Todd v. Hanna

251 P. 255, 120 Or. 29, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 3
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 251 P. 255 (Todd v. Hanna) 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
Todd v. Hanna, 251 P. 255, 120 Or. 29, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 3 (Or. 1926).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

Mrs. Blanche Todd maintains that her signature to the deed involved in this suit was procured through misrepresentation, in this: That she was led to believe that the paper which she signed was not a deed, but a mere statement that would aid in the collection of the Linn mortgage. About Hanna *32 and his agents’ coming to her home for a settlement, she testified:

“Then Mr. Kindt drew out a paper from his pocket and without unfolding it at all he asked me just to sign that, as it would help them to get their money. Now, mind, he said I would sign that paper, and I maintain now it was—it was graft and misrepresentation, for I had not the least idea that that was a deed; if I would sign that paper it would help them to get their money, and showed me just the line to sign my name on, and I did it. They had no sooner got hack to town, I suppose to their office, than the phone bell rang and I heard Mr. Kindt’s voice say: ‘You be careful that you don’t sign any other paper.’ Well, that was the first thing that made me feel uneasy lest I had signed something to. them that I should not have done, and I feel that they were crafty foxes. * *
“Q. Did they give you a check for something?
“A. They gave me—oh, yes, they said if I would do that, why, they would give me a hundred and fifty. * *
“Q. Did they tell you what the apartment house was worth?
“A. They said that the realty board valued it at about thirteen thousand.
“Q. Did they tell you how much was against it in mortgages and judgments?
“A. Oh, yes, it went up to about nineteen or twenty, I suppose. # *
“Q. * * When you signed that paper, * * what did you think you were doing?
“A. Well, I just thought just exactly what they said, if I signed that paper it would help them to collect. I didn’t know enough about deeds or mortgages or anything about it. I didn’t know that it went beyond just what they said if I would just sign that paper. They didn’t -read out anything over to me, I didn’t read anything in it, and I thought they were honorable men.”

*33 C. E. Kindt testified that fie was employed for the purpose of helping to collect the Linn mortgage; that, in the course of his employment, he met Blanche Todd at the office of her attorney, whom he supplied with a statement of the liens against the property; that he later called at the home of plaintiffs and, at Mrs. Todd’s request, supplied her with a statement of the encumbrances. He further testified:

“Q. Now, will you tell the court just as nearly as you can what was said (to Mrs. Blanche Todd) ?
“A. I took the abstract with me and I wanted Mrs. Todd to know exactly the status of the property. We had gone over that matter once before at Richardson’s office, but I had the abstract with me again and I went over this whole matter, these judgments and liens and mortgages with her, showed her how much they amounted to as nearly and closely and as accurately as I could get, and we discussed the value of the property just as we had done down to Richardson’s office, and those liens, they were so great in extent, the sum total was so great as compared with the value of the property that there was virtually no equity left there for her at all, absolutely none; if it was foreclosed there would be absolutely none whatever, and Mr. Shears told her that this Linn mortgage had been assigned to him and he was going to collect it; it had been running long enough; there had been nothing paid on it, principal or interest, and that he was considering foreclosing the mortgage, and that Martin probably would do the same thing; and we suggested to her that, under all those circumstances, that Mr. Shears would be willing to give her a little something for her equity, although in reality I didn’t think she had any equity there at all.
“Q. Just tell what was said.
“A. To give her a hundred and fifty dollars for her equity in the property.
“Q. What did she say?
“A. She said that she would take it.
*34 “Q. What did Shears tell her, if anything, that he wanted her to do for that hundred and fifty dollars? * *
“A. He wanted her to make a deed.
“Q. And what did she say about that?
“A. She said she would. * * We told her that we would come over and see her in a day or so further about it. * * We went back to the office and I drew a deed just in accordance with the conversation which we had had with her the day before or that day. (At this point witness identifies the deed.)
“Q. All right, what did you do with it after you drew it?
“A. Well, after I drew the deed, the next day, on the 29th, Mr. Shears and Mr. Hanna and myself went over to Mrs. Todd’s house with that. * # We told her that we had come over with the deed that she had agreed to sign the day before, and I read to her the deed, the four of us being present in her front room. * * Before I read the deed to her I handed it to her for her inspection and reading, and she handed it back to me and asked me to read it for her, which I did.”

The next witness was one J. E. Shears, a partner of J. L. Hanna in the real estate business. He testified that he came in contact with Blanche Todd and her daughter in attempting to collect the Linn note and mortgage which had been assigned to him; that, in company with Kindt, he called at the Todd home early one morning to see Miss Todd and her mother, and that he explained the proposition he had to make in regard to the collection as follows:

“I said this mortgage was in my possession and I was there to get some kind of an understanding in regard to a settlement. I said: ‘There are three propositions that I have to offer: Either let it go to foreclosure, or settle it up, or deed the property over,’ and she could do as she saw best about it.”

*35 On a second visit made by Kindt, Shears and Hanna, Mrs. Todd was at home alone, and, concerning what Shears said to her on that occasion, he testified:

“I did say to Mrs. Todd that the encumbrance was far beyond the value of the property * * and I made the same statement that I made to Nellie, that either one of the three ways would be a satisfactory settlement, but we wanted some kind of a settlement. And she said that she thought that the only way out of it was to give a deed to the property; that she didn’t think from what she had learned that there would be anything in it for her if it went to a foreclosure. * * I told her then,—we was talking about her giving a deed—I said, ‘Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 255, 120 Or. 29, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-hanna-or-1926.