Lanphear v. Woods Et Ux.

176 P.2d 653, 180 Or. 294, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 138
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1946
StatusPublished

This text of 176 P.2d 653 (Lanphear v. Woods Et Ux.) 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
Lanphear v. Woods Et Ux., 176 P.2d 653, 180 Or. 294, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 138 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This is a suit for the cancellation of a deed of conveyance of land to the defendants on the ground that it was procured by fraud. The plaintiff appeals from a decree of dismissal.

Plaintiff is a cousin of the defendant J. G. Woods. For many years she had been a resident of Los Angeles, where she executed the deed in question in January, 1944. She was then in her seventy-ninth year. The defendant J. G. Woods has lived in Sherman and Wasco counties in this state most of his life,-and is now a resident of The Dalles. He was about sixty-three years of age at the time of the challenged transaction.

The land involved, a quarter section in Sherman County, Oregon, had been owned by the plaintiff and her sister, Julia Lanphear, as tenants in common, and had been leased by them to the defendant J. G. Woods in 1939 for a rental of one-third of the crop. Julia Lanphear died in the autumn of 1943, and plaintiff inherited from her an additional one-sixth interest in the land, and so was thereafter an owner of an undivided two-thirds interest. The deed was executed and acknowledged before a notary public for Los Angeles County, California, on January 10,1944.

Plaintiff alleges in her complaint (1) that the defendant J. G. Woods induced her to execute the deed by falsely representing to her that “it would be *296 necessary for plaintiff to execute an instrument of writing whereby the interest of said Julia Lanphear in said land and inherited by plaintiff would be transferred to plaintiff”, and that he “would cause such instrument in writing to be prepared for plaintiff’s signature, and that he would then cause the interest of said Julia Lanphear * * * to be transferred to plaintiff, and that he, said defendant J. G. Woods would then lease said land of plaintiff as long as plaintiff lived, and pay plaintiff rental therefor”; (2) that said defendant prepared the deed and caused his sister-in-law to present it to the plaintiff for her signature; that his sister-in-law told plaintiff the instrument was “for the purpose of enabling said J. G. Woods to cause to be transferred to plaintiff” the Julia Lanphear interest in the land; and further stated to plaintiff that “she did not have time to permit plaintiff to read said instrument, although plaintiff desired and requested to be permitted to read” it, whereupon plaintiff executed it, relying on the statements aforesaid.

The representations of the defendant J. G. Woods are alleged to have been knowingly and intentionally false, but there is no such allegation respecting the statements of the sister-in-law.

We agree with the Circuit Court that the proof does not sustain these charges.

The original agreement of lease between Mr. Woods and his cousins was entered into in Los Angeles in 1939. The Lanphear sisters at that time suggested to him that he buy the land, but he told them he lacked the money. They then suggested a lease, and Mr. Woods agreed to this, the lease to commence, however, after the tenant then on the land should have harvested the 1940 crop.

*297 Mr. Woods took possession, of the land in the spring of 1941, farmed it, and in 1942 remitted to his cousins $1,500.00, their share of the crop as rent. He had correspondence with them concerning the business, but did not see either of them again until December, 1948. Late in 1943 he wrote them inquiring whether they still wished to sell the land, and, if so, at what price. About November 23, 1943, Hattie Lanphear, the plaintiff, answered his letter. She wrote that her sister Julia had recently died, and proceeded:

“I received your letter some time but did not get answered Julia was so sick. You ask if we still want to sell the land. Yes Julia and I have expected to sell our place to you ever since you were down. You were such a good renter we have had plenty to live on. You know the price of land. I don’t. Julia and I have always intended when we passed away it should go to Missions as we have no one to leave ■ it to — since Frank and Cora left us”.

The plaintiff explained in her testimony that she referred to missionaries sent to China by her church in Los Angeles.

After receiving the foregoing letter Mr. Woods employed an attorney in The Dalles to prepare a deed conveying to defendants plaintiff’s interest in the quarter section, and sometime in December went to Los Angeles, taking the deed with him.

Up to this point there is no substantial conflict in the testimony.

The substance of Woods’ testimony as to what occurred after he reached Los Angeles is that he and the plaintiff agreed that she would sell him the land, and he would pay for it by paying her rent as long as she lived, and, on her death, would pay the then value of the property to “the Missions”. If the rent should *298 not be sufficient to maintain the plaintiff, he would make payments on the principal which would be deducted from the final payment. The rent was to be one-third of the crop as theretofore. He also offered to pay her $1,000.00 at the time, but she declined, saying that she had a thousand dollars in the bank. This occurred at the home of the plaintiff. The parties apparently agreed on the terms of the sale on a Saturday after banking hours, and, as they considered it necessary to execute the deed at a bank and Mr. Woods had to return to Oregon the next day, it was not executed while he was in Los Angeles. He did not have the deed with him at the time, having left it at the Los Angeles home of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Nellie E. Randall, where he had been staying. He told the plaintiff he would send the deed to her, and thereafter evidently requested Mrs. Randall to attend to its execution by the plaintiff.

Mrs. Randall did so. As one of the charges in the complaint is that plaintiff was prevented from reading the deed and as the plaintiff so testified, Mrs. Randall’s testimony is important. She swore that she went to Miss Lanphear’s home on January 10, 1944, and told her that she had come “with the deed for Jim Woods in regard to the land in Sherman County that she was to sell to him”; that the plaintiff discussed the transaction with her and said, “I have always thought so much of Jim and he is the one person that I want to deal with and sell my property to in Sherman County”; that plaintiff suggested executing the deed at her own bank, which she named; that they went to the bank where the plaintiff said that there was a gentleman with whom she usually talked over her affairs when doing business there, but, not seeing him, *299 plaintiff sought out a Miss Messick, the bank’s escrow-officer, before whom, as a notary public, the plaintiff signed and acknowledged the deed. The plaintiff testified that she was well acquainted in the bank, knew Miss Messick, and had transacted there all the business that she had had. Concerning the actual execution of the deed Mrs. Randall testified:

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Bluebook (online)
176 P.2d 653, 180 Or. 294, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanphear-v-woods-et-ux-or-1946.