Pacific Coast Investment Co. v. Jones

63 P.2d 888, 155 Or. 244, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 77
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 63 P.2d 888 (Pacific Coast Investment Co. v. Jones) 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
Pacific Coast Investment Co. v. Jones, 63 P.2d 888, 155 Or. 244, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 77 (Or. 1936).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This suit was instituted by Pacific Coast Investment Company, a corporation, as plaintiff, *246 against Olive M. Jones, Belle M. Miller, as the widow of E. E. Miller, deceased, and as administratrix of the estate of that decedent, certain heirs of said decedent, and other individuals alleged to claim some right, title or interest, as cestuis qui trustent, in the real property involved in the suit, to recover on a note for $5,000 executed by E. E. Miller, trustee, on January 6, 1920, and payable to the defendant Olive M. Jones, and to foreclose a mortgage on real property in the city of Portland, given by said E. E. Miller, trustee, to Olive M. Jones as security for the payment of said note.

The note was payable five years after date, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, and, according to the allegations of the complaint, no part of the principal had been paid, nor had any interest thereon been paid subsequent to April 6, 1929. The usual allegations as to assignment of the note and mortgage are contained in the complaint, and judgment is demanded against Olive M. Jones and the estate of E. E. Miller, deceased, for $5,000 with past due interest and attorneys ’ fees.

No appearance was made by any of the defendants except Olive M. Jones. In her first affirmative defense she alleges that the plaintiff through fraud, misrepresentation and coercion induced her to indorse and deliver the note and assign the mortgage to plaintiff. The circuit court found against Mrs. Jones as to the allegations of this defense, and we concur with the court’s finding that she has failed to prove any fraud, misrepresentation or coercion in the respect alleged.

As a second affirmative defense Mrs. Jones alleges that on October 1,1932, which was a day or two subsequent to her indorsing the note and assigning the mortgage to the plaintiff, she acquired from the City of Portland a deed to the land mortgaged as security for *247 the payment of the $5,000 note; that the City of Portland had prior thereto acquired title to such property by virtue of the sale of the same for failure to pay delinquent city assessments against it; and that by reason of the sale of the mortgaged property by the city the lien of the mortgage had been extinguished.

In a third defense, by way of “cross-complaint”, Mrs. Jones asserts ownership of this property in herself by reason of the deed from the City of Portland and seeks to quiet title thereto against the plaintiff and the other defendants.

The reply put in issue the affirmative matters contained in the answers and further alleges that on January 10, 1928, the sheriff of Multnomah county, Oregon, issued to the plaintiff a tax delinquency certificate for the delinquent taxes on the property described in the mortgage; that in the latter part of September, 1932, the amount due on the certificate was in excess of $1,700; that Mrs. Jones knew of the issuance of such certificate to the plaintiff; and that on September 29 the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a written contract which is set forth as an exhibit to said reply. The “whereas” clauses in the contract refer to the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage to the defendant by E. E. Miller as trustee; the issuance of a certificate of delinquency to the plaintiff, and the further fact that there was in excess of $1,700 unpaid thereon; that the same was a prior lien upon the property covered by the mortgage; that the plaintiff was intending to foreclose the certificate of delinquency, which the defendant did not want done; and that as a consideration of waiver of the right to foreclose said mortgage the agreement was entered into by plaintiff and Mrs. Jones. The agreement expressly provides that in consideration of the plaintiff’s withholding and *248 waiving the foreclosure of said certificate the defendant ‘ ‘ does hereby sell, assign and transfer ’ ’ to the plaintiff by said document and by a formal assignment of the mortgage the note and mortgage involved in this suit. The agreement also contains the following two paragraphs:

“The conditions of this assignment and consent are: That the said Olive M. Jones shall pay to the said Pacific Coast Investment Company, a corporation, the full amount of the said tax certificate and all taxes paid thereon, with accrued interest, on or before the 1st day of April, 1933, then the said note and mortgage shall be re-assigned to the said Olive M. Jones, by the said Pacific Coast Investment Company, but if the said sum, and the whole thereof is not paid to the said Pacific Coast Investment Company, by the 1st day of April, 1933, then the said Pacific Coast Investment Company shall not be under obligation to reassign, or transfer to the said Olive M. Jones, the said note or mortgage, and the same shall become the property absolute of the said Pacific Coast Investment Company, a corporation.
“This agreement is to be construed as an option to purchase the said note and mortgage upon the terms and at the times hereinbefore expressed and is not to be considered as a pledge by the said Olive M. Jones of the said note and mortgage as security for her promise to pay the sums due or to become due on the said tax certificate. ’ ’

It was adjudged and decreed by the circuit court that the plaintiff have “judgment against the estate of E. E. Miller, trustee, and Belle M. Miller as administratrix of the estate of E. E. Miller, deceased,” for the sum of $5,000 with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from April 6, 1929, and the further sum of $500 as attorneys’ fees, also its costs and disbursements, and that the mortgage described therein be foreclosed and the property sold to satisfy such judgment. *249 It was ordered that plaintiff have judgment against the defendant Olive M. J ones in the sum of $1,629, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from September 29, 1932, also for $500 as attorneys’ fees, and the amount of plaintiff’s costs and disbursements; and that “this judgment in favor of the plaintiff herein against said Olive M. Jones is a prior and superior right and claim upon the judgment and decree herein rendered against the said E. E. Miller, trustee, et al., and shall be satisfied first from the sale of said real property”; that if a greater sum is realized from the sale of said property than is required to satisfy the judgment against the defendant Olive M. Jones, the excess shall be paid to said defendant; and that in the event that said property does not sell for a sum sufficient to satisfy in full the judgment against Mrs. Jones, “judgment for the deficiency shall be rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the said defendant Olive M. Jones, if upon motion and proper showing such deficiency judgment against said defendant, Olive M. Jones, would be just and equitable.” Prom this decree the defendant Jones has appealed.

The certificate of delinquency was issued to plaintiff by the sheriff of Multnomah county on January 10, 1928, and was for delinquent taxes for the year 1925, which taxes together with penalty and interest at the date of issuance of the certificate amounted to $272.95. On January 17, 1928, the plaintiff paid the delinquent taxes for the year 1922, which with penalty and interest amounted to $387.08.

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.2d 888, 155 Or. 244, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-coast-investment-co-v-jones-or-1936.