TZ Land & Cattle Co. v. Condict

795 P.2d 1204, 1990 Wyo. LEXIS 84, 1990 WL 109914
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1990
Docket89-211
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 795 P.2d 1204 (TZ Land & Cattle Co. v. Condict) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TZ Land & Cattle Co. v. Condict, 795 P.2d 1204, 1990 Wyo. LEXIS 84, 1990 WL 109914 (Wyo. 1990).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice, Retired.

In an action for trespass, appellee Alden R. Condict obtained judgment for compensatory and punitive damages against appellants.

Appellants state the issues to be:

1) Did the District Court lack subject matter jurisdiction to entertain an action in alleged trespass over 1760 acres of the public domain State Lease lands and the Bureau of Land Management lands?
2) Did the District Court lack subject matter jurisdiction to entertain an action in alleged trespass over 2140 acres of the Appellants Win Condict and Elsie Con-dict’s mortgaged property?
3) Did the District Court err in entertaining an action for alleged trespass over the State Lease lands?
4) Did the District Court err in granting the Appellees’ Motion for Summary Judgment on the question of liability?
5) Did the District Court err in denying the Appellants’ Motion to Amend Their Counterclaim?
6) Did the District Court err in denying the Appellants’ Motion for a New Trial?
7) Did the Honorable Larry Lehman err in presiding over this case over the strenuous objection of the Appellants?
We affirm.

The parties to this action have been in continual litigation since April 1982 and in a cold war years before that. Prior to April 1982, appellee and one or both of the individual appellants were joint owners of real and personal property and partners in a cattle ranching operation located in Carbon County, Wyoming. In April of 1982, appellee filed an action in the District Court for the Second Judicial District seeking to partition the real property and for an accounting. (Condict v. Condict, Civil Action No. 82C-219, Second Judicial District Court (Condict /)). In that case, the district court bifurcated the issues relating to partition and accounting.

In June of 1985, the district court held a hearing regarding division of the real property of the parties. While that hearing was in progress, the parties agreed to a division of the real property and appellants Win and Elsie Condict were given the choice of which half of the ranch land they would take. The division was reflected in a judgment and decree dated June 20, 1985, and filed by the district court on June 28, 1985. Win and Elsie Condict then transferred the property awarded to Win Condict by the judgment to a newly formed corporation, TZ Land & Cattle Co., of which they were the majority shareholders.

The second half of the bifurcated action dealing with the accounting for personal assets of the ranching operation was heard in November of 1985 and the decision taken under advisement. In June of 1986, Win and Elsie Condict filed a motion in the partition action to have the land division set aside, alleging fraud and coercion, and they refiled similar motions in that action in 1987 and 1988. Their motions to have the land division set aside were denied. The case then “ebbed and flowed [mostly ebbed] in the backwaters of judicial administration” 1 until a final judgment was entered January 12, 1989. 2 An appeal was taken from that judgment. That appeal was dismissed by the Supreme Court on January 24, 1990. The case presently before the court, hereinafter referred to as *1206 Condict II, is a fallout from the decision in Condict I.

In the spring of 1987, while awaiting a decision of the district court on the November 1985 trial and on their outstanding motions, appellants began to physically assert possession and control of property set over to Alden Condict in the 1985 judgment in Condict I. This propérty was commonly referred to as the Kennaday, Corpening and Reid places. This exercise of control initially included exerting control over road, ditches and buildings located on the Kennaday, Corpening and Reid properties. Employees of appellants entered these lands during 1987 and stayed through May of 1988. Finally, in August of 1987, appellants drove cattle with the TZ brand onto the lands to graze and pasture.

This action, Condict II, was brought in September of 1987 alleging that the appellants’ action constituted a trespass upon land owned by Alden Condict and to which he had the sole right of possession. Appel-lee sought compensatory and punitive damages as a result of appellants’ actions. Appellants have never denied utilizing the property in 1987 and 1988; rather, they contended in the trial court and on appeal that their use of the land was not wrongful.

Before 1982, the Condict brothers ran part of their cattle operation on lands leased from the Bureau of Land Management and on state and national forest leases. The leases were divided by the judgment of June 1985, with each of the parties assigned those leases contiguous with the lands awarded to them. All of the parties were required by the judgment to take the necessary steps to transfer the joint leases to the proper interest holder and to provide clear title of the deeded lands to the party awarded those lands by the judgment.

The dispute in Condict II is over parcels of land awarded to Alden R. Condict by the June 1985 decree commonly referred to as the Kennaday, Corpening and Reid properties. For reasons that do not appear in the record here, before the land division in 1985, Win and Elsie Condict claimed an undivided V12 interest in those lands. In the early 1980’s, Win and Elsie Condict obtained a loan from the Wyoming Farm Loan Board secured by the V12 interest in the Kennaday, Corpening and Reid properties. In 1985, in the partition action, Win and Elsie Condict agreed that Alden would receive those properties in the land division. Since the parcels of land were part of the properties solely awarded to Alden Condict in the 1985 judgment, it was required that Win and Elsie Condict take the steps necessary to remove the mortgage from those properties and to have it placed on properties awarded to Win Condict by the 1985 judgment. This was never done.

At trial in Condict II, the court granted appellee’s motion for a partial summary judgment on liability. In a jury trial, ap-pellee received a verdict for compensatory and punitive damages.

The issues stated by appellants and their arguments overlap and some duplicate others. Furthermore, appellants’ argument does not track the stated issue and is not supported by case law or cogent argument. 3

I

In Issues 1 and 3, appellants question the jurisdiction of the district court to entertain an action for trespass on state leases and Bureau of Land Management (BLM) leased land. The state lease was originally entered into between the State of Wyoming and the Condict ranches when the ranch was run jointly. The lease was a ten year lease most recently signed jointly by the parties in 1977. Since the lease was contiguous to lands awarded to Alden Condict in the 1985 decree (Kennaday, Cor-pening and Reid), the decree provided that the lease be assigned to Alden Condict.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
795 P.2d 1204, 1990 Wyo. LEXIS 84, 1990 WL 109914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tz-land-cattle-co-v-condict-wyo-1990.