Tuthill v. Stoehr

98 P.2d 8, 163 Or. 461, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 60
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 P.2d 8 (Tuthill v. Stoehr) 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
Tuthill v. Stoehr, 98 P.2d 8, 163 Or. 461, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 60 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by Garner G. Talboy and Erik Bjorkman, two of the five defendants, from a decree of the circuit court which grants judgment upon a promissory note payable to the plaintiff, and foreclose a real estate mortgage delivered to him as mortgagee to secure payment of the note. Both instruments were signed by the defendant Emily S. Stoehr. The decree grants judgment against her, Bjork-man, and T. E. and Clara A. Hammersly, all of them being defendants. It found that Bjorkman and the Hammerslys had assumed payment of the mortgage debt. The fifth defendant, Talboy, was a grantee in a deed which described the mortgaged property but did not impose payment of the mortgage debt upon him. No relief was granted against him except an adjudication that his interest in the property was subject to the mortgage lien.

May 12, 1912, Emily S. Stoehr signed the note and mortgage above mentioned. The note promised payment of $1500 to the plaintiff May 8,1915. The mortgage mentioned as the property encumbered Lot 16, Block 8, *464 Waverleigh Heights, a subdivision of Portland, and was recorded June 18, 1912. October 1, 1828, Mrs. Stoehr (a widow) conveyed the property to Alma E. Thacker by a deed which mentioned the mortgage and stated: “* # # which said mortgage grantee herein assumes and agrees to pay as part of the purchase price with interest thereon from October 1,1928.” The deed was recorded October 20, 1928. Mrs. Thacker became Mrs. Pier. November 12,1932, the Piers conveyed this property to'Mary E. Dorsett by a deed which after describing the mortgage said: “* * * which grantee assumes and agrees to pay * * The deed was recorded January 10, 1933. January 9,1933, Mrs. Dorsett and her husband conveyed the lot to the Hammerslys by a deed which in addition to mentioning the mortgage stated: “* * * which grantee assumes and agrees to pay * * *. Grantee also assumes and agrees to pay interest on said mortgage of $1500 at the rate of seven (7%) per cent per annum.” That deed was recorded January 10, 1933. October 25, 1933, the Hammerslys by written contract agreed to exchange this item of property for a three-acre tract owned by the appellant Bjorkman. The mention of plaintiff’s mortgage in the contract is the following:

“$1500. 3 yr. Straight mtg and app. $15. back taxes and $32. Interest Mtg bearing 6%.”

The contract bound Bjorkman to assume the indebtedness and the Hammerslys to pay the delinquent taxes which encumbered the acreage.

November 1,1933, the Hammerslys executed a deed conveying title to the lot. At Bjorkman’s request it named the American Construction Company the capital stock of which he owned as grantee. The deed recited that the property was subject to a “mortgage in *465 the amount of $1500 bearing six% interest, in favor of H. S. Tuthill, and approximately $103 Taxes and interest,” but did not impose payment of the indebtedness upon the grantee. The deed was not delivered to the corporation. The following circumstances account for the nondelivery. One I. O. Holman, a real estate broker, had represented Bjorkman in the negotiations with the Hammerslys and for these services charged $75. Bjorkman was not ready to pay the commission when the deed was handed to him and, pursuant to agreement, it was left with W. W. Graves, an attorney, to be returned to Bjorkman upon payment of $75. The sum was never paid and Graves still held the deed at the time of the trial. Bjorkman, when asked for “the reason for the nonpayment of commission in that deal,” replied, “When we signed up the contract, it called for a 50 by 100 lot and I discovered later on it was only 40 by 100 and I wanted some adjustment on it.” The contract did not describe the property as a lot, but as “residence located at 2820 Franklin St., Portland, Oregon.” Although the mortgage described the property as “Lot numbered sixteen (16) in Block numbered eight (8) * * *,” a part, 24 by 25 feet in size, occupied by a garage, had been conveyed to someone else.

The above is Bjorkman’s complete explanation of his omission to pay the commission and obtain the deed. He said nothing more upon the subject. He does not claim that he ever mentioned the matter to the Hammerslys. The deed signed by the Hammerslys and left with Graves excepted from the conveyance the 24 by 25 foot parcel. Although Bjorkman never obtained this deed Talboy obtained from the Hammerslys not merely one conveyance of the property, but in fact two, each *466 naming himself as the grantee. We shall now state the circumstances.

Talboy had represented the American Construction Company in the collection of a judgment in its favor against a debtor. When he undertook the services it was agreed that he should have one-half of whatever was recovered. Upon execution sale the debtor’s property was sold and the sheriff’s certificate was issued in Talboy’s name. This property later became the tract mentioned in the Hammerslys-Bj orkman contract. When this tract was traded for the lot with which we are now concerned Talboy felt that he became a half owner in the lot. January 29,1934, he obtained from the Hammerslys a quitclaim deed which conveyed the property to him. Talboy’s explanation of this circumstance follows: “I contacted the Hammerslys and explained to them that the deed previously given to the American Construction Company couldn’t be obtained. I don’t know that I went into detail and told them why, but explained that it would be necessary to secure another deed.” Continuing, he swore that when he requested the deed the Hammerslys referred him to Mr. Hammersly’s brother, an attorney, and that the latter told him that if Bjorkman would write a letter requesting that title be conveyed to Talboy a deed would then be executed. Talboy testified that the letter was signed and that he then obtained the deed. About two weeks later he obtained a second deed which named him as grantee. This deed was bargain and sale in form and, unlike the first, excepted from the conveyance the 24 by 25 foot area. Talboy explained the execution of the second deed by saying that the first had failed to mention the excepted area. Apparently, he recognized that the contract did not require the conveyance of the en *467 tire lot. As witnesses, the Hammerslys indicated that at the time of the execution of these two deeds nothing was said to them that the first deed (which named the corporation as grantee) had been left with Graves and that he still possessed it. Apparently the Hammerslys were confused concerning the two later deeds and regarded the two as copies, of one another. However, these circumstances, in our opinion, are not of material consequence in this cause. Talboy admitted that when he prepared the two deeds, which named him as grantee, he knew of the plaintiff’s note and mortgage. Referring to Bjorkman, he said, “He told me there was a mortgage against it.” The bargain-and-sale deed, being the one which excepted the 24 by 25 foot area, was recorded. Talboy did not contradict witnesses who testified that he was present when the deed, later left with Graves, was discussed and delivered to Bjorkman.

Nothing has ever been paid upon the principal of the mortgage debt. Interest payments, however, were faithfully maintained to and including August 21,1933. Nothing was paid upon the tax obligations after the year 1929.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Security State Bank v. Luebke
737 P.2d 586 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1987)
Security State Bank v. Luebke
723 P.2d 369 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1986)
Capps v. Georgia Pacific Corporation
453 P.2d 935 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1969)
Ruff v. Boltz
448 P.2d 549 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1968)
Sorenson v. Bowen
263 P.2d 766 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 P.2d 8, 163 Or. 461, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuthill-v-stoehr-or-1939.