Balfour v. Davis

12 P. 89, 14 Or. 47, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 75
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 12 P. 89 (Balfour v. Davis) 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
Balfour v. Davis, 12 P. 89, 14 Or. 47, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 75 (Or. 1886).

Opinion

Strahan, J.

This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage on certain real property in Multnomah County. The mortgage was made to secure a promissory note, dated November 29th, 1882, which note was due two years after'date, and was made payable at the City of San Francisco, California, and provided for the payment of interest half yearly, on the first days of June and December of each year; and if the interest was not paid when due, to be compounded by being added to the principal and becoming a part thereof. The rate of interest specified in the note was nine per cent. The mortgage provided in substance that said G. H. Davis should pay as soon as due all taxes, assessments, and incumbrances whatsoever which may be and appear to be a lien upon the mortgaged property or any part thereof, and will keep the buildings erected thereon insured against fire to the amount required by the plaintiffs or their assignee, in gold coin, in such insurance companies as shall be specified by the plaintiffs ; and that if such taxes, assessments, or incumbrances be not so paid, or such buildings so insured and the policies so assigned, then the plaintiffs may pay such taxes, assessments, or incumbrances, and be sole judge of the legality thereof, or may obtain such insurance in their own name as mortgagees; and all taxes paid therefor shall be secured by said mortgage, and shall be paid by said G. II. Davis on demand, and shall bear interest from the date of the payment at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, and be compounded monthly until paid; and that any default in repayment of such sums when demanded should, at the option of plaintiffs, render said whole mortgage immediately due and payable. The mortgage further provides in substance that, in case any action should be brought to foreclose said mortgage, counsel fees at the rate of twenty per cent, upon the amount due should be allowed and paid, whether judgment be recovered or not; as also such sum as may have been paid for searching the title of the mortgaged property since the date of the record of said mortgage.

[49]*49The main questions presented for our consideration arise upon the answers of the defendants, W. T. Burney and others, and the separate answer of the defendant G. H. Davis. The answer of Burney and others is substantially as follows :

“That defendant Gr. H. Davis executed and delivered to Burney his two certain promissory notes on the first day of November, 1883, for the payment of five hundred dollars each, within one year, with interest at ten per cent, per annum from date, and reasonable attorney’s fee, if collected by suit or action ; and also his certain second mortgage on the same land as respondents’ mortgage, to secure the payment of said notes.

“ That appellant Burney’s notes and mortgage were assigned to said bank on the first of March, 1885, as collateral security for the loan of $800, and interest at ten per cent, per annum, on note endorsed by defendants A. J. Knott and H. Clay Meyers, which had not been paid. These defendants, further answering herein, deny that they have any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief whether said sum has been paid to plaintiffs or not, or as to whether plaintiffs have paid the sum of $12.48, or any sum, on the 29th day of March, 1884, or at any time; or the sum of $14.08, or any sum, on the 23d day of May, 1885, or at any time; or any sum as road tax on the 17th day of July, 1885 j or whether plaintiffs have paid any sum at any time, as taxes or otherwise.”

The separate answer of the defendant Davis is as follows :

Admits the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage alleged in complaint; but denied that said note was to be paid in the State of California, or elsewhere than in the State of Oregon; and alleges as to that fact, that said note was made payable upon the face thereof in said state for the purpose of fraudulently evading the usury laws of the State of Oregon, where this defendant resides, and where plaintiffs’ business is carried on. And this defendant further alleges that said note was executed and delivered to the plaintiffs “upon the following usurious agreement, to wit: “ That plaintiff would loan to the defendant the sum of $1,200 on [50]*50the 29th clay of November, 1882, to be paid in two years, with interest thereon at the rate of nine per cent, per annum, payable half-yearly on the first day of June and December : and in default thereof the same to become compounded by adding the amount of said interest, and the whole thereafter drawing interest as principal; and the further sum of all taxes assessable in Oregon upon the mortgage securing said note, and upon the debt thereby secured, which taxes aggregate the sum of two per cent, per annum ; said taxes to be paid to plaintiffs on or before the 1st day of March of each year.

“ That said amounts were to be paid, and the further sum of $25.75 was retained by plaintiffs of said sum of -ft 1,200, as interest upon said loan, and not otherwise; and that the aggregate of all said sums amounts to a higher and greater rate of interest than ten per cent, per annum upon the said loan, that being the highest rate of interest by the laws of Oregon allowed to be contracted for; and all said sums were contracted to be paid for the use of said sum so to be loaned plaintiffs by defendant, pursuant to the agreement upon which said note was executed.

“Defendant further answering herein, alleges that said mortgage referred to in the second amended complaint herein was made, executed, and delivered upon the following usurious contract, to wit:

“ That the same was made, executed and delivered for the purpose of securing the payment of said note pursuant to its terms, and the said sums therein provided for to the plaintiffs, and thereby plaintiffs contracted to receive, and this defendant to pay, as interest, and for the use of said sum of $1,200, the following sums, viz: Nine per cent, per annum upon $1,200, payable half yearly upon the 1st day of June and December, and in default of the payment when due, then said interest to be compounded by being added to the principal and thereafter drawing the same rate of interest as principal; also the sum of all taxes assessable in Oregon upon the said mortgage, and upon the debt thereby secured, and all taxes, assessments and incumbrances whatsoever, which may be or appear to be liens [51]*51on the property described in said mortgage or any part thereof; and if said taxes, assessments or incumbrances be not so paid, then the plaintiffs should pay the same, and be the sole judge of the legality thereof; and all sums paid therefor should be secured by said mortgage, and paid by this defendant on demand, and if not so paid, bear interest from date of ¡payment by plaintiffs at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, and to be compounded monthly until repaid; also the further sum of $25.75 retained by the plaintiffs. That the sums so contracted to be paid for taxes as aforesaid amounted to more than two per cent, per annum, and that all of said sums payable as aforesaid as interest and for the use and in consideration of said loan of said sum, is and'was a usurious agreement upon the part of this defendant to pay, and the plaintiffs to receive, a higher rate of interest for said money than ten per cent, per annum, that being the greatest sum then allowed by the laws of Oregon.

“ The defendant denied the said conveyance was executed for, or intended to be or was, a mortgage or lien upon said premises, for any purpose other than to secure the payment of said sum of $1,200, pursuant to the terms and conditions of said note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 P. 89, 14 Or. 47, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balfour-v-davis-or-1886.