Burkhart v. Howard

12 P. 79, 14 Or. 39, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 74
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 12 P. 79 (Burkhart v. Howard) 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
Burkhart v. Howard, 12 P. 79, 14 Or. 39, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 74 (Or. 1886).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

The record herein shows that the appellant, as administrator of the estate of Philip Baltimore, deceased, commenced a suit in the Circuit Court for Linn County, to foreclose a certain bond for a deed. lie alleged in his complaint, after alleging the decease of said Baltimore and of his appointment as administrator of the estate of the deceased, that on the 19th day of September, 1877, said Estelle -M. Howard executed to Thomas Monteith her promissory note for five hundred dollars, with ten per cent, interest per annum from date, payable as follows: The interest on or before one year from the date thereof, one hundred dollars of the principal, and all the interest due on or before eighteen months from the date thereof, and a like payment of one hundred of the principal, together with all interest due, to be made on or before the expiration of each six months thereafter, until the whole sum of five hundred dollars and interest was paid; that at the same time the said Monteith executed to the said Estelle M. Howard a bond with a penalty of one thousand dollars, conditioned that it should be void if said Monteith executed to her a deed to lots 5 and 6 in block No. 90, in the city of Albany, in Linn County, Oregon, on or before the 1st day of January, 1884, provided she should on or before that date pay to him the amount [42]*42of the said note and interest; that by mutual mistake between said parties the premises to be conveyed were incorrectly described in the boncf; that they should have been described therein as lots 5 and 6 in block No. 90 in the Southern Addition to the city of Albany, in Linn County, Oregon. That the said Estelle M. Howard went into immediate possession of said lots, and ever since had been, and then was, in the actual and notorious possession of them; that on the 5th day of February, 1884, the said Thomas Monteith, for value, duly assigned and transferred said promissory note to appellant, who became the legal owner and holder thereof ; that said Estelle M. Howard had paid fifty dollars thereon, and the interest to September 19, 1878, and no more; that the amount thereof, with the interest thereon at 10 per cent, per annum from said last date, was due and owing from said Estelle M. Howard to appellant; that on February, 1884, said Thomas Monteith duly assigned all his property, both real and personal, including the said lots, to respondent 11. S. Strahan, for the benefit of his creditors, but that said Strahan received the assignment with notice of the possession and rights of said Estelle M. Howard; that said assignee and said Thomas Monteith were ready and willing to make, execute and deliver to the said Estelle M. Howard a good and sufficient deed to the premises, but that she would not accept it, and refused to pay the note ; that the other respondents claimed some interest in the premises; but that it was subsequent and subject to the interest of the said Estelle M. Howard. The complaint concluded with a prayer for a decree against said Estelle M. Howard for five hundred dollars and interest; for a re-formation of the bond in reference to the description of the lots ; for a sale of them, and the primary application of the proceeds to the payment of said debt and interest.

It further appears from said record that all the respondents except said Estelle M. Howard filed a demurrer to the complaint, which having been overruled, two of them, said Strahan and D. B. Monteith, filed separate answers. The former denied that he was ready or willing, or would at all, make, ex[43]*43ecute or deliver to the said Estelle M. Howard a good or sufficient deed to the lots, or that he took or received the assignment from said Thomas Monteith subject to any lien or rights of appellant in or to the lots ; alleged that the assignment was made on or about the last day of February, 1884; that said Thomas Monteith, long before he executed the bond, owed one Hannon the sum of four thousand dollars, with accruing interest from December, 1876, and still owed it to Hannon ; that it had been reduced to a judgment, and presented for payment as a claim against the estate of said Thomas Monteith, and that more than six months had elapsed since the presentment, and no objections had been made to it; and claimed that thereby his interest as assignee in the premises was prior to any interest of the appellant therein.

D. B. Monteith, in his answer, denied that his interest or claim in the premises was subsequent or subject to that of the appellant or of the said Estelle M. Howard, or that it was acquired with any knowledge or notice of any interest of the appellant, except that he had knowledge of the giving of the bond set forth in the complaint; and that Estelle M.. Howard refused to pay said note or any part thereof, except thirty dollars. And he further alleged in his answer, that before the assignment of the note by Thomas Monteith to the appellant, he executed with the said Thomas Monteith, as surety only, for the sole use and benefit of said Thomas Monteith, four certain promissory notes; one of them Januai’y 1st, 1883, for $5,000, with interest at ten per cent, from date, payable one day after date; two of them October 1st, 1882, for $6,000 each, with interest at the same rate, and payable one day after date; and the other on the same day for $5,000, bearing the same rate of interest, and payable at the same time ; that to secure him against payment of said notes, the said Thomas Monteith and wife, on the 2d day of February, 1884, before the assignment of the note to appellant, executed under their hands and seals a mortgage on certain premises therein described, which included said lots; that said mortgage was duly acknowledged so as to entitle it to record, and the same was, [44]*44on the 11th of February, 1884, duly recorded in the office of the clerk of the said County of Linn ; that the conditions in said mortgage having been broken, he, said D. B. Monteith, commenced a suit in said circuit court against said Thomas Monteith to foreclose it; that he obtained a decree at the October term, 1884, of said circuit court, foreclosing said mortgage, and directing the sale of the mortgaged premises, including the lots in question, to satisfy the sum of $19,002.20, and interest thereon, the amount adjudged to be due the said defendant from the said Thomas Monteith, besides costs, which decree remained in full force.

The case was heard upon these pleadings, and the court decreed a dismissal of the complaint, which is the decree appealed from.

The appellant’s counsel contends- that the effect of the bond executed by Thomas Monteith to Estelle M. Howard transferred the title in equity to the lots from the former to the latter; that he held the legal title merely as a security for the payment of the note; and that when he transferred the note to the appellant, it entitled the latter to the benefit of the security ; that the transaction between said Monteith and Estelle M. Howard was, in effect, a mortgage in favor of the former upon the premises in question, to secure the purchase money, and that when the note was transferred, it was as effectual to transfer the security as the assignment of a note secured by a mortgage would be to transfer the mortgage. It occurred to me upon the hearing that said counsel’s position was entirely correct in principle, and I am still of that opinion; but conceding this to be true, what security had Thomas Monteith, growing out of the transaction, to transfer, when he assigned the note to the appellant? He had at the time executed the mortgage to said D. B. Monteith for about $19,000, which covered the premises in question.

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Bluebook (online)
12 P. 79, 14 Or. 39, 1886 Ore. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burkhart-v-howard-or-1886.