Connel v. O'Connor

80 P.2d 542, 159 Or. 348, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 76
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 542 (Connel v. O'Connor) 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
Connel v. O'Connor, 80 P.2d 542, 159 Or. 348, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 76 (Or. 1938).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This suit is brought by Bridget Connel, plaintiff, as a creditor, to set aside a conveyance of certain real property in Wasco county from the defendant Mary Glavey 0 ’Connor to the defendant Marguerite Glavey, her daughter. After a hearing on the merits a decree was entered by the circuit court, dismissing the suit.

In July, 1932, the defendant Mary Glavey O’Connor executed and delivered to the plaintiff three promissory notes totaling $1,727, and at the same time executed a chattel mortgage on certain personal property consisting of horses and farm equipment, to secure the payment of the notes. All the notes were payable, respectively, one year or less from date.

On failing to receive payment Bridget Connel, payee of the notes, instituted a suit against Mary Glavey O’Connor in November, 1933, to collect the amount of the notes and to foreclose the chattel mortgage. Shortly thereafter Mrs. O’Connor paid to the *350 plaintiff in that suit $1,000, of which $500 was paid in satisfaction of a judgment theretofore obtained, by that plaintiff against Mrs. O’Connor, and the balance of the $1,000 was paid towards costs of the suit and applied on the indebtedness owing to the. plaintiff, on said notes as, principal and interest. In consideration of this $1,000 the parties to the litigation entered into a stipulation whereby Mrs. O’Connor was granted an extension of time until December 12, 1934, in which to pay the balance due on the notes and interest, and that suit was dismissed.

No further payments were made on the three notes, and on January 4, 1935, attorneys for the plaintiff wrote to the defendant, Mrs. O’Connor, insisting that the notes be paid. A week later another letter was written to the defendant by the attorneys, advising her that unless additional security should be given or unless she could obtain the signatures of her son and daughter, on the notes, foreclosure proceedings on-the chattel mortgage given by her would be instituted. About this time Mrs. O’Connor sent her daughter., Marguerite Grlavey, and her son, Jack Glavey, to the plaintiff’s attorneys, with an offer to pay the interest on the said notes., which offer was refused. Some few days later, suit was instituted by the plaintiff herein, payee in said notes, against Mrs. O’Connor, to collect the balance due on the notes and to foreclose the chattel mortgage.

On April 20, 1935, a decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff and against Mrs. O’Connor in the foreclosure proceedings, for the balance due on the notes and the foreclosure, of the mortgage. Thereafter the mortgaged property was sold and a considerable amount of it was bought by Mrs. O’Connor’s son, Jack Grlavey. The amount realized from the sale was not *351 sufficient to pay the judgment but left a balance of $1,031.17 due the plaintiff. Execution was thereupon issued for the balance of the judgment and returned nulla bona.

After the letters of January 4 and 11, 1935, were written by the plaintiff’s attorneys to Mrs. O’Connor, the latter, under date of January 16, 1935, made, executed and delivered to her daughter a quitclaim deed to all her interest in certain real property in Wasco county, Oregon, consisting of city lots and farm lands. The deed was filed for record January 19,1935.

This suit was instituted March 22, 1937, to have set aside said deed from the defendant Mary Glavey O’Connor to her daughter, as having been made to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of said Mrs. O’Connor and especially this plaintiff, Bridget Connel. The deed from Mrs. O’Connor to her daughter attempted to convey to the grantee therein Mrs. O’Con-nor’s interest in the real property which she had inherited from her deceased first husband, T. W. Glavey, and the interest in the said property which she had inherited from her deceased minor child.

In attempting to uphold this conveyance from Mrs. O’Connor to her daughter, Marguerite Glavey, the defendants contend that Mrs. O’Connor had received as guardian for her two children, Marguerite and Jack Glavey, large sums of money and other personal property to which they were entitled from the estates of their father, T. W. Glavey, and their uncle, John Glavey; that the mother had used the money and personal property as her own and had not accounted therefor to her two children; and that the deed was given by her to Marguerite to hold in her own right and as trustee for her brother, Jack, in satisfaction of their claim for money then due them from their mother.

*352 T. W. Glavey died intestate in Wasco county in 1918, leaving- surviving him his widow, defendant in this suit, who later became Mrs. O’Connor, and three minor children, the defendant Marguerite Glavey,- Jack Glavey and another child who died in infancy. At the time of his death Mr. Glavey was the owner outright of a small amount of real property and the owner of an undivided interest, in- various instances an undivided one-half, one-third or one-fourth, in other parcels of real property consisting of town lots and farm lands in Wasco county. His interest in the real property was appraised in his estate-at approximately $28,000.

Under the law then existing the widow was entitled at her election to take in fee simple an undivided one-third interest in the real property of the deceased husband (Laws 1917, chapter 331), and Mrs. O’Connor, then Mrs. Glavey, did elect to take' an undivided one-third interest in her deceased husband’s real property. The three children were entitled to an undivided two-thirds interest, and on the death of the minor child Mrs. O’Connor inherited an additional undivided two-ninths interest in her late husband’s estate: §10-101, Oregon Code 1930.

The personal property of T. W. Glavey, deceased, was appraised at $45,351.01, and the widow was entitled (§ 10-102, Oregon Code 1930) to one-half of it after the debts of the decedent and the costs of administration, amounting to $5,311, were paid. The distributive share of each child in the personal property of the father’s estate was of the appraised value of $6,673. The widow, who thereafter became Mrs. O’Con-nor, acted as administratrix of that estate and later as guardian of her three children. Marguerite Glavey, one of the defendants herein, became 18 years of age *353 in 1927. Jack Glavey, however, did not become 21 years of age until 1937.

About June, 1924, Marguerite Glavey and Jack Glavey, respectively, became entitled to receive from the estate of their uncle, John Glavey, approximately $7,880 and $1,750, bequeathed to them by their uncle’s will. Apparently this money was paid to their mother, as guardian for them.

The complaint contains the allegation usual to a suit of this nature. The answer admits some of the allegations of the complaint, by failure to deny the same, and puts in issue the other allegations by general denial or denial on information and belief. No affirmative averments are contained in the answer.

The appellant questions in this court for the first time the sufficiency of the defendants’ pleading to permit them to show that the transfer of Mrs. O’Con-nor’s interest in real property to her daughter was not affected for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 542, 159 Or. 348, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connel-v-oconnor-or-1938.