Cook v. United States National Bank

274 P. 1098, 128 Or. 415, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 53
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 274 P. 1098 (Cook v. United States National Bank) 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
Cook v. United States National Bank, 274 P. 1098, 128 Or. 415, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 53 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

MoBEIDE, J.

1. In order to recover in this proceeding claimant must show by satisfactory and convincing evidence, first, that at the time of the death of Dr. Fisher, claimant had a complete subsisting contract with deceased; second, that he and his cobeneficiary had complied with all the stipulations therein prescribed by the contract to be performed by them; third, that deceased breached the contract; and fourth, that damage resulted from such breach. All these facts must be evidenced by some corroborating evidence other than that of the claimant.

Outside of the fact that there was an exchange of properties substantially in line with that specified in the alleged agreement, and a mortgage given by claimant and his sister for $9,000 and interest, the whole matter rests upon the unsupported and uncorroborated testimony of claimant. Whether claimant or his sister received the whole or any part of the $9,000, or whether the failure of Dr. Fisher to comply with the agreement was the cause of their giving up the property, or what the real inside facts in regard to this transaction actually are, rest solely upon claimant’s uncorroborated testimony, when it is apparent that other testimony, if it existed, was within his reach.

2. The alleged contract between Dr. Fisher and claimant is ambiguous in some particulars and not in itself a complete contract. It provided that claimant and his sister should purchase the property for $14,000, but was not signed by Miss Cook. It pro *423 vided for a two-thirds interest in the property purchased to be conveyed to her and one third to claimant. Manifestly incomplete at the time, the whole matter was up in the air until Miss Cook had accepted the terms and made herself a party to the contract. The agreement was not severable into two contracts, but joint. If claimant turned in his property on the deal and if Miss Cook accepted the terms and purchased the property, then, if such consideration was sufficient, there was a joint contract, not joint and several, to pay the Cooks $9,000 in installments of $1,000 a year. This was payable to the Cooks, not to the Lamports. If claimant has any claim, he has only a joint claim with his sister for a breach: Parsons on Contracts (7th ed.), 13; Thieman v. Goodnight, 17 Mo. App. 429; Slaughter v. Daven port, 151 Mo. 26 (51 S. W. 471).

3, 4. The consideration, so far as Miss Cook is concerned, is for past “faithful and helpful services.” There is no indication that the past services here mentioned had not been paid for, or that they were such as created a moral obligation on the part of Dr. Fisher to pay for them so that the promise to pay $9,000 to her and her brother on account of them amounted to a gift and created no legal obligation, nor is she here claiming anything by reason of it.

If the same language were used in a will, it would support a bequest, because in that case no consideration is necessary to support a will; but to support an action on contract, the alleged consideration is insufficient, merely a promise to make a gift, and a promise to make a gift is never enforceable in law.

5, 6. Past services, when rendered under such circumstances as to create no legal liability, are not a *424 consideration for a subsequent promise: Page on Contracts, § 627 et seq. Then what is the consideration here? Upon claimant’s theory, Dr. Fisher, who had no interest whatever in the property purchased and could derive no probable benefit from the purchase, agreed that if claimant and his sister would purchase it, and that if claimant should convey his equity in a contract for the purchase of certain other property as a net payment on the property to be purchased, and execute a mortgage on the property purchased for the balance of the purchase price, he would pay to them $9,000, which they, not Dr. Fisher, should apply on the purchase price. Claimant here is claiming in his own right. His sister paid nothing and has lost nothing by the transaction. His claim is in effect that Dr. Fisher agreed, that, if he, claimant, would make the exchange of properties and obligate himself and his sister to pay $9,000 difference, he, Dr. Fisher, would pay that difference.

There is no promise on the part of the claimant or his sister to repay this $9,000 and interest on deferred payments. In the language of the street, we might inquire, “where does Dr. Fisher get off ” on this financial excursion? He is not to be repaid and is not interested in either tract of land. His only compensation is the altruistic one of being able to see his friends make a good trade. Were not the identity of this alleged contract admitted by defendant’s counsel on the trial, we would be inclined to doubt its genuineness, but it is admitted. But there is no getting away from the fact that the promise was gratuitous and probably a part of some larger or different transaction not disclosed in the testimony. There are too many unexplained circumstances in connection with *425 this affair, and too many inherent improbabilities in claimant’s account of the matter to justify us in allowing’ this claim.

The first improbable part of the narrative is claimant’s account of the anxiety of Dr. Fisher that claimant and his sister should make this trade and whereby he would gain only the privilege of presenting them with $9,000, and several thousand dollars more in accrued interest without a nickel’s advantage to himself. Claimant says, “he was very anxious to enter into the agreement * * I liken him to a young boy going to his first circus, he was so anxious to enter into this proposition, and finally I entered into an agreement with him.” All of which, while seeming the very height of romantic altruism ill comports with the character of a man whose business methods had enabled him to accumulate a competence of $130,000, and who had a family to protect and provide for. Such a man might in a moment of friendship consent-on solicitation to assume a friend’s debt for several thousand dollars, but that he would enthusiastically insist on the privilege is not so probable. Another improbability is that the agreement was dictated by Dr. Fisher. The document is carefully drawn and contains every technical legal requirement so far as such existed to make it a perfect document. It exhibits the characteristics of having been prepared, not by a physician or a layman, but someone possessing at least the elementary requisites of a legal education. That the deceased signed it, is unquestioned, but the statement that he dictated it is subject to serious doubt. We do not assert that it is impossible that claimant’s account of the transaction is true, or that the legal effect of the transaction would have been dif *426 ferent had he been corroborated in the statement made by him; bnt looking at it from the standpoint of an observer who knows practically nothing of the parties, these apparent improbabilities lend an air of doubt and uncertainty to the transaction, which would cause an unprejudiced person to hesitate in deciding what is in effect an action for unliquidated damages against the estate, and which attempts to establish the fact that a large liability has been incurred by one whose lips are sealed in death.

There are too many missing chapters in the history of the transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 P. 1098, 128 Or. 415, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-united-states-national-bank-or-1929.