Worley v. Peterson

12 P.2d 579, 80 Utah 27, 1931 Utah LEXIS 47
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1931
DocketNo. 5045.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 P.2d 579 (Worley v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worley v. Peterson, 12 P.2d 579, 80 Utah 27, 1931 Utah LEXIS 47 (Utah 1931).

Opinions

STRAUP, J.

Henry Worley and W. H. Stewart, as administrators of the estate of John Worley, deceased, brought this action against Anthone L. Peterson, Elizabeth Ann Peterson, his wife, Charles Peterson, Maria Peterson, his wife, the Cardón Company, a corporation, and William E. Davis, administrator of the estate of Veurlam Dives, deceased, to quiet title to 320 acres of farming lands in Box Elder county. In the complaint it, among other things, is alleged that John Worley died in 1907 and left surviving him as his heirs Henry, John, and George Worley, his sons, and Ann Smith, Mary C. Tarbett, Maria Peterson, and Kate Leish-man, his daughters; that Henry Worley in 1909 was appointed and ever since acted as administrator of the estate; and that on April 8, 1929, Stewart was appointed and ever since acted as co-administrator.

It is further alleged that at the time of his death John Worley was the owner and in possession of the real estate fully described in the complaint; that on March 7, 1910, pursuant to his petition filed in the district court, Henry Worley as the then sole administrator of the estate was authorized to mortgage the real estate for the sum of $1,-200 and that in pursuance thereof Henry Worley as the *31 administrator on June 15, 1910, executed a mortgage on the real estate for the sum of $1,200 payable to the Cardón Company two years after date, but that, as it is alleged, the administrator did not nor did the estate receive any money or other consideration for the mortgage which was recorded in the office of the county recorder of Box Elder county and at no time canceled or released and which constitutes a cloud on the title; that the mortgage was invalid; that the Cardón Company had no right, title, or interest therein, or any lien on the premises therein described; and that the plaintiffs were entitled to have the mortgage canceled of record and the cloud removed.

It is further alleged that the defendants claimed some right, title, or interest in the lands, but that the claim of each, if any they had, was junior and inferior to the right, title, and interest of the estate and of the plaintiffs, and that the defendants had no right, title or interest in or to the premises or any part thereof; that the defendants Peterson in 1911 conspired together to obtain possession of the lands from the administrator, Henry Worley, by falsely and fraudulently pretending to lease the premises from the administrator and offering to pay the taxes and a reasonable rental for the use and occupancy of the premises, whereby the administrator was induced to give and gave the Peter-sons possession of the premises, but who failed and neglected to pay the taxes or any rental and retained and applied all the rents and profits to their own use and benefit.

The plaintiffs thus prayed that the defendants be required to appear and set forth whatever right, title, or interest, if any they had, was claimed by them, and that such claims be adjudged invalid and groundless; that the plaintiff be given immediate possession of the premises and that they have judgment against the Petersons for the rental value thereof; and prayed for other and general and equitable relief.

The Petersons filed a general demurrer, and a special demurrer on the ground that the alleged action was barred *32 by the statute of limitations. These were overruled. They then filed a general denial, pleaded the statute of limitations, and interposed a counterclaim setting up title by adverse possession and alleging that they were in possession of the premises since 1911, and since then and until the commencement of the action had paid all taxes assessed against the lands and prayed that title be quieted in them.

The defendant Davis as administrator of the estate of Dives also filed a general denial and by way of counterclaim alleged that the Petersons ever since 1911 had occupied the premises and acquired title by adverse possession and had paid all taxes assessed against the premises, and further alleged that Dives advanced and loaned moneys to Anthone L. Peterson in the sum of $1,500 to settle the mortgage of $1,200 executed by the administrator Henry Worley, and that in 1914 Anthone L. Peterson and his wife executed and delivered to him their promissory note for $1,500 and to secure its payment gave him a mortgage on the real estate described in the complaint and claimed by the plaintiffs, together with other property, that the mortgage was recorded, and that in 1924 Anthone L. Peterson and his wife as a renewal of such mortgage executed another or new mortgage in the sum of $1,500 upon the same premises, which mortgage also was recorded, and that no part of such renewal note and mortgage had been paid; and that the administrator of Dives prior to the commencement of this action had commenced an action to foreclose the renewal note and mortgage, which action was pending and undis-posed of when this action was commenced. He therefore prayed that his renewal mortgage of $1,50(1 be subrogated to all the rights and priorities of the $1,200 mortgage given by the administrator Henry Worley to the Cardón Company and that his renewal mortgage be declared a first and prior lien on the premises described in the complaint.

A reply was filed by the plaintiffs to both counterclaims. They also pleaded the statute of limitations to the counterclaim of the Dives estate. The defendant Cardón Company, *33 though personally served with summons in the action, failed to appear or answer or otherwise plead to the complaint.

The case was tried to the court. Among other things, the court found that John Worley at the time of his death in 1907 was the owner and in possession of the 320 acres, the lands described in the complaint, and “that it was admitted that the legal title thereto was in the heirs of John Worley deceased subject to the administration of his estate”; that Henry Worley as administrator of the estate of John Worely, in pursuance of an order of court in probate proceedings, on June 15, 1910, executed a mortgage on the real estate in the sum of $1,200 payable in two years to the Cardón Company as the mortgagee, which mortgage was recorded and still stood on the records in the county recorder’s office unassigned and unreleased; and that the Cardón Company claimed no interest in the mortgage or in the premises by reason of the execution of the mortgage.

The court further found that Henry Worley was uneducated, had littled or no business erperience, and little or no understanding of his duties or responsibilities as an administrator, although he was not wholly incompetent to act as such; that Henry Worley realized his incapacity to manage the farm, take care of the interest of the estate, pay off the mortgage, and pay the taxes on the farm; that the defendants Anthone L.

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Bluebook (online)
12 P.2d 579, 80 Utah 27, 1931 Utah LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worley-v-peterson-utah-1931.