[Download] "Dwayne Blankenship and Beulah Blankenship" by Supreme Court of Idaho No. 10857 " Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Dwayne Blankenship and Beulah Blankenship
- Author : Supreme Court of Idaho No. 10857
- Release Date : January 30, 1975
- Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 78 KB
Description
This is an action to set aside a conveyance as in fraud of creditors, or in the alternative to assert a vendor's lien against certain real property which was conveyed by plaintiff-appellants Dwayne and Beulah Blankenship to Roy C. Myers, Sr., and his son and daughter-in-law Robert and Nellie Myers, the defendant-respondents herein. A summary of the relevant facts of this rather convoluted transaction follows: The plaintiff appellants Dwayne and Beulah Blankenship, husband and wife, originally were the owners of the property in question, a farm along the Kootenai River in Boundary County, Idaho, herein referred to as the Bonners Ferry ranch. In August of 1956 the Blankenships agreed to sell their equity in the ranch to Roy C. Myers, Sr., and Robert and Nellie Myers. The purchase price for the property was purportedly to be a ranch owned by the two Myerses in the state of Washington, referred to as the Moses-Coulee property. However, the Blankenships maintained throughout the action, and the evidence tends to support their contention that the real estate agent who was handling the transaction, a Mr. Al Patrick, had represented to the Blankenships that there was a contract of sale already in effect on the Moses-Coulee property, and that what the Blankenships were really buying was a vendor's interest in the contract of sale of the Moses-Coulee property, the proceeds of which they could use to acquire the Vic Weitz ranch in Washington which they were really interested in purchasing. The Blankenships denied that they ever agreed to accept the Moses-Coulee property in exchange for their Bonners Ferry ranch. However, the original documentation represented the transaction to be a trade of the two ranches.