Adams v. Adams

20 P. 633, 17 Or. 247, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 6
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 P. 633 (Adams v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Adams, 20 P. 633, 17 Or. 247, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 6 (Or. 1889).

Opinion

Thayer, C. J.

This appeal is from a decree of the said circuit court in a suit in which the appellant was plaintiff and the respondents were defendants. The litigation originated out of an action at law brought in said circuit court by the respondent Calvin H. Adams against the appellant, to recover the possession of lot 2, in block 19, in the city of Salem. After the action was commenced, the appellant, conceiving that she had no legal defense thereto, but that she was entitled to relief arising out of facts requiring the interposition of a court-of equity, filed a cross-complaint against the respondents, in which she alleged, in substance, that the respondents were brothers; [249]*249that about June 1, 1884, the respondent William Adams, being then the owner of the premises in dispute, entered into an agreement with appellant to give her the use of the property for her home during her life, in consideration of her marrying him; that she did marry him, and with his consent entered into possession of the property under the agreement, and remained there; that about two years afterwards, for the purposes of defrauding appellant, William Adams made a deed of the property to his brother, said Calvin H. Adams, without appellant’s knowledge or consent; that said Calvin took the deed with full knowledge of William’s fraudulent purposes, and of appellant’s rights in and to the possession of the property, with intent to aid said William in perpetrating the fraud on appellant, and without having paid any consideration for the property; and that respondents’ doings, and the claims of said Calvin of ownership of the property, and that he is entitled to the immediate possession thereof, constitute a cloud upon appellant’s right in said property and of her possession thereof; and wherein she prayed that the said respondents be perpetually enjoined from claiming or asserting any estate or interest in the property adverse to appellant’s use of the same during her life, and from disturbing her possession thereof. The respondents, after interposing a demurrer, which was overruled by the court, filed an answer denying all the material allegations of the complaint. The case was thereafter heard upon depositions and proofs, and the said court decreed that the said complaint be dismissed, which is the decree appealed from.

It appears from the evidence that the appellant and the said William Adams intermarried in this state on the first day of June, 1884; that at the time of their marriage she was above fifty-two years of age, and that he was more than sixty-two years old; that she had had a former husband, and he a former wife; that they had a slight [250]*250acquaintance in Illinois while they were single persons, but did not see each other again until they met in Oregon, a short time before their marriage. Their object in forming the relation was evidently a purely selfish one; that is apparent from the account of their courtship, although it is glossed over with sentimentality. She doubtless fancied that she would thereby secure a home and the ordinary comforts of life; while he confidently imagined that she would be a great assistance to him in enabling him to prosecute the many vagaries which seem to have occupied his attention.

He says in his testimony: “I thought she was capable of being a very useful woman, an ornament and blessing to society, and that her taste and ingenuity would indeed make me, with my own efforts, a beautiful home.”

She says in her testimony: “At our first interview in Portland, he told me that he had sold his property at Hills-borough, and had bought the property here in Salem; that, through the request of his former wife, he had willed the property to the Bible Society, but he expected to keep control of it during his lifetime, and if he ever married again, he expected to have it .for a home, and his wife would share it with him, and if she survived him, she should have the use of it and control of it during her lifetime. In our next interview, he made a proposition of marriage, and wanted I should make him a beautiful home, as his former wife had done, and repeated again that he expected that we should have it for a home, and repeated again that I should have it for a home in case I outlived him, only far more strongly than on the former occasion, and laid a great deal of stress on‘making us a beautiful, home.’ .... I complained of being prematurely broken, and he said he was abundantly able to support me; that his brother owed him some, — I forget the amount, — and some others; qnd he had a standing offer of sixty dollars a month, be[251]*251sides a good standing in three of the learned professions; and that he had an invention, that if he were successful in he believed it would make us wealthy.”

The appellant should not have been deceived by such assurances; for she ought to have known that a man of the age of the said respondent, who claimed to have a good standing in three of the learned professions, who was then trying to succeed in an invention, and had nothing but an ordinary house and lot in Salem, which he had willed to the Bible Society, as evidence of his thrift, would not be able to support a wife nor furnish her a comfortable home. It is apparent, however, that she was deceived, and married him under a delusion. And the evidence shows quite conclusively that the sale of the house and lot by William Adams to the respondent Calvin H. Adams wTas a mere pretext and device to dispossess the appellant thereof.

It appears from the evidence that William wrote a letter to Calvin H., as follows: —

“Salem, Oregon, Aug. 11,1886.

“Calvin H. Adams, Hillsboroügh, Oregon.

My dear Brother, — Being anxious about what I owe you, and feeling the uncertainty of life and strength in my old age, I propose, if you can send me three dollars by money order or registered letter, for and in consideration of the same to give you a warranty deed of my home, numbered 191 High Street, and my lot, No. 2, in block 19, both in the city of Salem, Marion County, Oregon. Affectionately your brother,

“William Adams.”

Said William was asked, when, on the stand as witness in the case, the following questions, to which he gave the following answers:—

. “What was the three dollars for that you mention in [252]*252that letter ? A. As the necessary consideration to insure its validity.

“Was it not for the purpose of making and recording the deed? A. It was not.

“ How much did you owe your brother at that time ? A. Well, summing up from the time I had owed him, counting interest, I estimated at one thousand dollars.

“Was it for borrowed money? if so, how much? A. Seme two hundred dollars of borrowed money.

“ When did you borrow it ? A. Some of it as long ago as 1847 or 1848, when I was attending medical college.

“What else did you owe him for? A. For assistance in coming to this country, in 1852.

“How much did that amount to? A. About $150 or more, with interest.

“Did you intend this deed as a revocation-of the will that you made to the Bible Society ? A. Of course, if I put it out of my power, it would revoke it.

“ Did your brother ever make any demand on you for the payment of this money that you claim to owe him ? A. We had talked of it, and he had claimed it, and I had admitted his claim.

“ When was this ? A. The first when we arrived in this country, in 1852.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 P. 633, 17 Or. 247, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-adams-or-1889.