Lund v. Lund

51 P.2d 1031, 152 Or. 377, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 71
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 P.2d 1031 (Lund v. Lund) 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
Lund v. Lund, 51 P.2d 1031, 152 Or. 377, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 71 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

BELT, J.

This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage on real property. It arose out of the following facts: In 1929, the defendant F. A. Bates, father of plaintiff herein, purchased an alleged gold mine in Jackson county. The money with which to pay the balance of the purchase price, viz, $2,500, was furnished by the defendant Jacob F. Lund and his wife, the plaintiff Margaret Bates Lund. Pursuant to agreement, Lund and his wife were named as grantees in the deed of conveyance, in order to secure them for the money thus advanced. It is conceded in the brief of appellants that this conveyance, although in form a deed, was in fact a mortgage.

In 1932, Bates and his wife joined the Lunds in a contract to sell the mining property to the Black Chan *379 nel Mines, Inc., for $25,000. The company took possession of the property and mined the same for a short time hut, sad to relate, paid nothing on the purchase price.

After this sale, the Bates and the Lunds entered into an agreement whereby their equities in the anticipated proceeds of the sale were fixed and determined. It was stipulated therein that the equity of Jacob F. Lund in the proceeds of sale amounted to $4,788, covering the sum advanced to Bates together with accrued interest and taxes. It was further provided therein that all payments made by the Black Channel Mines, Inc., should be divided “fifty-fifty between Jacob F. Lund and wife and F. A. Bates and wife” until the full sum of $4,783 was paid to Jacob F. Lund and wife and a similar sum paid to F. A. Bates and wife. The remainder of the purchase price to be paid was to go exclusively to F. A. Bates, “free from all claims of ownership of said Jacob F. Lund and wife”.

Numerous labor liens were filed on the property as the company was unable to meet its financial obligations. Soon thereafter suit was instituted in Jackson county to foreclose the liens. Although Bates and his wife and Lund and his wife were served in the foreclosure proceeding, the defendant Jacob F. Lund alone appeared and contested the amount of the lien claims. He succeeded in obtaining a substantial reduction in the amount alleged to be due, but a decree of foreclosure was entered and the property sold on execution to one R. D. Shelley.

While the suit for foreclosure of the labor liens was pending, the defendant Lund commenced a proceeding to foreclose what he termed an equitable mortgage. . In this suit, strange to say, reliance was had *380 upon the above contract fixing the equities of the parties in the purchase price rather than upon the deed held by him and his wife as security for the money advanced to Bates. Bates and his wife were made defendants and served with summons in said suit, but the wife of Lund was not made a party nor did she make any appearance therein. A decree was entered to the effect that Bates and wife were indebted to Lund in the sum of $5,135.13, together with interest and attorney fees, and the property was ordered sold upon execution to satisfy such indebtedness. However, no sale was ever had under this decree.

After the property was sold upon execution in the lien foreclosure proceeding, the defendant Lund took steps to redeem the same. The decree which Lund obtained in the alleged mortgage foreclosure proceeding was assigned to his now attorney, Porter Gr. Neff, to enable him, as judgment creditor, to redeem the property. It was necessary to obtain funds with which to accomplish such redemption. Hence, Lund entered into a contract with the defendant Walter M. Robertson whereby the latter agreed to advance $2,400 to be used for the purpose of redemption. It was understood that Lund would redeem the property and sell the same to Robertson, subject to the right of redemption by Bates and his wife. With the money thus obtained Porter Gr. Neff redeemed the property from Shelley and a certificate of redemption was issued to him. Mr. Neff, now appearing as counsel for appellants, had no part in the foreclosure proceeding instituted by Lund. He frankly concedes that he has no personal interest in the property in controversy; that, in making the redemption, he was acting for and on behalf of Lund; and that whatever title he thus obtained as redemptioner he holds in trust for Lund.

*381 Thereafter the instant suit was commenced by the plaintiff who alleges in effect that she is a co-mortgagee with her husband, the appellant Jacob F. Lund, and has a common interest in the funds loaned to her father, the defendant F. A. Bates, for the purchase by him of the property involved herein. It is her theory that the conveyance wherein she and her husband were named as grantees, although in form a deed, was in fact a mortgage and that since she was not made a party in the foreclosure proceedings instituted by her husband, she has not been divested of her interests in the property. She alleges in substance a scheme on the part of her husband to wrongfully deprive her of her interest in the property as a co-mortgagee and to cheat and defraud her parents, the defendants Bates, for whom the legal title, under and by virtue of the mortgage deed, was held in trust. In the prayer of her complaint she asks that the decree obtained by her husband in the foreclosure proceedings be declared null and void; that the conveyance wherein she and her husband were named as grantees be declared a mortgage; that any title acquired by Porter J. Neff as redemptioner be declared to be held in trust for the plaintiff and her husband, as mortgagees, and the defendants Bates; that the mortgaged premises be sold to satisfy the amount due her and her husband; and that the overplus, if any there be, be paid to the defendants Bates.

The trial court entered a decree in favor of the plaintiff in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, with the exception that the defendant Robertson was given a prior lien on the property on account of the money advanced by him to Lund for redemption purposes. It was further decreed that Lund had no right or authority to contract to sell to Robertson the prop *382 erty involved herein and that the latter acquired no right or interest in the property by virtue of such contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 P.2d 1031, 152 Or. 377, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lund-v-lund-or-1935.