mills is it commercially feasible to process small sized or stud logs.

Tru-Cut negotiated the following business arrangement in order to obtain stud logs for its mill: respondent, a wholesaler of logs and distributor of Tru-Cut’s inventory (besides which respondent had made several outstanding loans to Tru-Cut), would supply funds to appellants, who had farming and ranching operations in the Orofino area, to enable appellants to purchase land covered with small trees; appellants would sell their stumpage to Tru-Cut, and then could clear the land and add it to their cattle farming operation; part of the stumpage price would be withheld by Tru-Cut and credited against appellants’ obligations to respondent for its loans; and appellants would evidence their debts to respondent by executing promissory notes secured by mortgages in respondent’s favor on the purchased tracts. The two mortgages of present concern were executed with reference to this business arrangement. -

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Bluebook (online)
442 P.2d 753, 92 Idaho 343, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twin-harbors-lumber-company-v-carrico-idaho-1968.