Paul v. Livestock State Bank

241 P. 56, 239 P. 108, 116 Or. 626, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 173
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 241 P. 56 (Paul v. Livestock State Bank) 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
Paul v. Livestock State Bank, 241 P. 56, 239 P. 108, 116 Or. 626, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 173 (Or. 1925).

Opinions

IN BANC.

MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL OVERRULED. McBRIDE, C.J.

This is a motion to dismiss the appeal. The record presents a singular mixture of mistakes and omissions. The first ground is the failure to serve and file an undertaking on appeal within the time required by law. This case was decided by Judge HEWITT, April 2, 1925. On April 4th, notice of appeal was served and filed. On May 1st, an undertaking on appeal was filed, and a transcript on appeal was filed June 4, 1925. The abstract of record was filed with the clerk at Pendleton, July 16th.

Thus it will be seen that twenty-seven days elapsed between the service of the notice of appeal and service and filing of the undertaking. It appears from the statement of counsel for appellants that after he made service of the notice of appeal, he applied to the judge, who tried the case, to fix the amount of the undertaking, which was to include a stay of proceedings. *Page 628 The court fixed the stay bond at $2,500, which appellants were unable to give and appellants' attorney applied to the court for a reduction. On the twenty-fifth day of April, the judge wrote to appellants' attorney suggesting an ordinary appeal bond in the sum of $300 instead of the stay bond, which letter was received on April 28th, and on May 1st appellants executed and served the required undertaking and surrendered their ranch to the respondents.

The motion to dismiss, for the reason that the undertaking was not filed within ten days after service of notice of appeal, was not made within ten days after that fact came to the knowledge of the appellants. The statute requires an undertaking to be served on the adverse party. It is certain, therefore, respondents must have known that it had not been served within the time required by law, and under Rule 23 of this court, it was their duty to file a motion to dismiss within ten days after the failure to so serve and file the undertaking came to their knowledge. Otherwise, the objection is deemed to be waived: Mitchell v.Coach, 83 Or. 45 (153 P. 478, 162 P. 1058). See, also,Stone v. First Nat. Bank, 100 Or. 528 (193 P. 1023, 197 P. 304, 198 P. 244.)

By an order of this court the time for filing the abstract of record was extended to and including July 15th. A copy was sent to the printer with instructions to forward printed copies to appellants' attorney not later than the 12th of July, but instead of doing this, the printer sent the copies direct to the clerk at Pendleton, where they arrived and were filed on the 16th, one day late. Copies were received by appellants' attorney and served on the 16th and filed a day or two later. *Page 629

The abstract is a bulky affair and evidently an expensive one to print, and the fact that it was prepared indicates that the appellants were doing everything in their power to perfect their appeal. The time for filing the brief was extended by an order of this court and the briefs were filed in time.

The filing of the abstract of record within the required time is not a jurisdictional matter, and in view of the evident good faith of the parties in seeking to perfect their appeal as shown by their having printed an expensive abstract and brief, we feel disposed to excuse the omission; but there is a limit somewhere to judicial charity to the mistakes of counsel, and, so far as appellants are concerned, no delay on their part will hereafter be excused which might tend to prevent the hearing of this appeal at the October term of court at Pendleton.

The motion is overruled. MOTION OVERRULED.

ON THE MERITS.
(241 P. 56.)
This is a suit brought to set aside certain deeds and bills of sale given by plaintiffs to C.H. Leonard and later to W.H. Craven on the ground that the same were procured by fraud, threats and duress. The particular threats alleged being, the grantees in said instruments threatened, that unless plaintiffs executed said instruments, the grantees therein would prosecute James H. Paul for a felony and cause him to be sent to the penitentiary.

While a long-detailed history of the transactions between the parties would be unprofitable, an outline thereof may be summarized about as follows: In July, 1916, plaintiffs executed a mortgage to R.C. *Page 630 Goodwin embracing 760 acres of land in Harney County, and also about 150 head of horses, 40 cattle, a band of ewes containing about 2,400 head, and 700 lambs, being the whole of Paul's flock except wethers and coarse wool lambs. The mortgage was given to secure the payment of a promissory note for $12,000, dated July 19, 1916, with interest at 10 per cent per annum, with the usual provision for costs and attorney's fees in case of suit. It was stipulated in the mortgage that it should not cover the wool or increase of the sheep described therein, but that the same might be sold to cover the expenses connected therewith, except that the mortgagors should keep the number of sheep complete with sufficient of the increase to keep up the number mentioned in the mortgage.

Later, Goodwin died and the mortgage became the property of his administrator. On November 20, 1919, while the Goodwin mortgage was still subsisting and unpaid, Paul borrowed $9,000 from the Portland Cattle Loan Company and executed a chattel mortgage on all his sheep including those embraced in the Goodwin mortgage. On June 30, 1920, this mortgage was renewed in the sum of $10,000, and on December 31, 1920, was again renewed in the sum of $13,500, the increase representing operating expenses incurred.

In all of these mortgages it was covenanted that the personal property was free from all encumbrances. On January 11, 1921, the latter mortgage was assigned to the Live Stock State Bank. After the Live Stock State Bank acquired this note and mortgage, it became aware, for the first time, of the existence of the Goodwin mortgage and of the fact that it was the holder of only a second mortgage. At this juncture, the Live Stock State Bank, in order to *Page 631 secure itself, found it necessary to acquire control of the Goodwin note and mortgage and Mr. C.H. Leonard, an attorney of Bend, interviewed the Pauls, under circumstances hereinafter alluded to, with the result that they conveyed to him in trust for the Live Stock State Bank all their real property and by a bill of sale of the same date conveyed to him in trust for said bank all their livestock, including sheep, lambs, horses, mules and cattle, all equipment and feed, camp outfit, an automobile and a note and mortgage for $2,000 given by W.J. Taylor to James Paul.

The bill of sale also contained the following stipulation:

"This conveyance as well as the deed to the land is made to C.H. Leonard, the attorney for Live Stock State Bank, in the nature of a trust, and to facilitate foreclosure proceedings by him on the Goodwin and Live Stock State Bank mortgages, in order that the same may be done with as little extra cost and inconvenience as possible outside of what is provided for in the said notes and mortgages. These conveyances are made with the further understanding between the parties hereto that all of the personal property will be disposed of first and to the best possible advantage before a sale of the real estate shall be made, thus leaving the opportunity for the parties of the first part to save their home if possible even though the same may be covered by a mortgage. It is further understood that the said C.H.

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Related

J. A. Campbell Co. v. Corley
14 P.2d 455 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1932)
Paul v. Livestock State Bank
241 P. 56 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 56, 239 P. 108, 116 Or. 626, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-v-livestock-state-bank-or-1925.