Crisman v. Corbin

128 P.2d 959, 169 Or. 332, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 82
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 128 P.2d 959 (Crisman v. Corbin) 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
Crisman v. Corbin, 128 P.2d 959, 169 Or. 332, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 82 (Or. 1942).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree of the circuit court which dismissed his suit. The decree was entered after a demurrer to the amended complaint had been sustained and the plaintiff had declined to plead further. According to his pleading, the plaintiff is the maker of an overdue, usurious promissory note in the denomination of $9,000, and the defendants are its payees and holders. The payment of the note is secured by a pledge of some corporate stock owned by the plaintiff. The prayer asks that judgment be entered in favor of the state for the amount actually borrowed; that the defendant be directed to surrender to the court’s clerk possession of the pledged securities; that the latter be sold to satisfy the judgment; and that there be awarded to the plaintiff any additional relief which equity may deem proper. The demurrer was based upon a contention that the complaint fails to state a cause of suit.

Stated more fully, the amended complaint avers that in 1938 the plaintiff borrowed from the two defendants the three sums of $3,700, $1,000 and $1,000 and gave to the defendant Corbin three promissory notes in the denominations of $4,000, $1,200 and $1,200. *335 Each of the three notes included “a bonus or commission” for the defendant Eddy, one in the amount of $300 and the other two in the amounts of $200 each. Payment of the notes was secured by a warranty deed executed by the plaintiff and his wife and delivered to the defendant Corbin, which the parties, however, deemed a mortgage. January 31, 1939, there was due to the defendants $6,800 upon the three notes.

The property which the plaintiff conveyed to the defendant Corbin by the aforementioned deed was improved with a hotel building known as the Vale Hotel, and in January 1939 it was encumbered with various liens — -tax, mechanics’, materialmen’s, etc. — in addition to the mortgage given to Corbin in the form of the deed. At that juncture the parties effected an agreement and pursuant to it Corbin reconveyed to the plaintiff the aforementioned real property. At the same time the plaintiff, through the medium of this property, secured a mortgage loan in the amount of $11,000 from the Eeconstruction Finance Corporation, and discharged the outstanding tax and lien indebtedness.

The agreement which resulted in the reconveyance further contemplated that the plaintiff should organize a corporation, convey to it title to the aforementioned property and secure payment of the three loans with a pledge of the corporation’s stock. According to the complaint, the plaintiff formed the corporation (Vale Hotel Company) and he and his wife conveyed to it the hotel property. The corporation’s capital stock was represented by 1,000 shares of common and 1,000 shares of preferred stock. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff was entitled to the stock as consideration for his conveyance to the corporation of the hotel property. It also alleges that after these things had been *336 done the defendants demanded that the plaintiff sign and deliver to “defendant Corbin his promissory note in the sum of $9,000.00 and that the payment of said note be secured by said 1,000 shares of the preferred stock and said 1,000 shares of the common stock of said Vale Hotel Company.” The complaint adds: “Plaintiff was compelled to and did comply with said demand.” Thus was issued the note which the complaint charges is usurious.

The pledge just mentioned was made in part in the following manner (our quotation is from the complaint) :

“Pursuant to said plan and scheme to conceal the usurious character of said loan, 680 shares of preferred stock of said corporation were issued to defendant J. C. Corbin, 220 shares of preferred stock were issued to defendant S. L. Eddy, and 100 shares of preferred stock were issued to plaintiff, and the common stock was issued to * * *. Thereupon all said shares of stock issued to plaintiff were endorsed in blank and delivered to the defendants.”

The complaint alleges:

“At the time of the consummation of the above transaction, and as a part thereof, plaintiff upon demand of defendants and to conceal the true character of said transaction, entered into a certain pretended written agreement with defendants denominated an ‘ Agreement to Purchase Stock. ’"

A copy of that writing forms a part of the complaint. It purports to be an agreement by the plaintiff to purchase from the defendants 900 shares of preferred stock of the Vale Hotel Company at the price of $9,000 and declares that “as security for performance of his obligation hereunder, the Buyer agrees to give Sellers a promissory note for the full amount of the purchase *337 price, which note shall be secured by 1,000 shares of the preferred stock and 1,000 shares of the common stock of the Yale Hotel Company.” It also declares: “Time is of the essence of this agreement * * * and if the Buyer fails to pay the full purchase price, with accrued dividends, * * * and in case of such default the Sellers may sell all of the security covered hereby * * *.”

The complaint alleges that the only consideration which the plaintiff received for the $9,000 note and the pledge of corporate stock “was and is said loans totaling the sum of $3,700.00.” (That amount is seemingly an error. The original complaint states it as $5,700.)

The complaint charges that

“said transactions above set forth were and are usurious * * * in that by said contracts plaintiff obligated himself to pay to defendants the full sum of $9,000.00, together with any dividends upon said stock, in return for a loan of $5,700.00.”

Finally, the complaint alleges:

“Defendants at the time of filing the original complaint herein were threatening to sell said 1,000 shares of common stock and said 1,000 shares of preferred stock at private sale to satisfy said loan and to retain the proceeds thereof and heretofore have mailed to plaintiff a certain notice to that effect, a true copy of said notice being attached to this complaint marked ‘Exhibit B’, and by reference thereto made a part hereof.”

It alleges that the corporate stock was worth “far in excess of said $9,000.00.”

Exhibit B is a letter, dated January 31, 1940, addressed to the plaintiff and signed by the defendants. After stating that the agreement between the parties *338 “is now in default and has been for many months past” it informs the plaintiff that the defendants “will offer for sale all the preferred and common stock covered by said agreement and previously released of the Yale Hotel Company, an Oregon corporation, at 2 o’clock P. M., on the 8th day of February, 1940, * * *. At that time and place the said stock will be offered for sale to the highest bidder. * * * On such sale, the proceeds of the sale will be applied in accordance with the terms and provisions of the agreement.” The complaint was filed February 7, 1940, a week after receipt of the notice just mentioned. We have already stated the contents of the prayer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 P.2d 959, 169 Or. 332, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crisman-v-corbin-or-1942.