Wettlin v. Jones

234 P. 515, 32 Wyo. 446, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 15
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1925
Docket1175
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 234 P. 515 (Wettlin v. Jones) 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
Wettlin v. Jones, 234 P. 515, 32 Wyo. 446, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 15 (Wyo. 1925).

Opinions

Herbert G. Wettlin and Elizabeth Wettlin, plaintiffs below and respondents here, recovered judgment for $3357.16 in the district court of Fremont County against Squier Jones and E.E. Vollmer, defendants below and appellants here, as damages for fraudulently depriving plaintiffs of their interest in certain personal property. The evidence on the part of plaintiffs and respondents tends to show: On August 24, 1921, respondents were the owners of certain laundry equipment in the town of Riverton, Wyoming, in good condition and of the value then and later in the year of $5000. On that day they executed to the appellant Squier Jones a chattel mortgage to secure the payment of a note for $2057.23 with interest, payable on or before April 15th, 1923, but further providing for the payment on the note of $100 per month beginning August 15, 1921. Said laundry equipment was located in a building owned by said Squier Jones, and a rental of $50.00 was then and thereafter to be paid for the use and occupation of said building. On August 25th, 1921, respondents entered into an agreement with one Louis Dudeck and Mrs. Dudeck, leasing said laundry equipment to the latter till April 1st, 1922, at an agreed rental of $200 per month, in addition to the rent to be paid for the use and occupation of said building, under stipulation on the part of said Dudecks to deposit in the Riverton State Bank, on the 15th of each month, the sum of $100 to the credit of said Jones, to meet the payments due each month on said note, and $100 a month for the benefit of respondents; also to pay the monthly rental of $50.00 for the use and occupation of said building. Shortly afterwards respondents left Wyoming for New Jersey, leaving their address, where mail would reach them, with said bank as well as at the postoffice at Riverton, and with an agreement on the part of Jones, as testified to by Mrs. Wettlin, but denied by Jones, to notify respondents in case the payments under the contract with the Dudecks should not be *Page 451 made when due. Mrs. Wettlin, according to her testimony, also had a talk with Jones before her departure as to the sale of said laundry equipment, at which time Jones suggested the name of the appellant Vollmer as a prospective purchaser.

The payment due August 15, 1921, as well as the payments due in the months of September and October, 1921, under said contracts with the Dudecks, were duly made. About November 1st, 1921, the appellant Vollmer came to Riverton and opened up negotiations with the Dudecks for the purchase of said laundry equipment through an agent, who seems to have continued as such till the completion of the purchase, and who, as some of the testimony shows, stated to the Dudecks that, unless they would sell, Vollmer would start another laundry and "freeze" them out. Vollmer, according to his testimony, made but a cursory examination of the property before taking it over, and on November 4, 1921, entered into a written agreement with the Dudecks whereby the latter turned the lease to the equipment over to Vollmer, the latter contracting to "carry out and perform all the terms and conditions" named in the lease. Jones consented to the transfer in writing. The Dudecks received no compensation for turning the equipment over, other than Vollmer's agreement to carry out the terms of the lease. The property was delivered to Vollmer on November 7, 1921. He refused to make the payments that fell due on November 15, 1921. Jones almost immediately thereafter proceeded to foreclose his mortgage, advertising the property for sale. The first notice was published on November 25, 1921. The paper selected for the publication of the notice was the Dubois Courier, published weekly at Dubois, a small country town some eighty miles or more distant from Riverton, and nearly that far from a railroad. But the paper was actually printed on the printing press of the newspaper published at Riverton. The paper so selected has a total circulation of 200 to 300, from three to five copies thereof *Page 452 being received by parties in Riverton. The sale was held at Riverton, pursuant to notice on December 24, 1921, and sold to Vollmer for $1900, he being the only bona fide bidder present. Of this amount $270 only was paid in cash, in order to pay $170 expenses incident to the sale aforesaid and $100 on the mortgage. Vollmer gave a note and mortgage on said equipment for the balance of the purchase price, namely, for $1630.00, and thereafter treated the property as his own. After the transfer of the lease by the Dudecks was made on November 4, 1921, Vollmer, upon his own suggestion, continued to carry on the business in the name of Mrs. Dudeck, as it had been theretofore conducted, even having new and necessary stationery printed in her name. The Dudecks apparently were employed by Vollmer and worked in the laundry till after the sale under the mortgage aforesaid, when one or both lost their employment. Mrs. Dudeck appears to have worried over the fact that the Wettlins had not been notified of the transfer to Vollmer. The latter, she testified, did not want them to know anything about it till he got his "hands on the lease;" that they "would find out in time." When she spoke to him about helping her write a letter, he stated that he would "take care of it," but never did. Dudeck finally wrote on January 15, 1922. Nor did Jones communicate with the Wettlins in the meantime, and made no effort to do so. But on February 1, 1922, he wrote them a letter to 1108 3rd Ave., Asbury Park, N.J., duly received by them, stating that they had never paid all their "insurance on the laundry machinery," that this would have to be taken care of at once, or suit started. A note for $109.65, to be signed by them, was enclosed. This letter — the only one written by Jones to the Wettlins — contained no information that the mortgage had been foreclosed as above mentioned. Mrs. Wettlin soon after returned to Riverton, and the action herein was commenced on March 11, 1922. *Page 453

The action herein is that Jones and Vollmer entered into a conspiracy for the purpose of defrauding the Wettlins out of their interest in said laundry equipment and that the said equipment was acquired, the transactions herein mentioned subsequent thereto took place, and the foreclosure proceedings herein shown were had, pursuant to such conspiracy and intent to defraud. The first contention made on behalf of the appellants is that by reason of the non-payment of the installment due on November 15, 1921, a default existed in the terms of the mortgage; that the mortgage contained a clause enabling Jones to take possession of the property in case he felt himself insecure; that he had, by reason of said default, ample reason to feel insecure; that, accordingly, he had a lawful right to foreclose; that the foreclosure proceedings were regular, and that "what one may lawfully do singly, two or more may lawfully agree to do jointly." (12 C.J. 583). The conclusion drawn is, that defendants could not conspire to do a lawful act in a lawful manner. Assuming that to be the law, the conclusion must rest upon sound premises. It is a fundamental axiom in law that no man can profit by his own wrong. It has frequently been held that a mortgagee is guilty of conversion where he takes possession of the mortgaged property before he is entitled to do so under the terms of the mortgage and sells it. 11 C.J. 589; Jones, Chat. Mtgs. (5th Ed.) Sec. 437; Woods v. Gaar, Scott Co., 93 Mich. 143, 53 N.W. 14; Ray v. Goings,96 Ill. 361, 36 Am. Rep. 151; Broshier v. Tolleth,31 Neb. 622, 48 N.W. 398; First Nat. Sav. Bank v.

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Wettlin v. Jones
234 P. 515 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 P. 515, 32 Wyo. 446, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wettlin-v-jones-wyo-1925.