Bagley v. Kerr

112 P.2d 459, 166 Or. 368, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 78
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 112 P.2d 459 (Bagley v. Kerr) 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
Bagley v. Kerr, 112 P.2d 459, 166 Or. 368, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 78 (Or. 1941).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree of the circuit court which dismissed his suit. The purpose of the suit was to (a) reinstate a mortgage which is described in the complaint and which was executed and delivered by the defendants to the plaintiff to secure payment of their promissory note in the denomination of $3,600;. (b) secure judgment upon the note; (c) foreclose the mortgage; and (d) secure incidental relief.

The note above mentioned was signed October 1, 1928, and was payable “to the order of O. J. Bagley or Mary Bagley, husband and wife, and unto the survivor thereof.” Mary Bagley, who at the time of her marriage to the plaintiff February 20, 1908, was a widow, was the mother of the defendant Walter J. Kerr. The latter is the husband of the other defendant Mabel F. Kerr. Mrs. Bagley died November 13, 1936. Concurrently with the signing of the note the defendants executed the aforementioned mortgage. November 18, 1936, the plaintiff, without having received any consideration, entered in the mortgage records a marginal satisfaction of the mortgage. August 1, 1938, when he *370 was 78 years of age, the plaintiff married his present wife. Seven and one-half months later, that is, on March 16, 1939, he filed this suit.

The demand for a reinstatement of the mortgage became the sole issue in the circuit court and is the only matter argued upon appeal. As a predicate for that relief, the complaint charged that November 17, 1936, the defendant Walter J. Kerr represented to the plaintiff “that a certain person or persons had threatened to ruin his credit unless the mortgage described in paragraph 3 was satisfied of record and requested the plaintiff herein to enter a satisfaction for the purpose of saving his credit, and representing that unless such satisfaction was entered said defendant would be ruined financially. ’ ’ The complaint alleges that these representations were false, but that the plaintiff, unaware of their falseness, believed them and released the mortgage on November 18, 1936, without having received any consideration. The answer admits virtually all of the above-mentioned averments of the complaint with the exception of those which charge deceit. All averments concerning fraud are denied. From the answer we quote:

“On the 18th day of November, 1936, the plaintiff, with intention to forgive, release, satisfy and discharge as a gift to defendants the indebtedness evidenced by the promissory note and mortgage * * * and then owing to him by defendants, executed and entered of record a marginal satisfaction of said mortgage * * *. Thereafter, on the said 18th day of November, 1936, the plaintiff informed the defendants that he had executed and entered said marginal satisfaction with the intention of forgiving and discharging the indebtedness evidenced by said note and mortgage by way of a gift thereof to defendants, and defendants accepted said gift.”

*371 A copy of the marginal release follows:

“For value received, I hereby acknowledge full and complete satisfaction of this mortgage and discharge the same from record this 18th day of Nov. 1936.
O. J. Bagley.
Attest:
C. S. Graves, County Clerk
By Claire M. Miller, Deputy.”

The plaintiff and the defendants lived near each other on farms. According to the plaintiff, the defendant Walter Kerr, to whom we shall refer as Walter, was in the business of “buying sheep and stock.”

February 20, 1908, when the plaintiff was a widower, he married Walter’s mother, who was a widow. Each at the time had two children. The plaintiff’s daughter died unmarried. His relationship with his son Edward was unsatisfactory. He testified that Edward “had been married a time or two * * *. He died, I don’t know where he died, I didn’t know anything about it, I couldn’t hear from him.” The early death of his daughter and his displeasure with his son possibly account for the parental attitude which he assumed toward his new stepson.

In 1905 or thereabouts the plaintiff lived upon a farm near Suver in Polk county. Shortly he became a rural mail carrier and continued in that occupation until 1928 when he retired on a pension of $72.50 per month. He was then 67 years of age. About a year after his retirement he suffered a paralytic stroke which still affected his movements at the time of the trial.

In 1905 the plaintiff became acquainted with Walter. Three years later he married Walter’s mother. The *372 marriage was a happy one. A strong bond of friendship, if not of affection, developed between the plaintiff and Walter. Both said that it approximated the relationship which exists between father and son. May 21, 1919, Walter and his co-defendant were married. The plaintiff became very fond of Walter’s wife and treated her like a daughter. The two families lived upon tracts of land a quarter of a mile or so from one another and exchanged many visits. Hardly a day passed but that Walter or his wife called upon the Bagleys and the latter at times visited the young folks. The plaintiff, in detailing this happy relationship, said that “no trouble of any kind” had ever developed between the two families. In the last four or five years of Mrs. Bagley’s life she became afflicted with a heart ailment. Mrs. Kerr testified that as a result of this ailment Mrs. Bagley “would be up and down * * * but there were times which would run into weeks when she couldn’t be up.” Mrs. Kerr, who called the plaintiff “Grandpa”, testified further: “Well, they would call me and maybe I would be doing the dishes or different things, and Grandpa would come and say Mrs. Bagley wanted me to come up. I always went. I don’t think there was ever a time when I didn’t go. Maybe I would give her a bath, maybe there was something she wanted me to fix to eat, maybe I took her something to eat. Sometimes I took the sweeper up and swept the front room. Sometimes I made her bed, * * * Several times I did the washing * * Her testimony continued in like vein. Carl J. DeArmond, who had known all of the parties over an extended period of time, said: “They seemed to be very congenial, they always got along very well. I know that Mrs. Kerr did lots of things for Mr. and Mrs. Bagley, and I don’t *373 think Mr. Bagley will deny it. I know they done as much for him as any person could. I know I have made the remark more than once to my wife, ‘I wouldn’t do what Mrs. Kerr has done for anybody for all they had. ’ I thought they done just as much as a person could do, one for another.” Upon cross-examination, he added, “Well, I don’t think it was too much maybe, but it was wonderful to be able to do it, I can say that, not many people do it, * * Mrs. Harriet Douglas, another neighbor, who had long been acquainted with all of the parties, testified concerning Mrs. Kerr: “When Mrs. Bagley was sick she done anything any one would do for a sick person when they needed help, I know, I went there, and Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 P.2d 459, 166 Or. 368, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bagley-v-kerr-or-1941.