Schuler Et Ux. v. Humphrey Et Ux.

257 P.2d 865, 198 Or. 458, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 229
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 257 P.2d 865 (Schuler Et Ux. v. Humphrey Et Ux.) 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
Schuler Et Ux. v. Humphrey Et Ux., 257 P.2d 865, 198 Or. 458, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 229 (Or. 1953).

Opinion

TOOZE, J.

This is a suit for the rescission of a contract for the sale and purchase of approximately 400 acres of land, with livestock and equipment, located in Douglas county, Oregon, brought by William A. Schuler and Cecelia Schuler, his wife, as plaintiffs, against Carlyle H. Humphrey and Gladys E. Humphrey, his wife, as defendants. The trial court denied plaintiffs’ right to rescind and entered a decree in favor of defendants for a strict foreclosure of the contract. Plaintiffs appeal.

On or about March 30, 1947, at Los Angeles, California, the plaintiffs and defendants entered into a written agreement whereby plaintiffs agreed to purchase and defendants agreed to sell 430 acres of land, more or less, situated five miles north and approximately three-fourths mile west of Roseburg, Oregon, on Garden Valley road and known as the C. E. Humphrey ranch. Certain livestock and farm equipment were included in the sale. The purchase price agreed upon was $37,500, to be paid as follows: $10,000 in cash upon execution of the agreement, which sum was paid by plaintiffs; $10,000 to be paid in escrow upon the *463 opening of the escrow; the balance of $17,500 secured by “a first trust deed” covering the premises, to be paid in five equal annual installments, plus interest at five per cent per annum, the first installment with interest to be due and payable April 1,1948.

On March 31, 1947, an escrow was opened in California Bank, Van Nuys, California, with the said bank designated as escrow agent. Detailed escrow instructions executed by plaintiffs and defendants were deposited with the bank. Pursuant to the agreement, plaintiffs paid the sum of $10,000 to the bank. According to the escrow instructions, the several instruments required to complete the transaction were to be executed and delivered to the bank by the respective parties, and the several required payments were to be made, on or before 30 days from March 31, 1947.

In their complaint plaintiffs allege that they were induced to and did enter into said contract for the purchase of the real and personal property by reason of certain misrepresentations made to them regarding the same, and upon which they relied, and that upon discovery of the truth, they elected to rescind the contract.

Defendants by their answer denied the making of any false representations respecting the property and denied that plaintiffs, in entering into the contract, relied upon any representations that were made, affirmatively alleging that plaintiffs made a personal inspection of the property before entering into the agreement and relied entirely upon their own investigation and judgment. Defendants also allege that after plaintiffs discovered the alleged fraud, they moved upon and took possession of the premises, and by their conduct waived all claims of fraud and any right to rescind which they might have had. By way of cross- *464 complaint defendants pleaded a breach of the contract of sale by plaintiff and prayed for strict foreclosure.

Plaintiffs by their reply denied all the affirmative allegations of the answer contradictory to the allegations of their complaint.

For the sake of convenience, we shall hereafter refer to William A. Schuler as plaintiff, and to Carlyle H. Humphrey as defendant.

Plaintiff was born in Los Angeles, California, and at the time of trial was 34 years of age. Aside from a period of five years, his home had been in California at all times prior to the transactions involved in this litigation. When he was 11 years of age, he moved with his father to Shelton, Washington, where his father operated a muskrat farm. He left there and returned to California when he was 16 years of age. He graduated from high school and then spent one and one-half years at Porterville Junior College in California, where he took a one-year course in agriculture, about a third of the course being devoted to general farming, and the remainder to the growing of citrus fruits. He worked in the orange groves in California. For three years he was employed as a car loader for American Fruit Growers. About 1940, he purchased a 20-acre orange grove and operated it until he entered the United States Air Force in the spring of 1941. He remained in active service for four and one-half years. Upon his return to civilian life, he resumed the operation of his orange grove and after one year sold it. Except for passing through the state of Oregon on his way to and return from the state of Washington, and one short vacation trip into this state, plaintiff had never been in Oregon and consequently was wholly unfamiliar with the local farming conditions and livestock raising:

*465 Defendant was born and reared on a farm. When he was 21 years of age, he went to Yakima, Washington, and for eight years was employed in a commissary grocery. During that time he dealt more or less with sheep and cattle. He took supplies to the sheep shearers at shearing times and spent considerable time with the shearers. For a long period of time immediately prior to 1943, and at time of trial, defendant resided in Los Angeles.

In March, 1943, defendant purchased from one Herbert G. Hastings approximately 500 acres of land located in Douglas county. The land involved in this litigation is a part of that 500 acres. Defendant paid as consideration for the entire tract the sum of $16,500. Approximately 57% acres of the land lies east of the Southern Pacific railroad and west.of state Highway 99. This tract is referred to in the record in this case as the hay field. Another part of the land comprising 23% acres lies between the North Garden Valley road and the Umpqua river. This piece is designated by the witnesses as the alfalfa patch. Both of these tracts of land were excepted from the 430 acres, more or less, sold to plaintiff.

After purchasing the land in 1943, defendant moved upon the premises and for a period of 18 to 20 months resided thereon and farmed the same. The buildings on the property were in a state of disrepair, and new fences were required, as well as repairs to portions of the old.

Defendant made certain improvements on the premises. He cleaned, painted, and plastered the dwelling house, doing most of the work himself. He also repaired the roof and built a porch. He built a new hay and implement shed with a lean-to, and reshingled the barn. He erected approximately 750 rods of new *466 fence. He also purchased seed for permanent type grasses such as tall fescue, chewing fescue, lotus, subterranean clover, and red clover, and sowed about 200 acres. This seeding was done in 1945 and 1946. To secure an ample water supply for household uses, defendant had a new well drilled, to a depth of 112 to 115 feet, and purchased pumping equipment therefor. He put in a new lawn near the house, using top soil from the river bottom for the purpose, and repaired the fence around the lawn. Some farming equipment was purchased, which included a John Deere tractor, a walking plow, a disc, a clod breaker, a lime spreader, a harrow, a 14-inch John Deere hammermill, a power mower, a hay rake, a Dodge two-ton motor truck, and other miscellaneous tools.

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Bluebook (online)
257 P.2d 865, 198 Or. 458, 1953 Ore. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuler-et-ux-v-humphrey-et-ux-or-1953.