Butler & Thompson Co. v. Hostettler

58 P.2d 236, 153 Or. 565, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 136
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 236 (Butler & Thompson Co. v. Hostettler) 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
Butler & Thompson Co. v. Hostettler, 58 P.2d 236, 153 Or. 565, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 136 (Or. 1936).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This appeal involves two suits originally instituted to foreclose two separate mortgages on two different adjoining tracts of land, which suits were consolidated in the circuit court.

Butler & Thompson Co., a corporation, is the plaintiff in both suits and as originally instituted the suits named the following defendants: John Hostettler, who is appellant here; J. J. Deakin, L. A. Murphy and Alice *567 Gr. Murphy, his wife. On request of the defendant Hostettler, G. S. Butler and Alice B. Butler, his wife; were brought in as defendants in one of the suits. The'first of these suits concerned the foreclosure of a $3,000 purchase-money, mortgage on the northerly 50%' feet of lots 21, 22 and 23 in block 0 of Railroad Addition to the city of Ashland: The second of the suits involved the foreclosure, of a mortgage given as security for a note originally made in the sum of $7,500, on which there remained due $6,898.06 principal and $150 paid as taxes. It was in this second suit that the Butlers were made defendants. All the parties originally made defendants defaulted,, except John Hostettler, who filed an answer to the complaint in the second suit only, in which answer he asked for affirmative relief based on alleged fraud of the defendant G. S. Butler and others, which will hereinafter be stated in detail. From a decree in favor of the plaintiff the defendant Hostettler has appealed.

The facts in the case are substantially as follows: On September 19, 1930, Charles L. Wimer was the owner of lots 22 and 23 and the northerly 50% feet of lot 21 in block O of Railroad Addition to the city of Ashland. At that time there was a mortgage on this and other property, originally made in the sum of $7,500, which had been reduced to approximately $7,200. Situated on the northerly 50% feet of these three lots was a garage. On or about the date last mentioned, Wimer and his wife conveyed to William M. Briggs said lots 22 and 23, except the northerly 50% feet thereof, “subject to a mortgage indebtedness in favor of the First National Bank of Ashland, in the sum of $7,236, which sum includes the interest thereon. It is understood that said mortgage covers not only the property herein conveyed but other adjacent property lying to the north *568 thereof, title to which is retained hy the grantors but the grantee herein does hereby agree to save the grantors harmless from the payment of all, or any portion of, said mortgage indebtedness, and the grantee further agrees that he will, within 12 months from the date hereof, procure a release of the said mortgage as to the lands included therein which are retained by the grantors”. As a consideration for this conveyance and the transfer to him of the personal property in the building on said property, Briggs, according to his testimony, transferred property of a value of approximately $1,500 and paid $300 or $400 in cash.

On October 28 of the same year, Briggs conveyed to G-. S. Butler, one of the defendants in this suit, an undivided one-third interest in and to the land so acquired by Briggs, which conveyance to Butler contained the following provision, “subject to the encumbrance, conditions and obligations of that certain deed to William M. Briggs, from Charles L. Wimer and wife”, and referred to the volume and page of the record of deeds where the same was recorded. As a consideration for this conveyance to him, Butler paid into the building account the sum of $600, which was to be used and was used in repair and upkeep of the building-on such property.

Butler purchased from the First National Bank on October 31,1930, the note, originally made for $7,500, for $7,052.21, which in addition to the balance due on the note included $150 as taxes on the mortgaged property paid by the bank. The note was transferred to Butler with the following indorsement of the bank, by its cashier: “Assigned Oct. 31, 1930, for value received, to Gr. S. Butler, without recourse.” At the same time the bank assigned and transferred to Butler the mort *569 gage given as security for the payment of said note, which assignment was on the following day filed for record. On December 10 of the same year, Butler released from the lien of said mortgage all the property covered thereby, except the part which had previously been conveyed by Wimer and his wife to Briggs, in which latter tract Butler had acquired an undivided one-third interest. This partial release was filed for record February 24, 1931, and recited, among other matters, “it being understood that said mortgage shall remain in full force and effect as to said portion of said mortgaged property conveyed to said Wm. M. Briggs as aforesaid”. The property hot released from the lien of the mortgage included all of lots 22 and 23, except the northerly 50% feet of the same.

. Wimer and his wife on March 10, 1931, conveyed to Briggs the northerly 50% feet (sometimes referred to as 50 feet) of lots 21, 22 and 23 in said block 0, and there was executed and delivered by Briggs to Wimer a purchase-money mortgage for $3,000, covering the real property so conveyed, to secure the payment of the $3,000 note executed at the same time by Briggs and payable to Wimer. Briggs on April 6, 1931, conveyed to Butler an undivided one-third interest in the land last acquired by him from Wimer, subject to the $3,000 purchase-money mortgage given by Briggs to Wimer. Later, after the defendant Hostettler had become interested in this property, Wimer sold, indorsed and delivered to Butler, on September 3,1931, the $3,000 note and assigned to him the mortgage securing the payment of such note.

On January 17, 1931, the Western Loan & Building Company, a corporation, entered into a contract with Briggs whereby it agreed to sell to him lot 21 in said *570 block 0, with the exception of the northerly 50 (50%) feet thereof, for the sum of $4,400, on which contract there was no initial payment and the purchase price was to be paid at the rate of - $52.80 per month beginning February 16,1931.

E. D. Briggs, father of William M. Briggs, prac-. ticing law with him at Ashland under the firm name of Briggs & Briggs, and J. J. Deakin were both interested in all the property hereinabove described, with the possible exception of the tract being purchased on contract from Western Loan & Building Company, but their interest was not shown of record.

We now direct attention to the transactions which were consummated on or about May 22, 1931. At that time Hostettler was the owner of a farm in Josephine county, consisting of approximately 225 acres of land, 70 or 80 of which were under cultivation, and according to the deed for this land, which was on the date last above mentioned given by Hostettler to the Murphys, there was an existing mortgage to the Federal Land Bank of Spokane, on which there was a balance due of approximately $8,000. The Murphys were the owners of approximately 55 acres of farm land in Jackson county, of which 10 acres were in clover, 32 acres in alfalfa and 8 acres in woodland. Against this property was a mortgage lien of approximately $6,000 and “the bond rights of the Medford Irrigation District”.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 236, 153 Or. 565, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-thompson-co-v-hostettler-or-1936.