Hanns v. Hanns

423 P.2d 499, 246 Or. 282, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 576
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 423 P.2d 499 (Hanns v. Hanns) 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
Hanns v. Hanns, 423 P.2d 499, 246 Or. 282, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 576 (Or. 1967).

Opinion

REDDING, J. (Pro Tempore).

This is a suit in equity brought by plaintiff, Prank J. Hanns, against Satolli W. Hanns, a single man, Sylvania M. Kremmel, a single woman, Bosina Hanns Mounce and her husband, and Steven J. Hanns and his wife, to impose a constructive trust upon the proceeds from the sale of a certain parcel of real property in Eugene, Oregon. The plaintiff, Prank J. Hanns, is the son of P. J. Hanns, a deceased son of Joseph A. Hanns. Plaintiff has named all of the children of Joseph A. Hanns and his wife Emma, surviving at the time this suit was instituted. Their spouses were also named as defendants. Of the defendants, however, only Satolli W. Hanns and Sylvania Kremmel, brother and sister, defended in the trial court, and only they have appeared in this court as respondents.

This being a suit in equity, it becomes the duty of this court to determine the issues de novo and in so doing, to review the entire record and make its own evaluation of the facts. Por this reason, it becomes necessary to here review in some detail the facts leading up to this litigation. As will appear later in this opinion, we find that some of the trial court’s findings of fact are unsupported by the evidence.

Hntil approximately one year prior to the death of Emma Hanns in 1930, Joseph and Emma Hanns, the mother and father of the defendants, were the sole occupants of the family home, the property in question at East 13th Avenue and Oak Street in Eugene, Ore *289 gon. By 1929 all the surviving children of Emma and Joseph A. Hanns had grown to adulthood. Satolli Hanns had joined the navy in 1918, where he remained until after the death of his parents. Sylvania Kremmel had married. In 1929, Emma became seriously ill and Sylvania and her husband moved in with her parents and cared for both of them until their respective deaths — Emma in 1930 and Joseph in 1938.

During most of the period of Satolli’s absence while in the navy, he made monthly allotments to his parents of $100. The evidence shows that the sums so contributed to them by him over the years totaled approximately $13,000. He also deeded certain real property to his parents.

Joseph A. Hanns, the father, executed a deed dated and acknowledged December 28,1937 to the home property at 13th Avenue naming as grantees Satolli Hanns and Sylvania Kremmel. It is assumed that he then placed the deed in his safety deposit box in the First National Bank in Eugene. We say it is assumed for as far as the evidence shows, it remained there, undisturbed, until after the grantor’s death in 1938 when P. J. Hanns, by virtue of his office as administrator of his father’s estate, gained access to the deposit box.

The defendants asserted in their brief and upon oral argument that the deposit box was used jointly by Joseph A. and P. J. Hanns. The only evidence on the subject, however, compels a contrary conclusion. On direct examination as an adverse witness, Satolli Hanns, one of the defendants, testified as follows:

U* * # # *
“Q When did you first discover the existence of that deed?
“A In . . . Let’s see. It was ’56 when my brother told me, my sister and I, that our names were on the deed.
*290 “Q So that it is fair to say that prior to this time you had no idea that such a deed existed?
“A No.
“Q Where was that deed during this period of time? Do you know?
“A I assume it was in the bank box.
“Q And this was a bank box held by your father, Joseph Hanns?
“A Joseph Hanns.”

Later on the same subject Satolli Hanns testified as follows:

“Q Now do I understand you correctly, Mr. Hanns, to say that P. J. Hanns made a statement to you that he had recorded this deed in about 1956?
“A Yes.
“Q Do you know where the deed was kept thereafter?
“A I am not sure, but I assume it was put in the bank box.
“Q This would have been in P. J. Hanns’ bank box?
“A Yes, in Joseph A. Hanns’ box. Yes, P. J. Hanns’ box.
“Q Well, is there a difference?
“A No, they are the same.
“Q But Joseph Hanns had the box up to the time of his death, is this correct?
“A This is true.
“Q And then P. J. Hanns took it over after that?
“A That is right.”

On cross-examination by his own counsel, with regard to the control of the bank box, Satolli Hanns was asked:

“Q And was this bank box originally owned by your father, Joseph Hanns?
“A It was.
*291 “Q And upon yonr father’s death was it owned by yonr brother, Peter or P. J. Hanns?
“A That is true.
“Q He was the executor of your father’s estate?
“A Yes.
“Q And so the property that was in the bank box subsequent to your father’s death would be under the control and effect of your brother, Peter, is that correct?
“A That is true.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Prom the above, constituting all the evidence on the subject, it can be seen that there is no evidence from which it can be inferred that P. J. Hanns ever “used jointly” the deposit box where the deed was placed by Joseph A. Hanns. The most that can be gathered from the above testimony is that after the death of Joseph A. Hanns, P. J. Hanns, as administrator of his father’s estate, obtained access to the box. Any assumption that the box was used jointly is pure conjecture and is contradicted by the evidence.

The trial court found that Joseph A. Hanns delivered the deed to P. J. Hanns with the intention that it be recorded. No evidence supports this finding. The evidence does not indicate that P. J. Hanns knew of or had any access to the deed until after the death of Joseph A. Hanns and the record is silent as to the intention of Joseph A. Hanns when the deed was executed.

The trial court found that after the delivery of the deed to P. J. Hanns, P. J. Hanns “retained the deed in his own safety deposit box in what was then the First National IBank of Eugene. That Joseph A. Hanns died on December 21, 1938 and the deed remained in the custody of P. J. Hanns until * * * recorded * * (Emphasis supplied.) The evi *292 deuce fails to show that P. J. Hanns had a safety deposit box prior to Joseph A. Hanns’ death, or that he knew of the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
423 P.2d 499, 246 Or. 282, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanns-v-hanns-or-1967.