Albany & Santiam W. D. Co. v. Crawford

11 Or. 243
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 Or. 243 (Albany & Santiam W. D. Co. v. Crawford) 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
Albany & Santiam W. D. Co. v. Crawford, 11 Or. 243 (Or. 1884).

Opinion

[244]*244By the Court,

Watson, C. J.:

This is a suit in equity to have a deed absolute on its face declared a mortgage, in accordance with an alleged intention of the parties.

The deed was executed April 21,1876, and the complaint was filed April 4, 1881. All the property of the appellant, both real and personal, including The Albany and Santiam Water Ditch or Canal, with its right of way, water privileges, etc., several small tracts of land, and a boat called “Red Jacket,” situated in Linn county, is covered by the deed. Possession accompanied the execution of the deed to respondent. He paid thirty-three thousand nine hundred dollars. Appellant claims that this was a loan merely, and that the deed, although absolute in terms, was only intended as a mortgage.

This is disputed by the respondent, who insists that the transaction was in fact what on its face it purports to be, an absolute and unqualified sale. This seems to us the only material issue in the case. And it is one of fact simply, to be determined by the evidence in the record. • There is no controversy over the proposition of law involved in the very institution of the suit itself, that a deed absolute in terms may be shown by parol evidence to have been intended as a mortgage in a court of equity, and such intention preserved and effectuated. But the evidence to justify this interposition should be clear and satisfactory. (2 Whar. Ev., 1032.)

The presumption is that the transaction was, in fact, an absolute conveyance, just as it appears from the face of the deed to have been, and it is one of no little weight either. The great amount of evidence in the case renders any detailed examination impracticable, as it certainly would be [245]*245unprofitable. A general analysis is all that will be attempted.

A noticeable feature of the appellant’s case is the entire absence of any direct evidence of the alleged agreement by the respondent to loan it the money and take the deed for his security. Not a single witness has testified to a personal knowledge to such fact or named the party making such an agreement with Crawford on behalf of the company. Here was a lai’ge corporation engaged in an extensive and costly enterpi’ise with its capital stock of thirty thousand doilax’S all paid up, and expended in the prosecution of the work, and an indebtedness of thirty-three thousand dollarsincux’red in completing it still hanging over it, a boai’d of seven directors and a large membership of stockholders deeply interested in the company’s affairs, and most, if not all, residing in the immediate vicinity of the company’s principal office or place of business at Albany, Linn county, this state, axxd yet not a particle of direct testimony as to the alleged agreement oxx Orawfoi’d’s part, that is, to convert the deed absolute on its face and including all the compaxxy’s property into a xnortgage. Evexy one of the directors, save D. M. Thompson, who had deceased when the testimony was taken, axxd a majority of the stockholders have testified in the case, but not one of the whole number attempts to give the time or parties when, where, or with whom Crawford entered into the alleged agreement.

The only proof the company offers upon this vital issue consists of declarations xnade by Crawford, and the “understanding” the individual members of the company had as to the character of the traxisactions at the time, and the opinion of the witnesses as to the “general understanding” of the company at the time ixx respect to the xuatter.

Luther Elkins is the only witness for the company who [246]*246testifies to declarations made by Crawford before the sale. The precise bearing and real value of his testimony cannot be properly estimated without a brief reference to previous events leading up the sale and disclosing its inducements, as well as his subsequent conduct.

The company was incorporated January 28, 1871, for the purpose among others of constructing and operating the water ditch or canal described in Crawford’s deed. This work was completed in 1874, but, as already stated, leaving the company largely in debt. About twenty-two thousand dollars of this indebtedness was held by six or seven of the stockholders, of whom Elkins was one, and was secured by mortgage on the ditch and other property of the company. In 1873, and again in 1875, the company sought to raise the necessary funds to liquidate this indebtedness by increasing the amount of its capital stock, but apparently without avail. On January 11,1876, the board of directors ordered a meeting of the stockholders, called for February 25, ensuing, to consider a proposition to sell the property to pay such indebtedness, divide any surplus, and dissolve the corporation. The stockholders met accordingly, and by a vote of one hundred and twenty-two to two authorized the sale, but requiring that it should be at public auction, and upon four weeks’ notice. Before taking the action, however, the meeting rejected this proposition by Elkins to accept additional subscriptions to the capital stock, upon certain designated terms, and to issue and sell bonds of the company, secured by a first mortgage on its property, to raise the necessary funds to meet its obligations.

The board of directors therefore gave notice of the sale by publication for four weeks in “The State Rights Democrat,” a weekly newspaper published at Albany, and fixed the time at 1 p. m., April 15,1876. At this sale, the direct[247]*247ors and stockholders were generally present. Crawford did not make his appearance until about three o’clock, and the property was not offered until his arrival. Elkins says that Crawford came to the court house where the sale had been advertised to take place about half past three o’clock, and seeking him out, told him he desired to talk with him. That they walked back into the court house, behind the stair-case together, and Crawford then told him he was about to loan the company a sufficient amount of money to pay the debts, and asked him what amount the company owed. That he told him upwards of thirty thousand dollars, perhaps thirty-two thousand or thirty-three thousand, but he could not tell him precisely—it might be a little more or a little less. , That Crawford repeated that he had agreed to loan the company money necessary to pay its debts; that the time was five years, and as much longer as the company desired—to keep it as long as he lived, for that matter. That he further said the ditch and property were to be turned over to him as security, and he was to have the income to pay his interest, and that the company were his old friends and neighbors, and had done a' great work, both for Albany and the whole country, and he would sooner they should have the money than others. That Crawford said just as they were about to separate, if he bid upon the property at all he would bid it in for the company, and that upon that agreement he went with Crawford to the door, and that in a few minutes the property was put up for sale and bid off by Crawford.

This is the only declaration by Crawford operating as an admission of an agreement by him to loan the money bid at the sale to the company, and take the deed as a security for its repayment, made prior to the sale, that the company has offered any evidence to prove.

[248]*248Crawford denies having any conversation whatever with Elkins before the sale, and upon this point he is strongly corroborated by Allen Parker, a director of the company, who was also present at the sale.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Or. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albany-santiam-w-d-co-v-crawford-or-1884.