Enes v. Pomeroy

206 P. 860, 104 Or. 169, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 11
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 206 P. 860 (Enes v. Pomeroy) 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
Enes v. Pomeroy, 206 P. 860, 104 Or. 169, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 11 (Or. 1922).

Opinion

BURNETT, O. J.

In this case the plaintiff claims that he entrusted the defendant Estella Pomeroy, then Estella Brown, with $1,500 of his money, for the purpose of contracting in his name for the purchase of real property involved in this suit. He charges that instead of stipulating thus, she made the agreement with the then owner of the property in her own name, providing for her purchase of the same, dependent upon making future payments. The plaintiff charges, in substance, that the defendant G. T. Pomeroy afterwards bought the property from the original owner with full knowledge that the plaintiff had advanced the money with which the first payment was made, finally married Mrs. Brown and took possession of the property. The prayer is to the effect that Pomeroy be declared to hold the premises as trustee for the plaintiff until the money the latter had advanced is repaid with interest, and that the plaintiff recover this amount from the defendants and have a lien against the premises, and for further relief.

The answer challenges everything alleged in the complaint except that Estella Pomeroy was formerly [171]*171Estella Brown and that she received from the plaintiff $1,500. It is also admitted that the two defendants were married to each other on January 17, 1921, and are now husband and wife. Otherwise the complaint is denied.

The answer affirmatively states that the defendant Estella contracted with the then owners of the property, Homer Grouley and Fannie Grouley, his wife, about May 29, 1920, to purchase the same at a price of $5,500, of which she paid $1,500 in cash on the execution of the agreement and was to pay $1,000 on or before November 1, 1920, the balance to be secured by a first mortgage on the property. The defendants say that when the second payment became due, the defendant Estella had no funds to complete the contract with the Glouleys and was in default in performance of her contract; and finally, that after such default C. T. Pomeroy purchased the property from the Grouleys and the defendant Estella for value and without any knowledge of any of the matters or things set forth in the complaint. This new matter was denied by the reply.

The substance of the testimony on behalf of the plaintiff is, that he was acquainted with Estella while she was yet the wife of one Brown, and that during her married life with Brown, the plaintiff made her some presents of money and furnished her $50 with which to secure a divorce from Brown. The plaintiff courted Estella and advanced her sums of money from time to time with which to pay her grocery bills and the like. At the time, she was residing in Salem in a house belonging • to a railroad company. She had received notice to vacate the premises and was unable to find a house to rent, whereupon the plaintiff told her to see what she [172]*172could do in the way of purchasing one in his name, and she found that she could buy the property here in question from Gouley for $5,500 upon a cash payment of $1,500 and a further payment of $1,000 on November 1, 1920, whereupon Gouley would execute a deed and take back a mortgage for the remainder of the purchase price. The plaintiff says that he intrusted the defendant Estella with $1,500 in money, with instructions to contract with Gouley in the name of the plaintiff for the purchase of the property on the terms indicated. She, however, caused the contract to be made in her own name. The plaintiff soon afterwards discovered this and taxed her with deceit, whereupon she allayed his fears by stating to him that when the $1,000 should be paid in November she ■ would cause the deed to be made directly to him. As November 1st approached he found himself unable to furnish the money, and so informed her. Later still, as he says, she told' him that she had borrowed $1,000 on the property as security which still further postponed his action, as he relied upon her statement. Meanwhile, the defendant C. T. Pomeroy had appeared on the scene and taken rooms in the house which Estella had occupied at once on making the contract. It developed she had not borrowed the money and was in fact in default, and, on November 5, 1920, Pomeroy bought the house from Gouley direct, paying in cash $4,100, representing the balance of the purchase price, plus $100 interest.

The testimony' on behalf of the defendants' is to the effect that the party from whom Estella said she had borrowed the money for the $1,000 payment had approached Pomeroy to lend that amount of money on the property as it stood, but the latter [173]*173refused to make a loan on city property. This party then interested Pomeroy in buying the premises, with the result as stated.

The testimony of the plaintiff is utterly silent on the subject of Pomeroy’s or G-ouley’s notice of anything about the plaintiff Enes. In other words, the testimony of the plaintiff utterly fails to impute to Pomeroy any knowledge of Enes or of the source from which Mrs. Brown secured the $1,500 which she paid on the contract. On the contrary, Pomeroy and the party who negotiated the sale of the property to him, as well as Gouley, the former owner of the premises, all state they never knety or heard of the plaintiff or of any connection he had with the transaction, until about the time of the commencement of this suit. What, then, are the rights of the parties under such circumstances?

It is elementary law that if A intrusts B with money for the purpose of buying real estate for the former and B takes the money and buys the property, taking title to himself without consent of A, B at once becomes a trustee ex maleficio for the benefit of A.

If that were all of the attraction, it would be easy to charge Estella as such trustee for the benefit of the plaintiff. But, like any other case of trust of that kind, the purchaser from the trustee must have notice of the trust, before he can be charged for the benefit of the cestui que trust. If the purchaser from the original trustee had no notice, or if the testimony fails to prove such notice, of the rights of thé cestui que trust, such purchaser becomes a purchaser in good faith and is exempt from the effect of the trust.

[174]*174Seemingly on the theory that the defendant Pomeroy had no actual notice of the rights of the plaintiff in the premises, plaintiff’s counsel argue that when Pomeroy bought, the defendant Estella was in possession of the premises, which of itself was notice of some kind to Pomeroy, charging him with the duty of inquiry, and that he is affected by what such an inquiry would have disclosed. Conceding this as a principle, we cannot say that Pomeroy’s inquiry would have disclosed' anything further than what would have appeared by an inspection of the contract between Estella and Grouley. We cannot presume that Estella would have revealed to her latest suitor the fact that she had diverted to her own use money intrusted to her by his rival. The case comes within the analogy of Section 10174, Or. L., relating to fraudulent transfers of property. It is there stated that:

“The provisions of this chapter shall not be construed in any manner to affect or impair the title of a purchaser for a valuable consideration, unless it shall appear that such purchaser had previous notice of the fraudulent intent of his immediate grantor, or of the fraud rendering- void the title of such grantor.”

The.notice in such' cases must be actual notice: Coolidge v. Heneky, 11 Or. 327 (8 Pac. 281).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P. 860, 104 Or. 169, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enes-v-pomeroy-or-1922.