Rogers v. Blumauer

255 P. 324, 122 Or. 352, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 170
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 255 P. 324 (Rogers v. Blumauer) 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
Rogers v. Blumauer, 255 P. 324, 122 Or. 352, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 170 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

At the close of plaintiff’s testimony in chief defendant interposed a motion for a nonsuit and reserved an exception to the court’s refusal to grant the same. This is the vital question in the case.

The stipulation dismissing the case referred to in the complaint recites that the cause having* been fully settled and compromised between the parties, it is hereby stipulated and agreed that the plaintiff waives and withdraws any and all claims and demands of whatsoever nature against the above-named defendant and against the estate of Simon Blumauer, deceased, or any of the heirs thereof, and consents to the dismissal of the above-entitled cause with prejudice, neither side to recover costs.”

The action was dismissed accordingly on April 4, 1919. Mariza Rogers, plaintiff, testified as bearing upon the terms of the dismissal as follows:

“Q. Did you, Mrs. Rogers, ever have any conversation with the defendant, Philip Blumauer, with reference to the settlement between him and your mother, *355 that is to say, the settlement of the action she brought against him for the fifty thousand dollars? A. For that ten shares?
“Q. Yes, for the ten shares that you called it? A. Yes, on one occasion.
“Q. Just state to the jury what that was. A. The family were estranged. We did not speak. But on one occasion I met Mr. Blumauer quite accidentally in the corridor of the Multnomah Hotel, where we had lived, where my mother lived for eleven years. I was very much incensed at her parting with her shares at all for this miserable little stipend of fifty dollars a month, and I spoke to Mr. Blumauer, whom I have known for many, many years, and upbraided him for placing my mother in such a position that she was forced to accept this fifty dollars a month in lieu of her claim for the ten shares, the fifty thousand dollars. And I said, ‘Why did you do it, why did you oppress her like that, an old, old woman, and I wasn’t here, there was nobody to protect her, why did you get her to sign away her claim without anyone?’ He said, ‘Well, at least she has dismissed the suit and she has now settled upon her legally, fifty dollars a month. She can depend upon that. ’ It was at the very apex of the high prices, during the war, and I said, ‘What would fifty dollars a month do my mother, what good, what if she fell ill, it is nothing.’ ‘Well,’ he says, ‘she has it, it is settled on her for life, she won’t starve.’ That ended the conversation.”

The stipulation was dated March 26, 1919. Plaintiff further testified, to the effect, that payments were made by defendant to her mother beginning in March or April and were made for a year, or until May, 1921. The evidence of the assignment of the claim consists of an instrument which reads as follows:

“Know All Men by These Presents, that I, Dr. Frances M. Blumauer, am selling and transferring to *356 my good daughter Mrs. A. M. Rogers, all of my goods, possessions and properties that I have not already transferred to her. She has earned it all. She is entitled to it all. All debts owing to me she shall collect in her own name and for herself. All my prescriptions and formulae, the results of my close study in the action of drugs upon the skin and scalp and upon cell growth are herein included. In consideration of my love for her, and the love and care she has bestowed and is now giving to me for my encouragement and help in this time of trouble I do this thing and give her all.
“Signed and sealed March 1st, 1922.
“Frances M. Blumauer. (Seal.)”

Phillip Blumauer, defendant, testified in regard to the settlement of the action as follows:

“A. The only thing was that you were handling it and Mr. Senn came to you and said that the Doctor needed money, and you said to me that the Doctor needed some'money, she was sick, and that Mr. Senn wanted us to agree to give her a certain amount of money, and we instructed you not to make any agreement whatever, but if the Doctor was in need of any money we would give her money, whatever she needed we would give her, — look out for her, which we always have.
“Q. Did you ever make any agreement yourself or promise or have any understanding with Dr. Frances Murray Blumauer that you would pay her fifty dollars a month for the rest of her life or for any period? A. No, sir.
“Q. Did you ever authorize your attorney to make any such a payment? A. No, sir.
“Q. Tell the jury what is the fact as to whether or not after that case was dismissed you or your brothers or the Estate of Simon Blumauer did give Mrs. Blumauer money from time to time. A. Yes, I have.”

*357 The defendant further stated to the effect that he stopped giving Dr. Blumauer money on account of a suit she commenced in April, 1921.

The question of whether defendant agreed, in consideration of the dismissal of the action mentioned, to pay Dr. Blumauer, the mother of plaintiff, $50 per month during her life, depended upon the truth of the testimony of plaintiff in regard to the conversation she had with defendant in the Multnomah Hotel. The defendant denied having any such conversation, or that he had conversed with plaintiff since 1917. If the jury found that plaintiff’s statement in that respect was true, then they might reasonably conclude that defendant agreed to make the payments as alleged in the complaint.

It is argued with much force on behalf of defendant that the statement attributed to defendant by plaintiff “is consistent with his voluntary donation of said sum to her” only. It appears without dispute that the proposition for such payments was made to defendant on the part of Dr. Blumauer and discussed at the time of entering into the stipulation, which recited that the action had been “settled and compromised,” left plenty of room for the suggestion there was some kind of an agreement. It was for the jury to say what the defendant meant by his statement if they found he made it and not for the court. The testimony tended to show that the very competent attorneys signing the stipulation knew nothing of the agreement being made and it was not embodied in the instrument as it probably would have been had they had anything to do with it.

If the jury believed that the defendant stated to plaintiff that her mother had “dismissed the suit *358 and has now settled upon her legally fifty dollars a month, * * she has it, it is settled on her for life,” the question of when and where and who was present when the compact was made would not be very important. The defendant might well construe and relate his own contract. The plaintiff’s testimony, taken with the other evidence of the payments being made for a time, was sufficient to take the case to the jury on this point.

Defendant objected and excepted to the instrument as evidence of the assignment of the claim to plaintiff. It appears that the assignment was written by Dr. Blumauer herself.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 324, 122 Or. 352, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-blumauer-or-1927.