Harris v. Craven

91 P.2d 302, 162 Or. 1, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 77
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 302 (Harris v. Craven) 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
Harris v. Craven, 91 P.2d 302, 162 Or. 1, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 77 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, who is the widow of T. J. Harris, from a decree of the circuit court in favor of the defendants, one of whom is the executor of the decedent’s estate, and the remaining five of whom, brothers and sisters of the deceased, are the beneficiaries of his will. The purpose of this suit is to secure specific performance of an alleged oral promise, which the plaintiff claims her husband made to her in July, 1933, to bequeath all of his property to her. June 9, 1933, he signed his aforementioned will. She claims that she was unaware of that fact when the alleged promise was made. The following is the only paragraph of the will which mentions the plaintiff:

“I give and devise to my wife, Mabel Harris, in case she shall still be my wife at the time of my death, the dower interest allowed to her by law in and to all real property of which I may be seized at the time of my decease. In case she shall not be my wife at the time of my death, then it is my will that the said Mabel Harris take nothing under this will.”

No children were born to the marriage. Harris’s estate was worth approximately $22,000 at the time of his death. The defendants deny that the alleged oral *4 promise was made, and, in addition to other matters, contend that the plaintiff failed to do the things which she avers she promised to do in exchange for her husband’s purported promise.

The appellant’s brief states: “The controversy involved herein is largely a factual one.” With that we agree. August 19, 1930, when the plaintiff was 49 and Harris was 56 years old, they were married. The plaintiff at that time was a widow, and Harris had been married and divorced three times. At the time of their marriage Harris, according to the plaintiff, was indebted to her in the sum of $1,175 on account of wages for services she had rendered him, and in an additional amount of $1,800 for personal property which he had purchased from her. The services, according to her testimony, began March 8,1928. At that time Harris’s home was in Hopewell where he operated a general merchandise store.

On October 26, 1927, the plaintiff’s first husband, W. A. White, died, bequeathing to her, on condition that she not remarry, an estate worth a little more than $5,000 consisting, in part, of a general merchandise store located at Hopewell. White’s will provided, however, that in the event the plaintiff remarried her interest in the estate should be reduced to one-fourth and that the other three-fourths should belong to their three children. Shortly after White’s death Harris suggested to the plaintiff that she sell the store’s stock of merchandise to him and enter his employ as a clerk in his store and as housekeeper in Ms home. The plaintiff testified that Harris offered to pay her $50 a month for the services of herself and her 15-year-old daughter Goldie, in addition to providing room and board for the two. The sale was made and the two *5 entered Harris’s employ March 8, 1928. While the plaintiff’s testimony is somewhat uncertain, she indicated that the price of the merchandise was $1,200, to be paid upon its delivery to Harris. White’s estate owned the small building in which his store had been housed. About a year after the plaintiff had entered Harris’s employ the building was demolished and Harris purchased the lumber. The complaint avers that the value of the latter was $600. We are satisfied, however, that its value was virtually inconsequential. In the meantime, the plaintiff’s children surrendered to her the interest their father’s will gave to them conditioned upon their mother’s remarriage.

The plaintiff swore that neither her wages nor the sum due for the above-mentioned personal property (merchandise and lumber) were ever paid. In explanation, she said that she and Harris contemplated marriage when the above transactions occurred, and that he repeatedly assured her that the unpaid sums were purchasing for her and her daughter an interest in the store. September 12, 1929, the store was used as part consideration for the purchase of a farm located three miles from Hopewell. When Harris moved to the farm the plaintiff and her daughter went with him. The plaintiff claims that she continued in Harris’s employ and was promised $25 per month for her services as housekeeper in the home and as helper on the farm. She swore that none of these wages were ever paid, but that when the farm was acquired Harris said “my interest would be just the same on the farm as it was in the store.”

August 19,1930, the plaintiff and Harris were married. About this time, according to the plaintiff, Harris told her that “he was building up the farm, and I was *6 to get the farm — I or my children, was to get the farm.” She swore that no mutual wills or any deeds evidencing such a condition were prepared, and when asked “Why not?” replied, “Well, I just trusted him.”

A few days prior to April 27,1933, a serious quarrel between the two developed and on that day the plaintiff and her daughter left. In the early part of June, 1933, Harris had three conferences concerning a will with E. J. Claussen, an attorney located in Tillamook. As a - result, Claussen prepared the will above mentioned and on June 9, 1933, Harris signed it.

Following her departure from their home the plaintiff upon her own volition made three brief visits to the farm, and in the latter part of July a conference was arranged for the two to take place in the office of W. T. Vinton, an attorney in McMinnville. Both parties knew Mr. Vinton. He had acted as attorney for the plaintiff when she served as the executrix of the estate of her first husband, and upon the separation she had consulted him with reference to a suit for divorce against Harris. After the separation she returned several times seeking advice concerning the divorce and her property rights. The plaintiff testified that she attended the conference in Vinton’s office under a belief that a divorce and settlement of her property claims against her husband were the matters to be considered. Other evidence indicates that Harris went to the conference because of a letter he had received from Vinton requesting him to come. Be the facts as they may, husband and wife entered Vinton’s private office shortly before noon upon the occasion with which we are now concerned. It was at the close of this conference that Harris, according to the plaintiff, made the promise upon which this suit is based. The plaintiff *7 testified that at the outset Vinton endeavored to effect a reconciliation and that her husband expressed himself as anxious to have her return. However, she replied that Harris had been so abusive and that the abuse had had such ill effects upon her health that necessity compelled her to decline their pleas and to insist upon a divorce. An hour or so after the conference had begun Vinton left, leaving the plaintiff and Harris as the only occupants of the room. Harris then repeated his entreaties that she return to his home, promising that he would treat her properly. During all of this time, according to the plaintiff, she was insisting upon a property settlement, but could obtain no expressions from her husband concerning her claims. Finally, as the hour of 5 drew near, the plaintiff yielded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 302, 162 Or. 1, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-craven-or-1939.