Sizemore, Adm'r v. Miller

247 P.2d 224, 196 Or. 89, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 231
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 247 P.2d 224 (Sizemore, Adm'r v. Miller) 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
Sizemore, Adm'r v. Miller, 247 P.2d 224, 196 Or. 89, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 231 (Or. 1952).

Opinion

LATOURETTE, J.

Otus Sizemore, as administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Tice Shull, deceased, brought the present suit to set aside an alleged contract for the sale of Shull’s land to defendants, Miller and husband, and an alleged partnership agreement between them involving Shull’s cattle, on the grounds of mental incompetency on Shull’s part, fraud, undue influence and failure of consideration. The trial court found for the defendants; hence this appeal.

Shull, at the age of 74 years and being the owner of some 800 acres of land in a remote part of Harney county, on May 6, 1946, leased said land, including his livestock comprising some 100 head, for a period of five years to defendant, Armintha Miller, the rental to be one-half of the increase of the livestock. At the time of the execution of such lease, Mrs. Miller was 31 years of age and was a well-educated woman, having attended high school in Arizona and having been graduated from Arizona State College after a four-year *91 course in journalism. After the 1946 lease was entered into, Shull continued to live in the dwelling house on the premises leased to Mrs. Miller. There were no near neighbors, and the Millers were the principal persons with whom Shull had social contact during the time. It is admitted that there was a close and intimate relationship between the parties. During Shull’s last illness, immediately preceding the signing of the documents in contest, the Millers were looking after Shull, procured medicine for him, took him to the hospital in Lakeview rather than in Burns, and obtained the services of the Miller’s physician, Dr. Kliewer, for him. Shull’s regular doctor practiced in Burns. In their brief the Millers state: “They were the persons to whom he turned for help, * * That there was a confidential relationship between the Millers and Shull cannot be doubted; in fact, the trial court so found in the following language:

“*= * * When he had his last illness, the first persons that he turned to were the Millers. Now that is more or less natural, for the reason that the Millers were the closest people to him; but it shows there a strong friendship, it shows a confidence, it shows in this evidence the persons to whom he could turn for his assistance.”

Shull was admitted to the hospital in Lakeview on June 16, 1950, and, although Mrs. Miller at least knew that Shull had a daughter, Mrs. Gladys Sweeny, she gave the hospital authorities the name of Minnie Sutherland without designating her relationship to Shull for the hospital’s records. Minnie was Shull’s sister.

In June, 1946, Shull was visiting his daughter in Nevada, at which time he became ill and was hospitalized, thereupon he executed a will leaving everything to her but naming her son as executor. Shull *92 and his daughter were on friendly terms, visited back and forth, and as soon as she learned of his illness in the hospital, she went immediately to Lakeview.

The record shows that Mr. C. B. McConnell, of Burns, was Shull’s attorney and had drawn the 1946 lease, and that prior to Shull’s entrance into the Lake-view hospital, Mrs. Miller went to Mr. McConnell’s office for the purpose, according to her, of having him draw the documents in question. She claims she became suspicious of Mr. McConnell and left his office without procuring the necessary papers.

The day after Shull was admitted to the hospital, the Millers obtained through their personal attorney, Mr. Theodore Conn, of Lakeview, two written documents and had Shull execute them. Mr. Conn never talked to Shull, and not having the description of the real property, called a county official at Burns to get the necessary description to enable him to prepare the contracts in question. One was an agreement on the part of Shull to sell his ranch to the Millers for the sum of $2,500, payable $300 per year without interest. Under the terms of such agreement, Shull agreed to pay a $2,500 mortgage on the premises which bore 5 per cent interest and which was then due but which had been extended for a period of one year. This mortgage was held by Otus Sizemore who was later appointed administrator of Shull’s estate.

The second document was a partnership agreement whereby Shull turned over the ownership of two-thirds of his cattle to the Millers, it being understood that the partnership should continue for a period of six years, and that the parties should run jointly and together all of the cattle belonging to Shull and should each share equally in the profits and bear equally the losses in the operation of said cattle ranch and each *93 bear equally the expenses of such partnership operation. It was agreed that the Millers should do all of the necessary work and labor and furnish the range in connection with the operation of the cattle ranch, but the expenses of taxes and the procuring of hay and other feed should be borne equally between the parties. It was further agreed that there should be an annual accounting between the partners, and that partnership books should be kept.

It is important to note that in the partnership agreement Mrs. Miller contributed nothing in the way of turning over her portion of the cattle, being the increase from the parent herd, to the partnership. Of this the trial court said:

“It then brings us down to the third question, which becomes much more difficult for the Court to determine, and that is the inadequacy of the consideration for the transactions that took place on that day in the hospital at Lakeview. Particularly the contract on the cattle does have one very odd clause, and I think it is the one which is giving the Court more consideration, more difficulty of determination, than any other one point; and that is where Tice Shull turned over two-thirds of his own cattle to Armintha and Eugene Miller and that there Armintha Miller withheld from that partnership the property that she had gotten through the benefit of the 4-year contract with Tice Shull. If that had been left out of this, the Court would not have had much difficulty in deciding this case, whether the Court would have been right or wrong.”

The court in his opinion did not explain how he overcame this difficulty in reaching his decision.

It must be noted that at the time these documents were signed in June, 1950, there was subsisting a lease between Shull and Mrs. Miller concerning the cattle *94 and the land which had not then expired but had up to May, 1951, to run.

The daughter, Mrs. Sweeney, shortly after the execution of these documents, was apprised by the sheriff over the telephone that things were not as they should be between her father and the Millers over the property in question and that he was in the hospital, and she immediately went to Lakeview to see her father. She there learned from her father that he had executed some documents, the purport of the same, according to her testimony, not being known to him. No papers were left with him so Mrs. Sweeney went to see the Millers’ lawyer, Mr. Conn, who had drawn up the documents, and he refused to divulge the nature of them to her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 P.2d 224, 196 Or. 89, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sizemore-admr-v-miller-or-1952.