Belcher v. Belcher

89 P.2d 593, 87 P.2d 762, 161 Or. 341, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 29
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 89 P.2d 593 (Belcher v. Belcher) 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
Belcher v. Belcher, 89 P.2d 593, 87 P.2d 762, 161 Or. 341, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 29 (Or. 1939).

Opinions

BAILEY, J.

The plaintiff, J. C. Belcher, instituted this suit against the defendant Foy C. Belcher, to foreclose a mortgage on a parcel of land in Portland. From a decree in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant appeals.

On April 10, 1924, Mrs. Ellen Belcher, mother of both the plaintiff and the defendant, executed and delivered to J. C. Belcher a note for $800, for money due from her to him, and secured the payment thereof by a second mortgage on property owned by her, namely, the west half of lots 1 and 2, block 61, town of Sellwood, within the corporate limits of the city of Portland. At the time this mortgage was given there was a first mortgage on the property in favor of one Dickey, in the sum of $950. The Dickey mortgage fell due in October, 1925, at which time Mrs. Belcher borrowed from the Bank of Sellwood the sum of $950 and secured the payment thereof by giving to the bank a first mortgage on the same property. Both the Dickey and J. C. Belcher mortgages were satisfied of record, the latter having been released in order that the bank might have a first lien on the realty.

At the same time that the mortgage was given to the bank, Mrs. Belcher gave J. C. Belcher a new note dated October 14, 1925, for the sum of $800, and secured the payment of that note by a second mortgage on the same *343 property. This mortgage was recorded October 15, 1925, and is the one sought to be foreclosed in this suit. The last note given by Mrs. Belcher to her son was payable three years after date and provided as follows: “ Should the property, securing this note, be sold, for cash, or on contract, then this note to draw interest at eight per cent per annum from date of sale.”

Mrs. Belcher on January 22, 1929, conveyed the property to her son Foy C. Belcher, the defendant in this suit, by warranty deed subject to existing incumbrances against the property. As consideration for this conveyance the defendant paid his mother four dollars and agreed to assume and pay the taxes and street assessments against the property and the Bank of Sellwood mortgage. This deed was not filed for record until November 28, 1936. After receiving title to the property the defendant paid the delinquent taxes, amounting to $140.92, street assessments of $67.12, and the Bank of Sellwood mortgage.

The complaint is in the form usual in suits to foreclose mortgages on real property. It sets forth the conveyance of the property by the mortgagor to the defendant on the date hereinabove mentioned; that no part of the note, either principal or interest, has been paid; and that there is due and owing to plaintiff on the said note the sum of $800 with interest at eight per cent from January 22, 1929, the date when the property was conveyed by Mrs. Belcher to the defendant. The prayer is that the amount due on the note, together with a reasonable sum to be allowed as attorney’s fees and plaintiff’s costs and disbursements in this suit, be decreed to be a lien on the property covered by the *344 mortgage and that the same he foreclosed and the property sold.

The defendant’s answer denies all the allegations of the complaint except that Ellen Belcher is a single woman and that she had conveyed to the defendant the mortgaged property. Por a first affirmative defense the defendant alleges that any note or mortgage given by Ellen Belcher to the plaintiff was without consideration. A second affirmative defense states that the plaintiff and the defendant are the sons of Ellen Belcher and that about February, 1928, in consideration of love and affection between them and their mother, and the duty owed by them to her, they entered into an agreement whereby both agreed to pay to their mother the sum of $20 per month for her support for the rest of her life; that the defendant fully performed his part of the said agreement; and that the plaintiff paid the sum of $20 monthly for a period of approximately eight months but had otherwise failed to carry out his part of the agreement.

The answer sets forth as a third affirmative defense the giving of the mortgage on the property here involved to the Bank of Sellwood by Ellen Belcher, the inability of Ellen Belcher to pay the said mortgage and the taxes against the property, and the conveyance of that realty by her to the defendant upon the consideration that the son would pay the mortgage to the bank and pay taxes against the property. It is further averred that neither the defendant nor his mother, until approximately one month prior to the institution of this suit, had any knowledge of the existence of plaintiff’s mortgage, and that Ellen Belcher had represented to the defendant that the only incumbrances against the' property were the mortgage to the bank *345 and the taxes. The defendant further alleges that in reliance upon the representations made by his mother, and not knowing of the plaintiff’s mortgage, he paid the first mortgage and the taxes against the property.

The prayer of the defendant asks that the suit be dismissed, or in the event that it should be found that the plaintiff has a valid mortgage on the property, that the court find that- such mortgage has been paid and satisfied of record; or if the court should find that plaintiff’s mortgage has not been paid, that it decree that the defendant be subrogated to the rights that the Bank of Sellwood would have had under its mortgage, had the same not been satisfied, and that the defendant be decreed a further lien on the property prior to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage, for the amount of taxes and street assessments paid by defendant.

The affirmative matter contained in the answer was put in issue by the reply. The first affirmative defense, i. e., failure of consideration for the note, has been abandoned by the defendant. The circuit court found that there was no agreement between the defendant and the plaintiff as alleged in the defendant’s second affirmative defense. We concur in that finding, without deeming it necessary to set forth and discuss the evidence in that connection.

The evidence is undisputed that the defendant paid to his mother the sum of four dollars in cash and assumed and agreed to pay, as the balance of the purchase price, the Bank of Sellwood mortgage and the taxes and assessments against the property. The defendant testified that he was told by his mother that the taxes, city liens and Bank of Sellwood mortgage were the only incumbrances against the property, and that he did not know of the plaintiff’s mortgage until *346 about a month before this suit was instituted, when he acquired knowledge thereof by the plaintiff’s requesting him to execute a new mortgage in lieu of the one sought to be foreclosed in this proceeding.

Mrs. Belcher testified that she did not know of the plaintiff’s mortgage. She did, however, remember giving to the plaintiff in 1924 a mortgage to secure the payment of $800, which it was agreed between herself and the plaintiff was owing to him from her. With reference to her conveyance of the property to her son Foy she gave the following testimony:

“Q. And you still thought that that same mortgage, the first mortgage, was on the property when you deeded it over to Foy? A. Yes, . . . well, I didn’t give it a thought.”

At the time Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
89 P.2d 593, 87 P.2d 762, 161 Or. 341, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belcher-v-belcher-or-1939.