Olshen v. Kaufman

385 P.2d 161, 235 Or. 423, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 345
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 385 P.2d 161 (Olshen v. Kaufman) 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
Olshen v. Kaufman, 385 P.2d 161, 235 Or. 423, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 345 (Or. 1963).

Opinions

[425]*425LUSK, J.

This is an action to recover the balance owing on a check for $5,750 given to the plaintiff by the defendant Leonard I. Kanfman, Jr. The other defendant, Leon W. Behrman, is the gnardian of the estate of Leonard I. Kanfman, Jr., a spendthrift. When the action was commenced the only defendant was Kaufman; the guardian was not made a defendant until after the case came on for trial.

The question is whether, under the statute of this state providing for the appointment of guardians for spendthrifts, recovery may be had on the contract of a spendthrift when his guardian has repudiated the obligation.

The facts are free from dispute. Briefly stated, the record shows that in December, 1958, Kaufman induced the plaintiff, a druggist in Portland, to advance to him the sum of $1,575 as an investment in a joint venture for the purchase of toys for resale. A few months later Kaufman informed plaintiff that they had doubled their money. He offered to give plaintiff a check in settlement and at the same time proposed another venture in the purchase of binoculars to which the plaintiff agreed. Plaintiff’s share of the toy business, his investment plus the profit, was $2,340. This sum and an additional $2,660, totaling $5,000, were thereupon advanced by plaintiff to Kaufman for use in the binocular business. Later Kaufman told plaintiff that the latter was entitled to $750 as his share of the profits from that venture, and he gave the plaintiff his cheek for $5,750, dated October 1, 1959, drawn on the Bank of California, N.A., in full settlement, of his indebtedness to the plaintiff. There were insufficient funds in Kaufman’s account with the [426]*426bank to pay the check and no part of the debt has been paid except $1,400. Plaintiff brought this action to recover the balance of $4,350, together with interest and a reasonable attorney’s fee.

There was a trial before the court without a jury, upon the conclusion of which the court entered findings to the effect that the transactions, as a result of which Kaufman delivered the cheek to the plaintiff, were not transactions for necessaries and that the guardian had declared void the transactions and the agreement of Kaufman to pay $5,750 to the plaintiff. Judgment accordingly was entered for the defendant. The plaintiff appeals.

We think that the case was correctly decided.

OES 126.005, in effect at the applicable times, provided :

“As used in this chapter:
“(1) ‘Spendthrift’ includes every person who, by excessive drinking, idleness, gaming or debauchery of any kind, shall spend or lessen his estate so as to expose or likely to expose himself or his family, to want or suffering, or to cause the county to be charged for the expense of the support of himself and his family.”

The order adjudging Kaufman a spendthrift and appointing Mr. Behrman guardian of his estate was entered by the Circuit Court for Multnomah County, Probate Department, February 25, 1953, upon a petition filed by Kaufman’s mother and sister, which showed, among other things, that Kaufman had a beneficial interest in a trust created by his grandmother from which he received an income of approximately $3,000 a year. Kaufman consented to the appointment in writing, as provided for by former OES 126.135. [427]*427Behrman immediately duly qualified as guardian and has ever since acted in that capacity.

Former ORS 126.335, the statute in effect at the time of the transactions in question, provided:

“After the appointment of a guardian for a spendthrift, all contracts, except for necessaries, and all gifts, sales and transfers of real or personal estate made by such spendthrift thereafter and before the termination of the guardianship are voidable.”

The statute originally provided that the contracts of a spendthrift are “null and void,” OCLA 22-114. This was changed to “voidable” by Oregon Laws 1947, eh 524, § 17, and changed again in 1961 to “voidable by the guardian of the estate for the ward,” Oregon Laws 1961, ch 344, § 37; ORS 126.280.

The statutes of other states regarding spendthrifts usually provide, as ours formerly did, that the contracts of a spendthrift while under guardianship, except those for necessaries, are null and void. We are of the opinion that the change from “null and void” to “voidable” in 1947 was made with the idea in mind that some contracts which a spendthrift might enter into would be for his benefit and that the guardian in such a case should be granted the discretion to determine that question and to avoid the contract if he thought that this would be in the interest of the ward, but if otherwise to affirm it. The 1961 amendment adding the words “by the guardian” after “voidable” was evidently adopted to clarify the meaning of the statute and to remove any doubts that might have arisen as to who was authorized to avoid the spendthrift’s contracts. See Elliott Grocer Co. v. Field’s Pure Food Market, Inc., 286 Mich 112, 281 NW 557, 118 ALR 845. This right to avoid a contract was given [428]*428for the protection of the spendthrift. A similar: right in the case of insane persons is ordinarily exercised by a guardian. Woerner, Guardianship, § 129; Atwell v. Jenkins, 163 Mass 362, 40 NE 178, 47 Am St Rep 463, 28 LRA 694; Allen v. Berryhill, 27 Iowa 534, 536, 1 Am Rep 309; Carrier v. Sears, 4 Allen (Mass) 336, 81 Am Dec 707. So, also, of infants. Oliver v. Houdlet, 13 Mass 237, 7 Am Dec 134. An Illinois statute provided that every contract with a “spendthrift made after the application for the appointment of a conservator, may he avoided, except in favor of the person fraudulently making the same.” Rev. Statutes of Illinois, 1905, ch 86, § 15. In Sheldon v. Eakle, 160 Ill App 282, this right to avoid a contract was held to he in the conservator.

The purpose of the appointment of a guardian of the estate of a spendthrift is to protect the ward in his property against his wasteful and vicious habits which expose him or are likely to expose him or his family to want or suffering or to cause any public authority to he charged for any expense for his support or that of his family. ORS 126.005, supra. See Norton v. Leonard, 29 Mass 152, 161. It would seem to be fairly obvious that for the fulfillment of that purpose the responsibility of declaring void a contract entered into by the ward naturally devolves upon the guardian, along with his other duties. That this is what the legislature intended when it adopted the amendment in question we think there is no reason to doubt.

The guardian in this case having elected to declare the contract void, the plaintiff cannot recover upon it, unless there is merit in his contentions now to he considered.

By way of reply to the affirmative answer alleg[429]

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Olshen v. Kaufman
385 P.2d 161 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
385 P.2d 161, 235 Or. 423, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olshen-v-kaufman-or-1963.