Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Kimball

94 P.2d 1101, 163 Or. 31, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 115
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 94 P.2d 1101 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Kimball) 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
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Kimball, 94 P.2d 1101, 163 Or. 31, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 115 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by Sarah A. Kim-ball, Mary Hortense Kugel and K. Burgard Kugel, three of the eight defendants, from a judgment and decree of the circuit court which grants judgment against them upon a promissory note signed by these *34 three appellants and orders foreclosure of a real estate mortgage executed by them to secure payment of the note. Both note and mortgage were also executed by S. P. Kimball, another defendant, who died before entry of the judgment. The real property at the time of the execution of those two instruments was owned by S. P. Kimball and his wife, the aforementioned appellant, Sarah, as an estate by the entirety. After the execution sale a deficiency of $1,804-remained for which the. three appellants are liable -by the terms of the-decree. They attack only that part of the latter which renders them liable for the deficiency, and in support of their appeal contend that the plaintiff had bound itself by estoppel, if not by contract, to accept a deed to the property which the four obligors had signed.

The facts are virtually free from- dispute. The issues concern the inferences to be drawn from them. .

The property with which we are concerned is a prune orchard, approximately one hundred acres in extent, located in Polk county. In 1926 while the Kimballs owned this property, subject to an interest held by one Henry Yoth which the latter subsequently released, Yoth and S. P. Kimball entered into a contract with the Puccinelli Dehydrater Company whereby the latter, in consideration of the sum of $18,000 to be paid largely in the future, built upon the property a prune dryer. The dryer consisted in part of two fireproof buildings each fifty-two feet by twenty-three and one-half feet in ground dimensions. One of the buildings served as a warehouse and sorting room, and the other contained the dryer equipment. In the dryer building were two compartments constructed of concrete and hollow tile known as the drying tunnels. The heat was furnished by two furnaces each weighing two tons and each *35 equipped with an oil burner which in turn was connected by pipes to an underground oil tank. We shall not pause to describe the hydrometers, the weighing scale, the electric wiring, the four fans, the four electric motors, etc., which were parts of the plant’s equipment, but shall now mention in brief detail the tracks, trucks and trays which constituted other parts of the plant. The tracks, set in concrete, extended through the drying kilns. For operation upon them the Puccinelli Company supplied 80 four-wheeled trucks constructed of steel. It also supplied a large number of trays. Prunes to be dried were placed upon the trays which in turn were set upon the trucks and then the latter were moved into and slowly through the drying kilns by means of car movers operated from outside of the plant by cables and other equipment. In this way the prunes moved through the plant in the process of being dried. This description of the plant will suffice for our purposes.

The contract with the Puccinelli Company was signed May 4, 1926, and, as already stated, required the payment of $18,000. Fifteen hundred dollars of the latter sum was payable concurrently with the execution of the agreement, $3,500 was payable when construction had been completed, and the balance in annual installments. The contract provided:

“It is further agreed by and between the said Owner and Contractor that the title to trays, burners, fans, motors, hydrometers, furnace, tracks, carriers, doors or any material or equipment moved onto said premises or caused to be moved onto said premises by said Contractor shall not pass to said Owner or claim to have passed to said Owner or any person whatsoever save Contractor until said last payment be made as aforesaid or withheld in whole or in part in accordance with the authority given the Owner hereinabove.”

*36 The defendants’ brief states that the contract was recorded in 1932. Certainly, it was not recorded prior to that time.

In the early part of 1927, after the plant had been completed, the Kimballs applied to the plaintiff for a loan of $10,000, payment to be secured by a real estate mortgage upon the prune orchard property. April 1, 1927, the loan was made and the mortgage with which we are now concerned was then executed and recorded. The note was payable January 1,1937. In applying for the loan, Mr. Kimball, according to W. C. Feldman, representative of the plaintiff’s mortgage loan department, told Feldman that “his total liabilities were ten thousand dollars.’ * * # He said that he had subscribed for stock in a linen mill and that he felt he should pay for that stock and that he was borrowing in order to pay for that stock. ’ ’ This testimony is not contradicted. Kimball told Feldman nothing about the sums unpaid upon the dehydration plant contract: Before the loan was -made Feldman inspected the property. He swore that when he recommended that the loan be made he deemed the dryer a valuable adjunct to the property and thought it materially enhanced the value of the property. The evidence indicates that a dryer is a very valuable part of a prune orchard and that an orchard without one has little value. The evidence justifies a conclusion that the plaintiff was ignorant of the fact that anyone but the Kimballs had any interest in the dehydration plant..

After the plant had been built the Puecinelli Company assigned its interest in the contract to K. L. Puecinelli. November 10, 1933, Puecinelli instituted an action against S. P. Kimball and Henry Voth in which he sought to recover a judgment upon the un *37 paid contract balance. April 10, 1934, the parties to that action effected an agreement whereby Puccinelli dismissed his action and Kimball executed and delivered to Puccinelli two mortgages, one a chattel mortgage upon virtually all of the chattels forming a part of the prune orchard property, and the other a real property mortgage which described the orchard property; the latter mortgage was, of course, a second mortgage. As a part of the same transaction Puccinelli was given possession of the property. The chattel mortgage, which we just mentioned, stated:

“It is not intended hereby to mortgage or convey any of said dehydrater equipment or accessories which have become a fixture to said real property, or any property upon which the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company now has a lien.”

Some time after the execution of the two mortgages just mentioned the chattel mortgage came into a condition of default, and in December, 1936, the Kimballs executed and delivered to Puccinelli a bill of sale which described as the articles transferred the same property which constituted the subject-matter of the chattel mortgage. It stated:

“It is not intended thereby to mortgage or convey any of said dehydrater equipment or accessories which have become a fixture to said real property or any property upon which the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company now has a lien.”

January 4, 1937, being a few days after the execution of the bill of sale, Mr. Percy Cupper of Salem, attorney for the Kimballs, in a letter informed the plaintiff of the execution and, delivery of the bill- of sale.

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Bluebook (online)
94 P.2d 1101, 163 Or. 31, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-kimball-or-1939.