Portland Trust & Savings Bank v. Lincoln Realty Co.

211 P.2d 736, 187 Or. 443, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 206
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 211 P.2d 736 (Portland Trust & Savings Bank v. Lincoln Realty Co.) 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
Portland Trust & Savings Bank v. Lincoln Realty Co., 211 P.2d 736, 187 Or. 443, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 206 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree of the Circuit Court which granted the plaintiff judgment against the defendants in the amount of $97,565.00. This is the second time that this cause has been before this court. The decision upon the first appeal, which is reported in 180 Or. 96, 170, P. 2d 568, identifies the parties and delineates the basic facts out of which the controversy originated. The previous appeal was from a decree which awarded the plaintiff judgment in the amount of $125,000.00. Our decision held that the judgment was excessive to the extent of “at least $14,892.05,” and remanded the cause to the Circuit Court for the purposes which we will presently mention.

The Lincoln Realty Company, a dissolved corporation, which is one of the defendants, was the owner of a hotel property in Portland known as the St. Andrews Hotel, and was indebted upon a series of *445 negotiable promissory notes totaling $140,000.00, of which the plaintiff was the payee. The notes were secured by a real estate mortgage which named the plaintiff mortgagee. When the notes were issued it was contemplated that they would be sold to investors, and that course was taken. The plaintiff retained no beneficial interest in them. This appeal, as the first, is from the foreclosure decree. The issues concern the amount of the judgment and the rate of interest to which the plaintiff is entitled.

The Lincoln Realty Company became financially embarrassed and unable to meet the obligation évidenced by the notes. In an effort to prevent foreclosure of the mortgage, it first made an assignment of the income produced by the hotel and, next, without terminating the assignment, leased the hotel to a corporation entitled Hotel St. Andrews, Inc., by an instrument which required the lessee to pay the plaintiff monthly $900.00 applicable to the indebtedness evidenced by the notes and $157.50 upon the unpaid balance due upon the purchase price of the furnishings of the hotel. The rental stipulated in the lease was 25 per cent of total room rentals. If 25 per cent of that gross was less than $1,057.50, the lessee was, nevertheless, bound to pay $1,057.50. If 25 per cent of the gross room rental was more than $1,057.50, the lessee was bound to pay the larger sum, but was entitled to credit for the excess in a future month when 25 per cent of gross was less than $1,057.50. It was not the duty of the lessee to pay $1,057.50 plus 25 per cent of room rentals. If 25 per cent of room rentals equalled or exceeded $1,057.50 and the sum was paid, the lessee had discharged its full duty. Hotel St. Andrews, Inc., and the plaintiff are two of the three appellants. The third is Hotel *446 Eugene, Inc., the parent of Hotel St. Andrews, Inc., and owner of all of its corporate stock. The characterization in our prior decision of the two hotel companies as “one and the same entity” has not been challenged. The respondents are the suceesors to the title of Lincoln Realty Company.

The payments exacted of the lessee by the provisions of which we have taken notice were not payable to the Lincoln Realty Company. The monthly item of $157.50 was payable to the conditional vendor of the hotel’s furnishings and the amount of $900.00 (or more) was payable to the plaintiff. For an adequate delineation of the terms of the lease and the assignment, reference is made to our prior opinion.

The plaintiff was obliged, upon receipt of the $900.00 (or more) portion of the monthly payment, to apply it upon the mortgage indebtedness (interest and principal). In that way, a total of approximately $15,000.00 of notes were retired and the indebtedness was reduced to $125,000.00. As indicated in our previous decision, the successors in interest to the Lincoln Realty Company (appellants in the first appeal, respondents in the present one) contended that the lessee failed to pay the full amount of the monthly rentals exacted of it by the lease and submitted that if the required rentals had been paid the aggregate of the notes would have been reduced to a sum materially less than $125,000.00. Our decision held that the lessee diverted rental moneys amounting to “at least $14,-892.05” to unauthorized purposes and that at least that much should be deducted from $125,000.00 in determining the amount of the judgment to which the plaintiff was entitled. We used the term “at least” because all needed figures were not before us. The total of *447 $14,892.05 was made up as follows: $10,129.47 represented an amount which the lessee had paid for repairs; $2,214.36 represented items which the lessee had paid for carpet, insurance premiums and taxes upon personal property; $2,548.22 was the amount of rentals delinquent November 1, 1942, and not thereafter paid. It is not claimed upon this appeal that we made any error in the two sums first mentioned ($10,129.47 and $2,214.36), but the appellants argue that the lessee was not delinquent in the payment of rentals November 1, 1942, and, therefore, that we erroneously reduced the mortgage indebtedness by the deduction of $2,548.22.

Our opinion said:

“ * * * It is our belief that the judgment is excessive to the extent of at least $14,892.05. It is apparent that rentals have become due since the complaint was filed, and, of course, so far as the record goes, they have not been applied upon the mortgage debt. The circuit court should determine their amount. If a part of their total was applicable to the payment of interest or of taxes, the proper deductions should be made. The balance should be applied upon the mortgage.
“The challenged decree is set aside and the cause is remanded to the circuit court to enter the proper decree.”

The mandate which issued from this court said:

“ * * * the judgment is excessive as to principal to the extent of at least $14,892.05.
“It is, therefore, considered, ordered and decreed that the decree of the Circuit Court be reversed and set aside, and that the Circuit Court should determine the amount of rentals since the institution of this suit to be applied upon the mortgage debt. If a part of their total was applicable to the payment of interest or of taxes, the proper *448 deductions should be made and the balance should be applied upon the mortgage.
# # # .
“It is further ordered and decreed that this cause be remanded to the court below from which the appeal was taken with directions to set aside the decree and the sale thereunder and enter the proper decree in conformity with the opinion of the court herein, and in accordance herewith.”

Upon the hearing which occurred after the Circuit Court received our mandate, further evidence was presented and then the decree was entered which is challenged by the plaintiff upon this appeal.

The first assignment of error declares:

“The Court erred in overruling appellants’ contention that the item of $2,548.22, alleged deficit on rentals during the months April to October, 1942, inclusive, did not, as of the date of the further accounting, exist, and further erred in deducting that amount from the mortgage debt.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 P.2d 736, 187 Or. 443, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portland-trust-savings-bank-v-lincoln-realty-co-or-1949.