Long v. Smith Hotel Co.

237 P. 671, 287 P. 671, 115 Or. 306, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 66
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 237 P. 671 (Long v. Smith Hotel Co.) 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
Long v. Smith Hotel Co., 237 P. 671, 287 P. 671, 115 Or. 306, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 66 (Or. 1925).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

The Congress Hotel was owned by the Smith Hotel Company and, in 1912, was leased by plaintiff, Lena Long, for three years, Henry Jennings guaranteeing the payment of the rent. On October 20, 1915, plaintiff’s rent being in arrears in the amount of $6,000, for payment thereof she executed to the defendant Smith Hotel Company a promissory note, secured by a chattel mortgage upon the furniture and furnishings of the hotel, in the amount of $6,000, bearing interest at 6 per cent per annum, due October 20, 1917. This mortgage was acknowledged and recorded and, by mutual consent, the time of payment was subsequently extended until October 20, 1918. On October 22, 1915, she likewise executed to Henry Jennings & Sons, from whom she had purchased the furniture and furnishings, a second mortgage for $5,000 upon the same personal property. On October 20, 1915, the date of the execution of the six thousand dollar mortgage by plaintiff to secure the back rental, the Smith Hotel company again leased the building to plaintiff for a period of two years from date, but subse *309 quently the period was extended until November 1, 1918. On October 25, 1918, tbe lease was canceled and terminated by mutual consent of the parties, tbe defendant Hedwig Smith, assignee of tbe six thousand dollar mortgage taking possession of tbe property.

Tbe complaint avers that defendant Hedwig Smith took possession of tbe property covered by tbe chattel mortgage as mortgagee in possession and that at that time tbe sum of $600 bad been paid upon tbe principal sum of $6,000; that tbe value of tbe use of tbe mortgaged property was $600 per month, and that tbe plaintiff was entitled to redeem that property but that tbe defendants denied her such right.

Tbe defendants allege that on March 1, 1917, tbe Smith Hotel Company, for value, transferred to Hedwig Smith tbe note for $6,000 and tbe mortgage securing tbe same and on June 29, 1917, conveyed tbe Congress Hotel to Hedwig Smith; that on October 13, 1917, Hedwig Smith, assignee, extended tbe lease to November 1, 1918. They aver:

“That during October, 1918, tbe plaintiff was unable to continue as lessee of the Congress Hotel * * and was unable to pay any rent and was unable to continue the management thereof and was unable to pay tbe said $6,000 note and mortgage, or any portion thereof, in accordance with its terms or otherwise, either with respect to principal or interest, and was unable to pay the said note for $5,000, or any portion thereof, or in any manner comply with tbe terms or conditions of tbe said note and mortgage for $5,000, or any portion thereof. ’

Tbe defendants assert that on October 25, 1918, there was a complete settlement between tbe plaintiff and defendant Hedwig Smith with respect to all their business relations arising under tbe lease of tbe Congress Hotel; and they aver, among other things:

*310 “For good and valuable considerations then passing and flowing between the parties, the lease to said Congress Hotel was canceled and terminated by mutual consent of both parties, and the possession of the said hotel building and the furnishings and furniture then in said building was delivered by the plaintiff to the said Hedwig Smith; and it was agreed that the plaintiff waived all claims of every kind against the said Hedwig Smith for advance rentals under the lease; and it was further agreed for good and valuable considerations that the said Lena Long was to have no further interest in said premises or in said lease or in said property covered by said chattel mortgage; and the said plaintiff then and there, for good and valuable considerations, did surrender possession of all the furniture and furnishings then in said hotel to the defendant Hedwig Smith, and did further part with all of her right, title and interest in and to said furniture and furnishings, and every portion thereof, including all of her right of redemption, and all of her equity of redemption, and the plaintiff did then and there, in consideration of her being relieved of all further liability under said lease, and in consideration of her being relieved from any personal liability upon the first note and mortgage for $6,000, * * bargain, sell, and transfer to the said defendant A. F. Smith all of her interest in and to all of said personal property, and by an instrument in writing properly signed and executed according to law, transferred said property to said A. F. Smith.”

They aver the recordation of the bill of sale in Book 41, page 57, Miscellaneous Records of Multnomah County, Oregon. They further aver that on August 12, 1919, Henry Jennings & Sons, for a valuable consideration, transferred to Hedwig Smith the note secured by the second mortgage upon the furniture and furnishings of the hotel.

The plaintiff denies that she made, executed or delivered to the defendant A. F. Smith, or to any other *311 person, a bill of sale or conveyance of the furniture and furnishings of the Congress Hotel, or of her right of redemption of any of the personal property described in the mortgages. She alleges:

“If any instrument purporting to be any such conveyance was in fact executed by plaintiff, the same was executed by her without any knowledge on her part or notice to her of its contents, and was executed wholly without her knowledge or intention upon her part to execute or deliver any such instrument.”

She further alleges lack of consideration for the ^‘alleged and pretended bill of sale or conveyance.”

The record in this case discloses that the plaintiff, Mrs. Lena Long, is an intelligent business woman, and that she has been engaged in the hotel business since 1900; that in 1911 she commenced negotiations for a lease of the Congress Hotel, which was then in the course of construction; that her first lease became effective in 1912 and expired in 1915; that during this period of time she paid a rental of $1,325 per month and that by the later lease the rental was reduced to $750 per month; that the furniture and furnishings of the hotel were purchased by Mrs. Long and placed in the hotel at the commencement of her lease and at the time of the trial had been used therein for about six years, but that there had been some replacements of the original personal property. As to the condition and value of this furniture at the time of the alleged transfer to A. F. Smith, there is a sharp conflict in the evidence. According to the testimony of some of the witnesses, the plaintiff has received full consideration for the furniture and furnishings of the hotel. On the other hand, there is testimony tending to show that the property was worth several thousand dollars more than the amount of her obligations.

*312 Answering plaintiff’s contention that the defendants have received the better of the bargain: It is beyond the power of a court of equity to aid the plaintiff in this case. That a valuable consideration passed from Hedwig Smith to Lena Long for the property involved there is no question. And it is an elementary principle that the law will not enter into an inquiry as to the adequacy of a consideration : 1 Williston on Contracts, § 115; 13 C. J. 365. The question of the sufficiency of the consideration was a matter for the determination of the contracting parties.

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Bluebook (online)
237 P. 671, 287 P. 671, 115 Or. 306, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-smith-hotel-co-or-1925.