Holzmeyer v. Van Doren

139 P.2d 778, 172 Or. 176, 148 A.L.R. 808, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 89
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 139 P.2d 778 (Holzmeyer v. Van Doren) 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
Holzmeyer v. Van Doren, 139 P.2d 778, 172 Or. 176, 148 A.L.R. 808, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 89 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This appeal concerns a note and

mortgage, both executed February 8, 1930, by Charles and Lulu Van Doren, husband and wife, who are two of the three defendants. The payees of the note and the mortgagees of the other instrument are Casper Holzmeyer, one of the plaintiffs (to whom we shall refer as the plaintiff), and Johanna Holzmeyer, deceased wife of that plaintiff. The appeal also concerns a satisfaction and a release of the mortgage signed by the plaintiff May 17, 1940, and a deed signed by the two Van Dorens concurrently with the execution and delivery of the release. The deed described the real property which was covered by the mortgage and conveyed it to the plaintiff. The appeal affects yet another instrument. It is a judgment entered in favor of the defendant-appellant, William C. Palmer, and against the defendant, Charles Van Doren, November 20,1930, in the circuit court of this state in the amount of $1,535.89.

The plaintiffs are two in number: the aforementioned Casper Holzmeyer and Henry F. Holzmeyer, administrator of the estate of the aforementioned Johanna Holzmeyer, deceased. We have already mentioned the defendants: the appellant Palmer and the Van Dorens. The Van Dorens made no appearance in the circuit court and have made none in this court. The plaintiffs are, therefore, the respondents. Palmer is the sole appellant.

The decree attacked by. this appeal (1) reinstated aforementioned note and mortgage; the former is in the denomination of $3,500 and the latter secured its payment; (2) cancelled the aforementioned release; *178 (3) cancelled the aforementioned deed; (é) fonnd that there was due and payable to the plaintiffs upon the reinstated note $3,500 plus interest; (5) held that the lien of the mortgage was superior to the interests of all of the defendants; (6) fonnd that the lien of the appellant’s judgment was subordinate to the lien of the mortgage; and (7) ordered the foreclosure of the mortgage and the sale of the property, and directed that the proceeds of the sale be first applied to the satisfaction of the mortgage, next, to the satisfaction of the judgment, and that the overplus, if any, be paid to the Yan Dorens.

The appellant Palmer presents three assignments of error. They are:

“I. That the trial court erred in overruling defendant and appellant Palmer’s demurrer to the amended complaint.
“II. That the court erred in overruling appellant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence in regard to the allégations of the amended complaint, the objections being set forth on Page 2 of the transcript of testimony.
“III. The court erred in entering the decree in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant and appellant Palmer.”

The phraseology of the assignments of error is too general. A part of the appellant’s brief which refers to the first assignment of error gives us a better impression as to what the appellant has in mind by his first assignment of error. That part of the brief says:

“This assignment of error may be divided into three parts: (a) That the estate of Johanna Holzmeyer has no interest in this suit; (b) that the amended complaint on its face must show that there is no adequate remedy at law; (c) that the *179 amended complaint on its face must show that the mistake alleged in the amended complaint by the plaintiff was not due to the plaintiff’s negligence. The burden is on the plaintiff to show clearly and satisfactorily, not only that the alleged mistake exists, but that it was mutual and was not caused by plaintiff’s own negligence.”

The objection that the plaintiffs’ remedy at law is adequate clearly possesses no merit. The principal purposes of this suit are to render the lien of the appellant’s judgment inferior to the lien of the mortgage and foreclose the latter. The remedy which the plaintiffs seek is obtainable only in equity. ’

A decision as to whether or not the estate of Johanna Holzmeyer has an interest in this suit will be unnecessary if the other contention is decided adversely to the appellant.

The second and third assignments of error present the same contention as is made in the third subdivision of the first assignment of error. Before particularizing upon it, it is well to state that the complaint alleges that the release and the deed were signed and exchanged in ignorance of the appellant’s judgment. It further alleges that the plaintiff and the Van Dorens were mutually mistaken and that none of them intended to afford the appellant’s judgment a priority. The third subdivision of the first assignment of error presents the controlling contention; it is that equity will not decree a cancellation of the release and of the deed and a reinstatement of the note and mortgage, if the mistake which caused the plaintiff to sign the release and accept a deed from the mortgagors was due to his negligence. Thus we see that the right of the plaintiffs to have the note and mortgage reinstated *180 is contested only on the ground that the plaintiff’s negligence in having failed to discover the appellant’s judgment denies him the relief which he seeks. We shall now undertake to determine the merits of that contention. The facts are largely free from dispute.

February 8, 1930, the plaintiff and his wife, who is now deceased, loaned to their neighbors, Charles and Lulu Van Doren, two of the three defendants, $3,500. As evidence of the debt that was thus created, they accepted from the Van Dorens a promissory note payable in five years to “Casper Holzmeyer and Johanna Holzmeyer or the survivor.” The note was secured by a mortgage which described a farm owned by the Van Dorens in Washington county. That note and mortgage are the instruments to which we have already referred. The mortgage was duly recorded.

October 24, 1930, the appellant instituted an action in the circuit court for Washington county against the aforementioned defendant, Charles Van Doren, and November 20, 1930, recovered by default a judgment for $1,535.89. The judgment was duly docketed in the judgment lien docket of Washington county. The Holzmeyers had no knowledge of either the institution of the action or of the resulting judgment until December of 1940. Van Doren swore that although he was served with the summons and complaint in the action he did not know until December 9, 1940, that a judgment had been entered against him. Van Doren was termed by a responsible witness an honest man, but we infer that Van Doren’s business methods are lax. November 9, 1940, an order was entered upon the appellant’s motion which renewed the judgment for a period of ten years.

Johanna Holzmeyer died April 29, 1935. The Van Dorens and .the Holzmeyers had been neighbors and *181 friends for thirty years. In 1940 when payment of the note was overdue five years, the Van Dorens ceased paying interest; nothing had been paid upon the principal. The defaults, however, had not affected the friendship between the plaintiff and the Van Dorens.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 P.2d 778, 172 Or. 176, 148 A.L.R. 808, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holzmeyer-v-van-doren-or-1943.