Stout v. Van Zante

219 P. 804, 109 Or. 430, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 113
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 219 P. 804 (Stout v. Van Zante) 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
Stout v. Van Zante, 219 P. 804, 109 Or. 430, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 113 (Or. 1923).

Opinions

RAND, J.

The plaintiff and her husband were the owners of real property in Sherman County, Oregon, under a conveyance made to them while husband and wife. .They sold and conveyed the land, taking, for a part of the purchase money, notes made payable to both of them, which are secured by a mortgage upon the land. The husband died testate and the defendant is executor of the will. The notes, for the purposes of administration, are in the possession of the executor, and were listed in the inventory and appraisement as belonging, in equal shares, to the plaintiff and the estate. ' Claiming to be the sole owner of the notes, as survivor, the plaintiff brought action to recover their possession from the executor, and ob-[433]*433tamed a judgment adjudging her to be the sole owner and entitled to the possession thereof.

It is contended on behalf of the plaintiff that she and her husband were not only each seised of an estate by the entirety of the lands, but also of the notes, and that upon the death of the husband, the plaintiff, as survivor, became the sole owner of the notes as she would have been of the land, if it had not been sold, while defendant contends that estates by the entirety are abolished by the provisions of Sections 9852 and 9936 and Chapter 2 of Title LI, Or. L.

Section 9852 provides that a conveyance or devise of lands or of an interest therein to two or more, in their' own right, creates a tenancy in common unless it is expressly declared in the conveyance or devise that they shall take the lands as joint tenants, and by Section 9936, joint tenancies are expressly abolished. The provisions of the married woman’s acts embraced in Chapter 2 of Title LI confer upon a married woman the same right to the control and disposal of her separate property that a husband has over his.

Under the common law “if an estate in fee be given to a man and his wife, they are neither properly joint tenants, nor tenants in common: for husband and wife being considered as one person in law, they cannot take the estate by moieties, but both are seised of the entirety, per tout, et non per my (by all and not by the half); the consequence of which is, that neither the husband nor the wife can dispose of any part without the assent of the other, but the whole must remain to the survivor.” 2 Black. Com. *182.

The common-law doctrine, that a conveyance to a husband and wife creates in them a tenancy by the entirety, has not been abrogated by statute in this state: Noblitt v. Beebe, 23 Or. 4 (35 Pac. 248); Howell [434]*434v. Folsom, 38 Or. 184 (63 Pac. 116, 84 Am. St. Rep. 785); Hayes v. Horton, 46 Or. 597 (81 Pac. 386); Oliver v. Wright, 47 Or. 322 (83 Pac. 870); Chase v. McKenzie, 81 Or. 429 (159 Pac. 1025); Myers v. Reed, 17 Fed. 401.

That the common-law doctrine is in force in this state follows from the conclusion reached by the court in the foregoing cases, for at the time of their rendition all of the statutes referred to had been enacted and were in full force and effect. The question, therefore, is no longer an open one in this state.

That estates by the entirety are not abrogated or abolished by these or similar statutes seems to be supported by the great weight of authority in other jurisdictions : Bertles v. Nunan, 92 N. Y. 152 (44 Am. Rep. 361); Goodrich v. Otego, 160 App. Div. 349 (145 N. Y. Supp. 497); Matter of Klatzl, 216 N. Y. 83 (110 N. E. 181); see also, authorities cited in 18 O. J. 329'; 30 C. J. 557, 558 and 561; see also authorities cited by Judge Cooley in his note, 2 Cooley’s Black. (4 ed.), *183; 1 Bishop, Law of Married "Women, § 615.

At common law the husband and wife were regarded as one person, and a conveyance to them was, in law, a conveyance to but one person. They took the whole of the estate between them and each was seised of the whole because they were legally but one person. They did not take as tenants in common or joint tenants, but by the entirety, and in the instant case, if the husband, or wife had died before the lands were sold, the survivor would have taken the whole estate, “not by right of survivorship simply, but by virtue of the grant which vested the entire estate in such grantee.” (Bertles v. Nunan, supra.) But they sold and conveyed the land to a third party and thereupon their tenancy by the entirety was at an end.

[435]*435The question of whether, upon a conveyance by a husband and wife of lands of which they were tenants by the entirety, notes secured by a mortgage on the land and given for a part of the purchase money and made payable to them jointly, are held by them as tenants by the entirety, and upon the death of one, the legal interest in the notes will pass to the other as survivor, does not seem, thus far, to have been decided in this state.

Under the common law, a mortgage is an estate created by a conveyance, absolute in its form, but intended to secure the performance of some act, such as the payment of money, and the like, and to become void if performed agreeably to the terms prescribed at the time of making such conveyance, but if the condition fail to be fulfilled punctually, all right of the grantor to the estate is thereafter gone and the mortgagee becomes the absolute and unconditional owner of the entire estate. A mortgagee in fee of land is considered as absolutely entitled to the estate which he may devise or transmit by descent to his heirs. He •takes it subject to its being defeated by the doing of some act, such as the payment of money in a prescribed time and manner. “It is, therefore, an estate defeasible by the performance of a' condition subsequent.” 2 Washburn on Real Property (5 ed.), pp. 36, 100.

Under the laws of this state, a mortgage of real-property does not convey the title to the mortgaged property nor create an estate therein, but merely creates a lien or encumbrance against the property as security for the payment of a debt or the fulfillment of an obligation, and becomes void on payment of the debt or the fulfillment of the obligation. The full legal and equitable title, both before and after condi[436]*436tion broken, remains in the mortgagor until foreclosure and judicial sale. The interest created by tbe mortgage is of a personal nature, like that which the mortgagee has in the debt itself, and until foreclosure, the mortgagor has the entire fee subject tojfhe lien of the mortgage. The mortgage is a mere chose in action held as collateral security for the payment of a debt: Schleef v. Purdy, 107 Or. 71 (214 Pac. 137), and authorities there cited; Matter of Albrecht, 136 N. Y. 91 (32 N. E. 632, 32 Am. St. Rep. 700, 18 L. R. A. 329).

At common law the husband and his wife were deemed, in law, to be but one person, and that person was the husband. The wife, by marriage, merged her personality in the person of her husband and the effect of the marriage was to deprive her of all separate legal existence. She could make no contract binding upon herself or upon her husband without his consent. Her identity was so completely merged in that of her husband that she could no more contract with him than with a stranger. By the marriage the husband became possessed of all her real estate during her life, and, if a living child was born of the marriage, he had her real estate during his own life, if he survived her.

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Bluebook (online)
219 P. 804, 109 Or. 430, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stout-v-van-zante-or-1923.