Union Central Life Insurance v. Toliver

52 P.2d 1129, 152 Or. 185, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 149
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 P.2d 1129 (Union Central Life Insurance v. Toliver) 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
Union Central Life Insurance v. Toliver, 52 P.2d 1129, 152 Or. 185, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 149 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

*189 BEAN, J.

The burden was upon defendants to prove the affirmative allegations of their answers. They have failed to make such proof or to show that there was an agreement by plaintiff for a partial release of the mortgage as to tracts 8 and 9.

It appears that prior to the sale of the land to Hume, I. M. Toliver was ill and unable to look after his business, and he called upon his friend, W. W. Everhart, to look after the matter for him and endeavor to make a sale of tracts 8 and 9 to Dr. Hume. Toliver, it is stated, had been a client of Philip Hammond for several years, and after Everhart made a tentative agreement with Dr. Hume for the sale of tracts 8 and 9 Everhart went to the office of Mr. Hammond to have a contract drawn. Mr. Everhart testified:

“Court: How did Mr. Hammond happen to draw that contract between Toliver and Hume?
*190 A. He was dealing with Mr. Toliver. Mr. Toliver was not able to appear—he was very sick—so he had me take his place, and I naturally went to his office, because he was dealing with Mr. Toliver.”

Hume paid $500 to Everhart on the contract. Ever-hart also testified:

“A. The Hume land, in order to get the five hundred dollar payment on the land it was a question of whether we could get—it seems as though the security might be reduced, and Mr. Hammond thought it, and he figured he could get by with the company. [Italics ours.] So we proceeded to close the deal on that basis. This tract 8 and 9 was not very desirable piece of land. In other words, it lay way back from the end of the place, and was wet, and quite a bit of brush on it, and stumps, and the price of the land was considered a very good price for the land. * * * Seventy-five dollars an acre, which was considered an extra good price for it.”

In answer to the question as to what Hammond meant when he said he could get by with the company, Mr. Everhart said:

“A. They would be willing to give a release for the price of fifteen hundred dollars, and release Tracts 8 and 9 to Dr. Hume.
Q. Well, now, I don’t want to ask a direct question, but that is what you intended to do, or not?
A. That is what we intended to do. That is what we intended to do as far as I was concerned, and Mr. Toliver intended to do. I think it was fully understood in all cases. I didn’t figure on anybody being criticized, or putting anybody in the hole. It was a matter of clean business, and we all understood it clear through; * * # 3 ?

The language of Mr. Hammond, as testified to by Mr. Everhart that “he figured he could get by with the company”, seems to indicate that Hammond would make the application for the release. It does not take *191 the form or substance of a promise to give a release. Everhart had no good reason to consider the statement of Hammond as an agreement to make a release. Mr. Hammond testified that he was not at that time either attorney or agent for the Union Central Life Insurance Company, and that he was not its attorney until the time he filed a complaint in the foreclosure suit. There is no substantial proof in the record to the contrary. He had worked with or for John .F. Kaufman and Sons of Portland, financial correspondents of the Union Central Life Insurance Company. The testimony of Everhart indicates that he went to Hammond’s office to have the contract with Hume prepared for the reason that Hammond had been Toliver’s attorney.

Defendants submit the following questions:

“ 1. Was Philip Hammond the attorney and agent of plaintiff corporation on March 12,1932, at the time the contract of sale covering Lots 8 and 9, Toliver Acres, was executed and delivered?
2. Did he act for and on behalf of plaintiff as attorney and agent in preparing said contract of sale?
3. Did he agree with W. W. Everhart, then representing Toliver and Hume, that upon the payment by Hume of $1500.00 as provided in said contract, and the keeping of the terms and conditions thereof by Hume that plaintiff would accept said sum, credit it upon the Toliver notes, and that plaintiff would release its mortgage on said lots?”

Concerning an attorney’s authority, we find the language of the late Justice Burnett in the case of Walk v. Hibberd, 65 Or. 497, 503 (133 P. 95), as follows:

“The term ‘attorney’ is defined by our code thus: ‘An attorney is a person authorized to appear for and represent a party, in the written proceedings in any action, suit, or proceeding, in any stage hereof’: L. O. L. § 1074 [§ 32-101, Or. Code, 1930]. ‘An attorney has *192 authority: (1) To bind his client in any of the proceedings in an action, suit, or proceeding, by his agreement, filed with the clerk or entered upon the journal of the court, and not otherwise. (2) To receive money or property claimed by his client in an action, suit, or proceeding, during the pendency thereof, or within three years after judgment or decree, and upon the payment or delivery thereof, and not otherwise, to discharge the claim or acknowledge satisfaction of the judgment or decree’: L. O. L. § 1083 [§ 32-202, Or. Code 1930]. The representative capacity of an attorney is thus defined and limited by these statutes. When nothing more is shown as in this case, a party dealing with one who is only an attorney must take notice of the limitations of his authority as just defined. * * *”

In Welch v. Johnson, 93 Or. 591, 607 (183 P. 776, 184 P. 280), we read:

“In the absence of any pending litigation in which Johns was appearing as the attorney of record for Welch, no more importance can be attached to the letter than to the declaration of anyone else who assumes to speak for another. The case is not affected by the fact that the writer was a member of the Bar. He might as well have been the plaintiff’s grocer or laundryman. It would be necessary to show that the declarations in the letter were authorized by the plaintiff and within the scope of the authority conferred upon the writer, before the writing could bind the plaintiff. How far an attorney may bind his client in compromise or renunciation of his claim, is discussed in Pomeroy v. Prescott, 106 Me. 401 (76 Atl. 898, 138 Am. St. Rep. 347,21 Ann. Cas. 574, and note). ’ ’ See Toomey v. Casey, 72 Or. 290, 295 (142 P. 621).

Defendant Hume pleads and defendants attempt to prove that:

“with the understanding and agreement between plaintiff and the said I. M. Toliver and this defendant that upon the payment of the balance of the purchase price *193

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 P.2d 1129, 152 Or. 185, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-central-life-insurance-v-toliver-or-1935.