Cogswell v. Wilson

21 P. 388, 17 Or. 31, 1888 Ore. LEXIS 92
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 P. 388 (Cogswell v. Wilson) 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
Cogswell v. Wilson, 21 P. 388, 17 Or. 31, 1888 Ore. LEXIS 92 (Or. 1888).

Opinions

Thayer, J.

The appellant and one D. R. Jones, on the rineteenth day of June, 1875, entered into written articles of copartnership. By the terms of the articles, they were to engage in the sheep-raising business, to be carried on at Warner Lake, Grant County, Oregon. The appellant was to furnish two thousand sheep (or more, as might be agreed upon) for the use of the copartnership, at the rate of three dollars and fifty cents per head. Jones, after fifteen .hundred dollars was taken from the half-value, was to give his note to appellant for the remainder of one half the sheep at the same valuation; said note was to draw interest at the rate of one per cent per month until paid; appellant was to make such payment on lands that said copartnership might purchase from the state of Oregon as university lands, or from the Oregon Central Military Road Company (if such lands were purchased), which purchase might be at the discretion of both parties; the appellant was to make such payment on said lands as might be required for the year 1875, which would be the first payment, and Jones was to make the second payment, appellant the third payment, and Jones the fourth payment. Each party was to pay one half of the purchase price, and all the expenses that might be incurred in the purchase and care of the sheep, and the sheep and their increase was to be under the care and control of the appellant. Both parties were to put up such quantities of hay each season for [33]*33the sheep as the appellant might think proper, to be done at their equal expense.

The parties, after executing said articles, it appears, engaged in said business. The appellant, on the tenth day of September, 1875, in pursuance of the partnership articles, furnished to the partnership 2,084 sheep and 42 bucks; and several tracts of land were purchased, claimed to be partnership property, the title to which was taken in the name of the appellant.

It further appears that the parties, at Warner Valley, September 16, 1876, signed the following writing: —

“It is this day agreed by and between II. 0. Wilson of the first part, and D. R. Jones of the second part, that as soon as the hay-land is purchased of the road company, then the said II. C. Wilson is to deduct the sum of fifteen hundred dollars from the amount D. R. Jones is indebted to lnm, for the improvements on the ranch.”

And that, at the same time and place, the said Jones executed to appellant, said II. 0. Wilson, his promissory note and writing, of which the following is a copy:— “$2624.30.

“One day after date, I promise and bind myself or heirs to pay to II. C. Wilson, or order, the just and full sum of $2624.30, in gold coin, with intei'est at the rate of one per cent, in like gold coin, for one-half interest in 2,926 head of sheep. The consideration of the above obligation is such that udien the said D. R: Jones or his heirs pay to II. C. AVilson the above sum, with interest, then the said Wilson is to deliver to the said D. R. Jones one half of the above band of sheep and their increase.”

On the back of this writing are the following indorsements: — ■

“Indorsed October 4, 1879. Paid on the within note fourteen hundred and eighty-nine dollars and sixty-one cents ($1489.61), October 21, 1880. Received on the within, $1,279.”

[34]*34It further appears that said parties continued in their said business until the twenty-sixth day of April, 1881, at which time A. and C. U. Snider caused an attachment to issue out of the circuit court for said county of Lake, in an action in their favor and against the said D. It. Jones, then pending in said court, to be levied upon the interest of said Jones in said sheep.

■ The sheriff’s return upon the writ of attachment is as follows:—

“State of Oeegon,

County op Lake.

“I hereby certify that I received the annexed writ of attachment on the twenty-fifth day of April, 1881, and executed the same by attaching all the right, title, and interest that the defendant, D. E. Jones, had in and to the copartnership property of Henry C. Wilson and D. E. Jones, doing business, under the firm name of Wilson & Jones.

■ “I also took into my possession the following described personal property of said copartnership, to wit: two thousand head of sheep, more or less, one black mare mule, one bay horse mule. I also served a copy of this writ upon the defendant, D. E. Jones.

“Upon said copy there was indorsed by me a notice that I had attached all his right, title, and interest in and to said copartnership property.

• “I also deposited in the post-office at Lakeview, postage prepaid, á copy of said writ of attachment, directed to Henry C. Wilson, at Eed Bluff, California, his post-office address; said copy of writ containing, a notice that I had attached all the interest of defendant, D. E. Jones, in said copartnership property.

“Dated Lakeview, April 28, 1881.

(Signed) '‘J. L. Hanks,
• “ Sheriff of Lake County, Oregon.”

[35]*35Subsequently, and on the seventh day of Juno, 1881, judgment was entered in' said action in favor of the Sniders, and against said Jones, for the aggregate' sum of $1,408.35, recovery, and $20.80, costs and disbursements. The said judgment entry contained the following clause: And it is further ordered and adjudged that the said plaintiffs do have execution against the property of the said defendant, and that the property heretofore attached in this action be sold as by law provided, to satisfy the said plaintiff’s demands herein.”

It further appears that execution was issued upon the said judgment, and that the right, title, and interest of the said Jones in the said sheep were, on the seventeenth day of June, 1881, sold by virtue thereof, and bid in by the respondent; that the said sale purported to be all the right, title, and interest of the said Jones in the sheep-raising business in Lake and Grant counties, Oregon, which he had on or after the seventh day of May, 1881, and which he had in and to the copartnership property of said Wilson & Jones; that respondent’s purchase of Jones’s interest was on the seventeenth day of Juno, 1881; that the clip of wool from the sheep for that year was sold, and the proceeds of the sale applied to the payment of copartnership debts due to third persons, except a residue left after such payment, which was divided between the appellant-and respondent; that on the fifteenth day of July, 1881, after the sale of the wool, and application of the proceeds as mentioned, the appellant, claiming to be the owner of the entire band of sheep, drove them away, and sold and appropriated them to his own use; that there were of the sheep at the time of the levy of the attachment and sale under the execution, as appears by the stipulation of the parties, 2,559 head of old sheep, and 1,632 head of lambs.

The respondent commenced this suit on the fifth day [36]

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Bluebook (online)
21 P. 388, 17 Or. 31, 1888 Ore. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogswell-v-wilson-or-1888.