Kreinbring v. Mathews

159 P. 75, 81 Or. 243, 1916 Ore. LEXIS 256
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 159 P. 75 (Kreinbring v. Mathews) 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
Kreinbring v. Mathews, 159 P. 75, 81 Or. 243, 1916 Ore. LEXIS 256 (Or. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McBride

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. It is argued by plaintiff that the defendant’s answer presents a counterclaim for unliquidated damages and nothing more, and that, such being the case, it cannot be successfully urged in this proceeding; but it is more than a mere counterclaim. It is pleaded not only as such, but also as an equitable defense. By it defendants say:

“It is true we gave this mortgage, but the consideration of the mortgage was falsely represented to be a tract of unencumbered land. We now find that there is upon it an encumbrance which diminishes its represented value to the extent of more than the amount of the mortgage. We are willing to discharge the mortgage so soon as the plaintiff shall have extinguished the encumbrance. If plaintiff declines to do this, we are entitled to have the value of the encumbrance deducted from the amount of the mortgage.”

This is not like the case of an outstanding claim of title. Here is an encumbrance of record plain and incontestable which its owner declines to extinguish without compensation. In such a case, it would be extremely inequitable to require the defendant to pay [247]*247for what it is probable he will never get, and relegate him to a remedy upon a covenant against encumbrances, which covenant was broken when his deed was delivered. Conceding for the purposes of this case that the answer is insufficient as a counterclaim, it contains all the elements of a valid defensive answer, and was evidently so treated by the court below. We are of the opinion that the evidence sustains the findings of the court below as to the facts,- and this conclusion leaves for our consideration the question of the sufficiency of these facts to justify the decree rendered.

2. Under most circumstances, a vendee of land will not be permitted to set up an outstanding title as a defense to a suit brought against him to foreclose a mortgage for the purchase money: Edgar v. Golden, 36 Or. 448 (48 Pac. 1118, 60 Pac. 2); Farmers' Nat. Bank v. Gates, 33 Or. 388 (54 Pac. 205, 72 Am. St. Rep. 724); Gennes v. Peterson, 54 Or. 378 (103 Pac. 515); Abbott v. Allen, 2 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 519 (7 Am. Dec. 554). A distinction seems to be made in some of the cases between an outstanding title which affects the seisin and goes to a paramount right in the fee and possession, and a mere encumbrance such as an outstanding mortgage. In the latter case, it has been held that the outstanding encumbrance must be disposed of before equity will foreclose the purchase money mortgage: Van Riper v. Williams, 2 N. J. Eq. 407. In Abbott v. Allen, 2 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 519 (7 Am. Dec. 554), Chancellor Kent, after stating that as a general rule a failure or defeat of title cannot be set up by the vendee to defeat a suit to foreclose a purchase money mortgage, uses this language:

“Perhaps an outstanding encumbrance, either admitted by the party or shown by the record, may form an exception, in cases of covenant against encum[248]*248brances. Some dicta in the books (see Sergeant Maynard’s Case, 2 Freem. 1, 1 Ves. 88) seem to look to that point, but I have formed no opinion respecting it.”

The distinction between a defense of an outstanding title and an outstanding encumbrance is shown by contrasting two cases decided by the same court and reported in the same volume, namely, Van Riper v. Williams, 2 N. J. Eq. 407, and Van Waggoner v. McEwen, 2 N. J. Eq. 412. In the former case the defense to the foreclosure of a purchase money mortgage was that there was an unpaid mortgage outstanding when the vendee purchased, and it was held that the plaintiff could not have a decree of foreclosure until the outstanding mortgage was disposed of. In the latter case, the defense was that there was an outstanding title to a part of the land, and that no decree of foreclosure should be made until the plaintiff should have procured such title for defendant, or that, failing in that, the value of the tract owned by other parties should be deducted from the mortgage given for the purchase price. The court held that defendant must rely on the covenants in his deed, there having been no eviction. The reason for this distinction seems sound.

3-5. A covenant for title is not broken until there is an eviction or something equivalent thereto, while a covenant against encumbrances is broken when the deed is delivered if such encumbrance actually exists. In the case of Glenn v. Whipple, 12 N. J. Eq. 50, this distinction seems to be ignored, hut an examination of that case shows that the defense set up was an outstanding right of dower, which, according to most authorities, is not technically an encumbrance, but an interest in the fee and covered by covenants of [249]*249seisin instead of those against encumbrances: Johnson v. Elmen, 94 Tex. 168 (59 S. W. 253, 86 Am. St. Rep. 845, 52 L. R. A. 162): Shell v. Duncan, 31 S. C. 547 (10 S. E. 330, 5 L. R. A. 821); Bostwick v. Williams, 36 Ill. 65 (85 Am. Dec. 385). In Kuhnen v. Parker, 56 N. J. Eq. 286 (38 Atl. 641), this case is noted as among those where an outstanding title is attempted to be set up as a defense to the foreclosure of a purchase money mortgage. This case (Kuhnen v. Parker) fully supports the contention of defendant in the case at bar.

6. The conveyance from Wells to Kinney purports to sell and convey all the timber upon the southwest quarter designated in the deed, coupled with a condition that it shall be removed within ten years from the date thereof, which limitations would expire on December 5, 1916. Such a conveyance amounts only to a sale of all the timber that the grantee can cut and remove before that date: Anderson v. Miami Lumber Co., 59 Or. 159 (116 Pac. 1056). And the right created by it is an encumbrance: Adams v. Reed, 11 Utah, 480 (40 Pac. 720); Stambaugh v. Smith, 23 Ohio St. 584; Cathcart v. Bowman, 5 Pa. 317. We are satisfied that plaintiff deliberately misled defendants into believing that the timber upon the southwest quarter described was unsold, and that the purchase would not have been made or the mortgage given but for this fraudulent misrepresentation.

7. But having arrived at this conclusion, we are confronted with another difficulty. The damage which defendants are likely to suffer is largely prospective. What little testimony defendants have introduced on that subject indicates that the value of the timber is about $700, and that the grantees of Kinney assert the right, which they undoubtedly have, to remove it; but the fact remains that up to December 7, 1914, they [250]*250had not removed a stick of it, and it is possible, and even probable, that they have not done so yet and may never do so. If they remove the timber, defendants should have credit upon the mortgage for its value. If they do not remove it by December 6, 1916, defendants-’ damage by reason of the encumbrance will be comparatively small, and it would be manifestly unfair to allow him credit for the value of the timber with the possibility that it may within less than six months revert to him. The rule adopted in Van Riper v.

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Bluebook (online)
159 P. 75, 81 Or. 243, 1916 Ore. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreinbring-v-mathews-or-1916.