Gilliam v. Schoen

157 P.2d 682, 176 Or. 356, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 119
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 157 P.2d 682 (Gilliam v. Schoen) 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
Gilliam v. Schoen, 157 P.2d 682, 176 Or. 356, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 119 (Or. 1945).

Opinion

HAY, J.

This is a suit to cancel a deed of conveyance of real property by Elvira Schoen, a widow, (now deceased), in favor of Fred T. Schoen. The plaintiffs are three daughters and a grandson of the grantor. The defendants are the grantee, Fred T. Schoen, and his wife.

The complaint alleged that the grantor, at the time of signing the deed, was eighty-eight years old, and, by reason of her advanced age and of grievous illness with which she had been afflicted for some years, was weak, ailing and unsound of mind and body, and mentally incapable of transacting business or understanding her affairs. It alleged further that she was caused to sign the deed by undue influence exercised over her by the defendants. The answer was a general denial. The trial court decreed cancellation of the instrument, and defendants appealed.

Elvira Schoen and her husband Adolph emigrated from Germany to America in the year 1880, and, after some years in the middle west, came to Oregon in 1908. They had six children, four of whom were born in Germany and two in the United States. One child died in Germany; the others, except Fred, came to Oregon with their parents. Fred remained in the middle west, where he attended a theological seminary. In due time, he was ordained a minister of the gospel, and for a number of years pursued his calling in Oklahoma and in Wisconsin. In 1928, upon the urgent insistence of his parents, and at their expense, he came to Oregon, where.he received a call to a church at Sandy. He served that church for seven years, during *359 which time he organized and conducted a mission at Gresham. Thereafter, he removed from Sandy to Gresham, and became pastor of the mission there. Under his leadership, the mission became organized as a permanent congregation, and a church building was erected for its use.

During the lifetime of her husband, Mrs. Schoen had become the owner of two lots of land in the city of Portland, upon which dwelling houses had been built. The family resided in one of these houses. Adolph Schoen died in 1931. By that time, all of the children had married, and, for about four years after her husband’s death, the widow continued to occupy the family residence. She seems to have been on cordial terms with all of her children, and the record indicates that all of them took a kindly and considerate interest in her welfare. In 1935, having suffered a fall and severely sprained her ankle, she was removed to the home of her daughter Ella Gilliam, who cared for her until she recovered. She then went to Salem, where she resided for some months with her daughter Johanna Miller. Afterwards she went to the home of her daughter Clara Van Horn, who lived with her husband on a farm near Albany, where she stayed for several months. From thence she went to Portland, to the home of her son Ernest and his wife, where she stayed for about seven years. During this period, in 1937, Ernest died, and Elvira remained with his widow, Martha, for about five years thereafter, although from time to time she paid short visits to all of her other children. In August, 1942, Martha was obliged to go to Salem to help her sister-in-law Johanna, in caring for the latter’s sick husband, and thereupon Elvira removed to Fred’s home in Gresham, where she re *360 mained until her death. She died April 27, 1943, at the great age of ninety-two years.

Elvira Schoen appears from the evidence to have been an excellent type of German hausfrau, industrious, capable, a good mother, and a deeply religious woman. She never became proficient in English, but conversed habitually in German. Her reading was confined to her German Bible, and to newspapers and magazines printed in German.

Prior to the death of Adolph Schoen, he and Elvira executed deeds conveying to all of their children the two Portland lots which Elvira owned. Whether or not these deeds were delivered, or were intended to operate as testamentary devises, the evidence does not disclose. Elvira gave them to Fred at one time, but he testified that he returned them to her some years later, and does not know what became of them.

On two occasions, Elvira made gifts of money to Fred for the Gresham church, one of $600 and the other of $250. Her daughters expressed their disapproval of those gifts, and evidenced suspicion that the money had been appropriated by Fred to his own use, although such suspicion has no foundation in the evidence.

In December, 1938, while Elvira was still residing in the home of Martha Schoen, she executed the deed which is the subject of this suit. The testimony of Fred Schoen is the only evidence before us respecting this transaction. He testified that his mother told him that she desired to have all of her property go to the church after her death, and asked him to find out about making a will. He consulted a Portland lawyer of his acquaintance, who suggested that, under the circumstances, an outright conveyance would be more de *361 sirable than a will. After reporting this to Ms mother, he had two deeds prepared by a real estate broker, in Gresham, with whom he was acquainted, each deed covering one of the lots. (Only one of the deeds is involved in tMs suit.) The instruments were warranty deeds, in favor of Fred T. Schoen individually, and not as trustee. After they had been prepared, Fred took his mother, in his own car, from Martha’s home in Portland to the real estate broker’s office in Gresham. The broker read both deeds over to Elvira, in English, word for word, and showed her where to sign. She signed the deeds, and the broker gave them to Fred. Fred then took Elvira back to Martha’s house, where he gave the deeds to her and she immediately gave them back to him. Each deed recites a consideration of $10, and Fred testified that, when she gave him the deeds, he gave his mother two ten-dollar bills. He remained with his mother at Martha’s house for an hour or two, during which time she gave him a letter, which is in evidence in this case. This letter is written in German, and an English translation reads as follows:

“To all my dear Children; I herewith testify, that inasmuch as the dear Lord has so graciously given me a long full life and bestowed so many blessings upon me, I now also wish to show my appreciation for His love and many blessings by bringing a thank offering to Him, not under the false pretense that by so doing I could merit Heaven and Salvation ; but solely out of love for my Lord and Savior. So therefore it is now my last wish and will that the little property I possess through His Grace be given to the Mission especially for the building of Redeemer Evangelical Lutheran Church in Gresham, through my son Fred who is pastor of this church, in honor of all my children and as a memorial to your father and mother, but most of all in honor of our Lord God. I therefore entreat you dear *362 children not to sin against your brother Fred because of the fact that I commissioned him to carry out my will. It is self evident that he should do this since he serves this church and she needs it urgently. Therefore I remind yon again, for God’s sake do not commit a grievous sin against your mother and your brother for the sake of a few dollars. Besides you are not in need of it, having no heirs.
‘ ‘ In Love, Mother. ’ ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P.2d 682, 176 Or. 356, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilliam-v-schoen-or-1945.