Legler v. Legler

211 P.2d 233, 187 Or. 273, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 200
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 211 P.2d 233 (Legler v. Legler) 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
Legler v. Legler, 211 P.2d 233, 187 Or. 273, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 200 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

BOSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by Vernie K. Legler, one of the defendants, from a decree of the Circuit Court which cancelled a deed that her husband, George Legler, *276 signed February 6, 1947, three months prior to his death, and which conveyed to her a half interest in a city lot which we shall later describe. Immediately prior to the delivery of the deed, George Legler was the sole owner of the lot. The deed, which evidently was patterned upon the provisions of § 63-210, O. C. L. A., expressed a purpose to create an estate in entirety between husband and wife. We may hereafter refer to Vernie K. Legler as the appellant and to her deceased husband as Mr. Legler. The latter died testate May 5,1947, at the age of 88 years. The attacked decree held that Mr. Legler, at the time of signing the deed, was incompetent and the victim of undue influence. It cancelled the deed.

The plaintiffs, who are now the respondents, are three in number. One of them, Margaret Legler Anderson, was the daughter of Mr. Legler. The other two, George A. and Fred W. Legler, were his sons.

The complaint alleges that when Mr. Legler signed the deed he was “of the age of approximately ninety years, and was unsound of mind to such an extent as to be wholly incapable of transacting his own business, and never to the day of his death knew that he had made such a deed.” It also says: “The said Vernie K. Legler paid no consideration for said deed, * * * and taking advantage of her close and intimate relation with her said husband, and by the exercise of undue influence, procured him to execute and deliver said deed to her without the knowledge of the plaintiffs and other defendants herein.”

April 11, 1936, when Mr. Legler was a widower, 77 years of age, and the appellant was 41, they were married. The children whom we have mentioned .were the offspring of Mr. Legler’s first marriage. At the *277 time of the second marriage Mr. Legler owned and was living upon a ranch in Eastern Oregon which was worth about $7,000 or $8,000. The ranch is not affected by this suit. In the same year he inherited a city lot located at the intersection of Northeast Twenty-seventh Street and Sandy Boulevard in Portland. That lot, to which we shall refer as the city lot, is the subject matter of this suit. It is improved with a store building and a small dwelling house. At one time Mr. Legler owned another item of property, but parted with it prior to his death. At the time of his decease he owned only the city lot and the ranch.

A few moments before Mr. Legler signed the attacked deed he executed a will. The respondents do not challenge it. Both instruments were drafted by Mr. Bruce Cameron, an attorney whose offices are in Portland. Since the two instruments were prepared simultaneously, we shall mention briefly the will. It devises the ranch as follows: To the son Fred, a one-third interest; to the daughter Margaret, a one-third interest; and to the children of the son George, the remaining one-third. The appellant swore that her husband intended to devise to her an interest in the ranch, but that she dissuaded him from so doing under a belief that the ranch should descend to his children. We shall presently mention other provisions of the will. If the deed is valid, § 63-210, O. C. L. A., renders the appellant the sole owner of the city lot. If the deed is invalid, and if the appellant elects to accept under the provisions of the will, there will be applicable the residuary clause of that instrument which devises to her a one-fourth interest in the residue which will consist of the city lot. The same clause devises to the testator’s son Fred a one-fourth interest; to his *278 daughter Margaret a one-fourth interest, and to the children of his son George the remaining one-fourth. We mentioned the fact that the respondents do not challenge the will, although its execution was almost coincident with that of the deed. Mr. Legler had executed a previous will on May 31, 1939, when his competency was conceded, which expressly mentioned the Sandy Boulevard property and directed that it “be sold as soon as advisable and divided one-fourth (14) to my wife; one-fourth (14) to my son, Fred Legler; one-fourth (14) to my daughter, Margaret Legler Anderson; and one-fourth (14) to my grandchildren, the children of my son, George A. Legler, in equal portions as herein provided. ” It is seen that the provision just quoted makes substantially the same disposition of the city lot as the residuary clause of the will which was signed February 6,1947.

Sometime after the second marriage and the receipt of the devised property, the Leglers moved to Portland and took up their residence in the cottage we have mentioned.

Before considering the testimony which bears upon the deceased’s competency, we deem it material to take note of the fact that uncontradicted evidence indicates that the deceased had long planned that the city lot, or at least a substantial interest in it, should go to his children upon his death. We shall briefly review the evidence upon that subject. Since the contested deed is testamentary in character, other instruments which he had signed previously when his competency was unchallenged were admissible in evidence for the purpose of showing that he had long formed a plan for the disposition at death of the city lot. See Wigmore on Evidence, 3d Ed., § 112, and annotation 82 A. L. R. 973.

*279 E. C. Mattson was the tenant of the city lot. As nearly as we can determine, he had no interest in the outcome of this suit. He testified that upon an occasion when he informed Mr. Legler that he would like to purchase the property, Mr. Legler “told me he was saving it for his son, and he brought him into the shop sometime later and introduced me to him and said that in the event- of his death that he would get the property and I would, no doubt, be able to deal with him.” Fred W. Legler, who had always been on cordial terms with his father, testified: “When he (the deceased) introduced me to Mr. Mattson, he said, ‘ There is the man that you will have to deal with when I am gone.’ ” Upon another occasion, according to Fred, “He told me that she was — wanted him to sell that property but he wouldn’t do it because he wanted to keep that for his children and that — he told me that was the reason why he leased it to this present tenant, was to keep her from selling it. ’ ’ By ‘‘ she ’ ’ and ‘ ‘ her ’ ’ he meant the appellant. Mrs. Mabel Miller, the mother-in-law of Fred Legler’s son, swore: “Mr. Legler told me that his wife wanted to sell the property on Sandy, but he didn’t want to sell it; that he had it leased to a good man and he had promised to lease it to him as long as he lived. And he said, ‘After all, I have ldds of my own that I want to have that property.’ ” In the same year that Mr. Legler acquired the property in question he executed a will (September 21, 1937) which devised to Fred Legler a one-sixth interest in the lot in question, another one-sixth to his daughter Margaret, a half interest to the appellant and the remaining one-sixth to the children of his son George. We have already mentioned the provisions of the will of May 31, 1939, and of the one executed immediately *280 preceding the execution of the deed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 P.2d 233, 187 Or. 273, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legler-v-legler-or-1949.