Thompson v. Holladay

14 P. 725, 15 Or. 34, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 47
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 P. 725 (Thompson v. Holladay) 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
Thompson v. Holladay, 14 P. 725, 15 Or. 34, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 47 (Or. 1887).

Opinions

Thayer, J.

The respondent commenced a suit in said Circuit Court against a number of defendants, including the appellants herein, to recover a decree against the defendant Ben Holladay, qn account of moneys advanced by the former to the latter, aud interest on the same at the rate of ten per cent per annum, from the time the advances were made, and to foreclose a chattel mortgage upon 1,194 shares of stock of the Portland Street Railway Company given by the said Ben Holladay to the respondent, to secure the said advances, said stock then being held and in the possession of the respondent as receiyer in the suit of Ben Holla-day v. Joseph Holladay; also to restrain the appellant Joseph Holladay from selling said shares of stock under a decree of this court, directing the sale of certain property, including said shares [37]*37of stock, until he should have first sold all the other property-referred to in the said decree, or a sufficient portion thereof to satisfy the sum of $315,492.46, decreed to be due from said Ben Holladay to said Joseph Holladay.

Answers to the complaint in the suit were filed by the appellants, and a reply to the new matter therein contained was filed by the respondent. Subsequently thereto, the respondent filed a supplemental complaint. The alleged mortgage bears date November 11, 1884. It recites the execution by the said Ben Holladay of a promissory note for the sum of four thousand five hundred dollars, bearing even date with the mortgage, payable to the order of the respondent, on or before the first day of January, 1886, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum until paid, containing an agreement to repay all further advances that may be made by the respondent to said Holladay, but which were not to exceed five hundred dollars per month, from and after the first day of January, 1885, to be repaid at the time the principal sum became due, with a like rate of interest, and containing also a provision that the same should become due and payable upon the decision being made of the said suit of Ben Holladay v. Joseph Holladay, the suit in which the decree was given, if said decision should be rendered before January, 1886. Said mortgage contained a granting clause, granting the said property for the purpose of securing the payment of the said note, and advances that might be further made by the respondent, with the interest accruing thereon. The note referred to in the mortgage is also set out in the complaint; and it is further alleged in the complaint, that in pursuance of its terms said respondent, after the execution thereof, loaned and advanced to the said Ben Holladay each month inclusive, from December, 1884, to October, 1885, excepting September, the sum of five hundred dollars; and one thousand dollars in the month of November of the latter year, making six thousand dollars; and that the amount thereof, with the principal sum mentioned in said note, aggregating ten thousand five hundred dollars, with accrued interest, was due and no part had been paid. It is also alleged in the complaint that the said decree of this court, in the [38]*38case of Ben Holladay v. Joseph Holladay, was given on appeal from a decree of said Circuit Court; that it was entered on the twenty-ninth day of June, 1886, and adjudged and decreed that the said Ben Holladay was indebted to the said Joseph Holladay in the sum of $315,492.46, and'that certain conveyances, assignments, and transfers of real and personal property, made by and under the direction of said Ben Holladay to the said Joseph Holla-day, were decreed to be mortgages -upon said property to secure the payment of said indebtedness; that the said Ben Holladay had an equity of redemption in all of said property, and that if he failed to pay the said sum of $315,492.46, together with interest, costs, and disbursements, then and in that case, the receivers appointed in said suit should, as directed by the attorneys of said Joseph Holladay, sell the same to satisfy the said debt, and the balance, if any, pay over to the said Ben Holladay; that the mortgaged property referred to in said decree was more than necessary to pay the indebtedness, and that the lien thereof was prior to the respondent’s mortgage; that the respondent had no other lien or security for the payment of said ten thousand five hundred dollars, and upon which facts the relief that the said Joseph Holladay first exhaust the other property to obtain satisfaction of his indebtedness, before selling .said shares of stock, is claimed.

It is also alleged in the complaint that since said decree was rendered by this court in the suit of Ben Holladay v. Joseph Holladay, George W. Weidler and said Joseph Holladay were appointed receivers therein, and have the possession and control of the said mortgaged property, and were, by order of the judge of said Circuit Court, directed to be made parties to this suit. There were two several answers to the original complaint filed by the. appellants; one on behalf of Joseph Holladay and George W. Weidler, in their character as receivers, and the other on behalf ofDolph, Bellinger, Mallory & Simon, and Williams, Durham & Thompson, who obtained leave of the court to intervene in the suit. The answer of Holladay and Weidler shows that on the twenty-seventh day of September, 1886, said Circuit Court made and entered an order wherein certain property, [39]*39described in the decree in said suit of Ben Holladay v. Joseph Holladay et al., was released aud discharged from the lieu of said decree, and was ordered to be transferred by them to George W. "VYeidler as trustee, as provided in the stipulation in the case theretofore filed; that on the said twenty-seventh day of September, 1886, it was so transferred, and said receivers had no custody or control of it as such receivers. The property so released is the stock in the Oregon Real Estate Company, the stock in the Willamette Real Estate Company, divers tracts of land, town property, and a balance due from Halsey stock in the Willamette Real Estate Company of $1,328. Said answer contains an averment that the amount then due Joseph Holladay, and secured by the lien of said decree upon the property therein described, excepting that which had been so released, was $346,686.46, with interest thereon from the tenth day of July, 1886; and that in case it should become necessary to sell said property to satisfy said decree, the stock in the Oregon Real Estate Company and in the Willamette Real Estate Company could not be sold by the receivers and the court; and that it is neither practicable nor just to order the sale of said 1,194 shares of the stock of the Portland Street Railway Company to be made after the sale of the other stock mentioned. As a further defense to the suit herein, said Holladay and Weidler alleged, as new matter, that on the eleventh day of November, 1884, at the time of the alleged execution of the note and mortgage referred to in the complaint, the respondent was the only appointed, qualified, and acting receiver of the said Circuit Court in said suit of Ben Holladay v. Joseph Holladay et al., then regularly pending in said court, and as such receiver, then had the custody, control, and possession of said 1,194 shares of the capital stock of the Portland Street Railway Company; and it had been assigned to him and was held in his name as such receiver, and not otherwise; and they averred that he could not in law or equity acquire the interest in said stock claimed in said complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P. 725, 15 Or. 34, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-holladay-or-1887.