Johnston v. McKean

162 P.2d 820, 177 Or. 556, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 159
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 162 P.2d 820 (Johnston v. McKean) 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
Johnston v. McKean, 162 P.2d 820, 177 Or. 556, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 159 (Or. 1945).

Opinion

BRAND, J.

Prior to January 6, 1942, Douglas County announced that on that date an auction sale would be held' of certain timber lands in Sections 15 and 20, T. 32 S., R. 2 W., Willamette Meridian. The minimum price for the whole of said lands was fixed at $3,000 with a required down payment of at least $600, and the balance to be in four yearly payments with interest at six per cent. The portion of said lands in Section 20 could be bought for not less than $1,500 with not less than a $300 down payment and like interest on the balance.

The following is a brief summary of the testimony in support of plaintiff’s claim:

Prior to January 4,1942, the plaintiff beeamé aware of the proposed timber sale, investigated the timber in Section 20, and “on or around the 4th of January” informed defendant of the favorable opportunity and asked the defendant for money so that he might* bid on the timber. Plaintiff repeatedly testified that the defendant then gave him a check for $300 in response to.his request. The defendant discussed with him the *558 matter of attending the sale. Bnt later the plaintiff called the defendant np, and defendant “said he wasn’t interested and didn’t think he wonld be down.’’ Plaintiff went to Eoseburg on January 5th and conferred with Mr. Darby, the deputy sheriff in charge of the sale. He left with Darby his personal check for $300 upon Darby’s representation that it would be permissible for him to bid in that manner on the timber in Section 20. The plaintiff says the check was accepted by Darby, but it is clear that no rights were acquired in the timber thereby. The understanding was that on January 6th the check would be treated as the minimum required bid and might be accepted if no higher bid was made. Plaintiff had intended to return home on January 5th, but changed his mind and returned to Eoseburg to attend the sale so that “if we were overbid we could bit [bid] a little more.”

Up to this point there is no evidence of any agreement that plaintiff and defendant were to purchase any of the timber jointly. On January 6th, plaintiff met the defendant at the courthouse.

Plaintiff testified:

“I told Mr. McKean what I had done and he said he had made arrangements to raise some more money and we talked at length and he wanted me to raise $300 and we would buy both tracts of timber which I wasn’t able to buy at the time and I agreed to take down the $300 check and he would bid both pieces in. He said he had money to do that at that time and we would have it together; he was supposed to put it in both of our names.
“I withdrew my check, and Mr. McKean put up $600 which was supposed to be for both of us. He owed me somewhere around $4,000 and he was to take it out of my account for my part of it.”

*559 After withdrawing his cheek, plaintiff says he destroyed it.

The defendant then bid in the timber lands offered in both Sections 15 and 20 at the minimum price fixed by the County, to-wit, $3,000, with the required minimum cash payment of $600. The defendant gave the sheriff his check No. 6850 for $601. The check is in evidence as defendant’s Exhibit 2, and it was signed “Talent Sawmills, by F. M. McKean,” that being the name under which the defendant was doing business and under which his account was kept. The additional dollar was required to cover the cost of recording the deed when it should be issued. A certificate of sale was issued by the County to the defendant alone as purchaser; and a contract, defendant’s Exhibit 5, “for resale of tax lands” was later executed under date of January 6, 1942, wherein the County appears as vendor and the defendant as vendee.

Concerning a conversation which occurred just outside of the courthouse after the defendant had bid in the property, the plaintiff testified as follows:

“A. * * * I told him that I should have a little more money than a fifty percent interest in it and he agreed on paying me $200 at that time for what I done.
“Q. What did he pay you $200 for?
“A. That was for me; I had run over the timber and made the trips to Roseburg and found out about the timber and he didn’t know anything about timber. I thought I should have that much more than fifty percent of the timber.
“ Q. Now, was there anything said about where Mr. McKean was going to get this $300 of the money that was being put up for you?
*560 “A. I had over $4,000 coming or somewhere in that neighborhood and he was supposed to take it out of my account. ’ ’

The defendant did in fact give to the plaintiff a check for $200 at that time in response to the request. The check is in evidence as defendant’s Exhibit 1 and was cashed by plaintiff in a bank in Roseburg on January 6th.

The plaintiff testified that he asserted to the defendant his claim for a half interest in the property around March 1942 or later but before the complaint was filed. He apparently refers to a conversation which led to an agreement that the parties should meet at the office of the plaintiff’s attorney in Med-ford. Plaintiff testified:

“Mr. McKean was supposed to put it in both of our names * * * and he was to meet me at Mr. Reames’ office to fix these papers up.”

Plaintiff testified that the defendant never denied that plaintiff had a half interest. Again he said:

“He agreed to meet me at Shady Cove on Sunday and we would straighten it up.”

This alleged conversation was in July 1943. Plaintiff testified that defendant offered to purchase plaintiff’s half interest. He testified further that the defendant told Mr. Saubert, a Forest Service official, that defendant had bought the plaintiff out.

In partial support of his own case, the plaintiff presented the testimony of M. G. Heath, who was then an employee of the plaintiff. Heath testified that the plaintiff asked him to accompany plaintiff on a visit to the defendant and that the plaintiff asked the defendant “if he would sell their timber so that he could have his money out of it; he wanted his money.”

*561 Again Heath testified:

“A. * * * Mr. Johnston asked him,‘I would like to have my share of the timber or the money out of that.’ He said, ‘I have got fifty percent interest in that.’ Mr. McKean says, ‘Yes, you do have fifty percent interest. ’ ’ ’

The conversation at which Heath was present occurred in March or April 1943, and it was on this occasion, according to the plaintiff, that they agreed to meet at Shady Cove and “straighten it up.” The proposed meeting at Shady Cove was not held because the plaintiff notified the defendant of his inability to attend. Plaintiff had commenced his suit and had secured a temporary injunction on December 12, 1942, several months previous to the conversation concerning which Heath testified.

Prom plaintiff’s brief we read:

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Bluebook (online)
162 P.2d 820, 177 Or. 556, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-mckean-or-1945.