Beals v. Harrison
This text of 222 P. 736 (Beals v. Harrison) 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.
Opinion
This is a suit to cancel a mortgage of record and to release the lien thereof upon the real property therein described. The complaint alleges the execution of the mortgage; avers that it was given to secure the purchase price of the property evidenced by certain promissory notes and [148]*148further states the execution and record of the same. The complaint then contains the following allegation:
“That thereafter and on or about the 19th day of October, 1921, the defendant instituted an action on all of said notes against the plaintiff F. E. Beals, wholly ignoring and disregarding said mortgage.
“That by the institution of said action and by electing to sue upon said promissory notes alone, defendants waived the mortgage hereinbefore referred to and abandoned the same.”
The Circuit Court overruled a general demurrer to this complaint and this is assigned as error.
Section 429, Or. L., reads thus:
“During the pendency of an action at law for the recovery of a debt secured by any lien mentioned in Section 422, a suit cannot be maintained for the foreclosure of such lien, nor thereafter, unless judgment be given in such action that the plaintiff recover such debt or some part thereof, and an execution thereon against the property of the defendant in the judgment is returned unsatisfied in whole or in part.”
In the excerpt from the complaint above set out, the only allegation of fact is the commencement of the action on the notes. All the rest is the plaintiff’s conclusion of law and does not amount to an averment of fact. For aught that appears in the complaint, the plaintiff in the action may have taken a judgment of voluntary nonsuit, leaving her exactly where she was before the action was commenced: Section 184, Or. L.
The demurrer is sustained and the suit dismissed.
Motion to Dismiss Denied. Reversed and Dismissed. Rehearing Denied.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
222 P. 736, 111 Or. 147, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beals-v-harrison-or-1924.