Cooper v. Sagert

223 P. 943, 111 Or. 27, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 106
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 223 P. 943 (Cooper v. Sagert) 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
Cooper v. Sagert, 223 P. 943, 111 Or. 27, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 106 (Or. 1924).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

It appears from the complaint of plaintiff, W. L. Cooper, that on the-day of June, 1917, one O. Ellenreider instituted a suit in the State of Washington against F. W. Sagert, and a deficiency judgment was rendered against F. W. Sagert on the fifteenth day of November, 1917, for the sum of $933.60, no part of which has been paid.

It is further alleged that about December-, 1917, the said O. Ellenreider instituted an action in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Washington against the defendant F. W. Sagert, setting forth the deficiency judgment rendered in the Superior Court of the State of Washington for Clarke County, and in December, 1917, secured judgment against defendant F. W. Sagert for the sum of $933.60, together with interests and costs, that no part of said judgment has been paid or secured; that at the time the complaint was filed in Washington County an attachment was issued and levied upon a certain 10 acres of land in that county.

It is further alleged that on the fourth day of September, 1917, F. W. Sagert executed a deed of the 10-acre tract to defendant, Mildred F. Johnson, in fraud of the creditors of said F. W. Sagert, and particularly O. Ellenreider, with the knowledge of and notice to defendant Mildred F. Johnson.

Prior to the institution of this suit it is alleged O. Ellenreider for a valuable consideration, sold, assigned and transferred that certain judgment recov[30]*30ered in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Washington County on the - day of December, 1917, against P. W. Sagert for the sum of $933.60, with interest and costs, to plaintiff W. L. Cooper, and prays that the deed from P. W. Sagert to Mildred P. Johnson, conveying the 10 acres of land to be set aside and held for naught, and the judgment lien of this plaintiff be declared to be a superior lien upon the 10-acre tract.

Defendant P. W. Sagert answered, admitting the foreclosure suit mentioned in the State of Washington instituted by O. Ellenreider to foreclose two mortgages, naming as defendant in the suit, among others, M. Bitter, also known as Mike Bitter, and that a deficiency judgment was rendered against M. Bitter and defendant Sagert for approximately $933.63; but denies that no part of said deficiency judgment has been paid and alleges the same has been paid in full. Defendant also admits the rendition of the judgment in Washington County, Oregon, in favor of O. Ellenreider and against P. W. Sagert, based upon the deficiency judgment rendered in the State of Washington for the sum of $933.60, with interest, and costs; admits the deed executed for Sagert to Mildred P. Johnson, and denies the allegations as to its being fraudulent.

For a further and separate answer the defendant alleges the facts in relation to the suit by O. Ellenreider in the Superior Court of the State of Washington for Clarke County against J. P. Rann and B. Barbara Rann, his wife, J. W. Rubish, F. W. Sagert, and Mr. Ritter, also known as Mike Bitter, for the foreclosure of a mortgage for the sum of $1,200 given by G. F. Bann, B. Barbara Rann and J. W. Rubish to Mike Bitter upon land in Clarke County, Wash[31]*31ington, and also to foreclose a second mortgage for the sum of $800 given by F. W. Sagert to Mike Ritter upon the same land; both of which notes and mortgages had been sold and assigned to O. Ellenreider and that a decree was entered therein on the third day of October, 1917, in favor of plaintiff and against defendant, and thereafter the land was sold under execution for the sum of $3,500. Thereafter on November 15, 1917, the Superior Court of the State of Washington for Clarke County entered a deficiency judgment and decree in favor of O. Ellenreider for the sum of $1,488.59, and on the same day a decree and judgment was entered in the Washington court against F. W. Sagert and M. Ritter for the sum of $933.60, said M. Ritter having guaranteed the payment of said promissory note.

It is further alleged that on December 3, 1917, O. Ellenreider commenced an action in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Multnomah County against Mike Ritter, alias M. Ritter, to recover $1,488.59 with interest, and the further sum of $800 with interest, and the sum of $100 as attorney’s fees, on the second cause of action, being the sums remaining unpaid after the foreclosure of the mortgages in the State of Washington for which the deficiency judgment was rendered. That thereafter on November 15, 1917, judgment was regularly entered in Multnomah County in favor of O. Ellenreider as plaintiff and against Mike Ritter, alias M. Ritter, as defendant for the sum of $1,488.59, with interest at 6 per cent from the 15th of November, 1917, on the first cause of action, and the sum of $800 with interest, at 6 per cent from the 28th of October, 1916, together with interest at 6 per cent upon $24, from April 28, 1917, and the sum of $80 attorney’s fees.

[32]*32That said sum of $800 and interest and costs, on the second cause of action, in the suit above mentioned in Multnomah County, was for the same note for $800 given by this defendant, F. W. Sagert, to M. Ritter and by him assigned to O. Ellenreider, and is the same note upon which a deficiency judgment was entered in the Superior Court of the State of Washington for Clarke County; which plaintiff alleges has been sold and assigned by O. Ellenreider to him and upon which plaintiff bases his cause of action.

It is further alleged that thereafter execution was duly issued on the judgment in Multnomah County to the sheriff of that county and levied upon property of Mike Ritter, and said property was sold and execution returned satisfied in full by the payment of $2,493.74, besides the cost and expense of sale, which sum was paid by the clerk of Multnomah County to the attorneys for plaintiff O. Ellenreider; and that the judgment obtained on the $800 note in Multnomah County, and the judgment obtained in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Washington County in favor of O. Ellenreider, and against F. W. Sagert, have all been fully paid, satisfied and discharged.

The answer of the defendant, Mildred F. Johnson, is the same in substance as that of F. W. Sagert, except as to the allegations relating to the sale of the 10-acre tract of land which are not necessary to be detailed here.

It will, therefore, be seen that O. Ellenreider obtained a judgment for the $800 note in Washington County against F. W. Sagert, and that the said O. Ellenreider obtained a judgment upon the same $800 note in Multnomah County against M. Ritter, or Mike Ritter, and that the judgment in Multnomah County was satisfied and paid in full. This is admitted by [33]*33the plaintiff in his reply. Therefore, when O. Ellenreider assigned the judgment in his favor against F. W. Sagert in Washington County to the plaintiff, W. L. Cooper, that judgment in Washington County had been satisfied and paid, and O. Ellenreider had no right to collect anything thereon.

Although a creditor may recover many separate judgments for the same debt against parties severally liable, he can have only one satisfaction, and a payment by one, attended by satisfaction of the judgment against him only, operates in law as a satisfaction and discharge of all the others. They are regarded as merely cumulative: Cox v. Smith, 10 Or. 418; 2 Freeman on Judgments (4 ed.), § 467. In Cox v. Smith, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
223 P. 943, 111 Or. 27, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-sagert-or-1924.