Haggerty v. Nobles

419 P.2d 9, 244 Or. 428, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 469
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 419 P.2d 9 (Haggerty v. Nobles) 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
Haggerty v. Nobles, 419 P.2d 9, 244 Or. 428, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 469 (Or. 1966).

Opinion

*431 LUSK, J.

This is a suit for partition of farmland in Wallowa County and for an accounting as incidental thereto. The court, being of the opinion that the property could not be partitioned “without great prejudice to the owners,” ORS 105.245, ordered its sale. The defendants Nobles have appealed from the interlocutory decree. They contend that there should be partition in kind and further challenge the accounting provisions of the decree and the assignment of dower to the plaintiff, Alice G. Nobles Haggerty.

The lands sought to be partitioned are a 680-acre tract and 360 acres of a 520-acre tract, all part of a 2,260-acre dry land grain and livestock farm. The main body of the farm comprises 1,740 acres and includes the 680-acre tract, of which approximately 320 acres are tillable and the remainder pasture. The 520-acre tract is all timbered pasture land.

All the ranch property was owned during his lifetime by Dale E. Nobles, deceased, either in fee simple or as tenant by the entirety with his wife. He died intestate on February 4, 1954. His surviving widow, the plaintiff Mrs. Haggerty, remarried. The interests of the three children in the lands in dispute, which had been owned by Dale E. Nobles in fee, were acquired by them by inheritance upon the death of their father. Title to the lands held by Nobles and his wife, as tenants by the entirety, passed, of course, to his widow upon his death.

The 680-acre tract is owned by the parties as tenants in common as follows: Plaintiff Alice Gr. Nobles Haggerty, an undivided five-eighths’ interest; plaintiffs Marjorie Nobles McGraw and Billie Lee Nobles Warner, daughters of Mrs. Haggerty and Dale E. *432 Nobles, deceased, and defendant James B. Nobles, son of Mrs. Haggerty and Dale E. Nobles, deceased, each a one-eighth undivided interest. (The spouses of the respective parties are also made parties.) The 360 acres of timberland pasture are owned by the three children of Mrs. Haggerty as tenants in common, each having an undivided one-third interest.

A mortgage held by the defendant The Federal Land Bank of Spokane, Washington, was declared by the decree to be a first lien on the property. There is no controversy respecting the mortgage.

On the 680-acre tract are a dwelling and other farm buildings, a power line, and a well connected by pipeline with the dwelling.

During the lifetime of Dale E. Nobles, James B. Nobles and Vaden L. MeG-raw (husband of the plaintiff, Marjorie McG-raw) operated the entire farm under a written lease from Dale E. Nobles. Under date of March 1, 1955, after Dale E. Nobles’ death, his widow entered into a new written lease of the farm •with her son and McG-raw, to run until March 1, 1960. Before the expiration date of this lease the McG-rawNobles partnership was dissolved and James Nobles continued to operate the ranch under the lease and was- still operating it at the time of the trial. No written lease was entered into after the March 1, 1955, lease expired by its terms. There is a dispute as to the status of James Nobles after that time, that is, whether he, as he claims, was in possession under an oral year-to-year lease or was a hold over tenant. The court found that he was a hold over tenant and with that finding we agree.

We will consider first whether the order for sale *433 of the property should be sustained. ORS 105.245 provides:

“If it is alleged in the complaint and established by evidence, or if it appears by the evidence to the satisfaction of the court without an allegation in the complaint, that the property or any part of it is so situated that partition cannot be made without great prejudice to the owners, the court may order a sale of the property, and for that purpose may appoint one or more referees. Otherwise, upon the requisite proofs being made, it shall decree a partition according to the respective rights of the parties, as ascertained by the court. The court shall appoint three referees to partition the property and shall designate the portion to remain undivided for the owners whose interest remain unknown or not ascertained.”

The established test of whether a partition in kind would result in great prejudice to the owners is “whether the value of the share of each in case of a partition would be materially less than his share of the money equivalent that could probably be obtained for the whole”: Idema v. Comstock, 131 Wis 16, 18, 110 NW 786, 120 Am St Rep 1027; Marshall & Ilsley Bank v. DeWolf, 268 Wis 244, 248, 67 NW2d 380; Williamson Investment Co. v. Williamson, 96 Wash 529, 165 P 385. See, also, Leavitt v. Benzing, 97 NH 118, 82 A2d 86; Freeman, Cotenancy 718, §542; 4 Thompson on Real Property, 1961 Replacement, 309, § 1828.

It has been said by this court in a partition case that “it is obnoxious to compel a person to sell his property”: Thompson Estate Co. v. Kamm, 107 Or 61, 68, 213 P 417, 28 ALR 722. To the same effect see Vesper v. Farnsworth, 40 Wis 357, 362; Williamson Investment Co. v. Williamson, supra, 96 Wash at 535. *434 Nevertheless, it is a power that in an appropriate case, the court may, and is required, to exercise.

The testimony upon this question was largely confined to the effect of partition in kind upon the value of the 680-acre tract, and it seems to have been assumed by all parties that the disposition of the timbered pasture, which is much less valuable than, the rest, should follow disposition of the 680 acres. Partition in kind of the latter would give to each of the children approximately 85 acres and the evidence is clear that a farm of that size in that part of Wallowa County would have small value because no one could make a living on it. As we view the case the real question is whether if, as the defendant James Nobles would have it, one parcel of 85 acres on which are located the dwelling and other farm buildings were set apart to him, the market value of the remaining (approximately) 600 acres would be materially diminished. That the court may, in a proper case, order a partial partition in kind and sale of the remainder we think there can be no doubt: ORS 105.205; 105.270; 105.310. See, also, Bennett v. Floyd, 237 SC 64, 73, *435 115 SE2d 659; Swogger v. Taylor, 243 Minn 458, 467, 68 NW2d. 376; Hall v. Hall, 250 Ala 702, 35 S2d 681; 4 Powell on Real Property 631, §612; 68 CJS. 199, Partition § 128.

In general, the evidence on behalf of the plaintiffs is to the effect that the market value of 600 acres sold separately and apart from 85 acres on which the buildings and well are located would be diminished by 20 to 25 per cent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
419 P.2d 9, 244 Or. 428, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggerty-v-nobles-or-1966.