United States National Bank v. Meyer

321 P.2d 1054, 213 Or. 1, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 277
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 321 P.2d 1054 (United States National Bank v. Meyer) 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
United States National Bank v. Meyer, 321 P.2d 1054, 213 Or. 1, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 277 (Or. 1958).

Opinion

KESTER, J.

This is a suit to rescind a deed on grounds of fraud allegedly perpetrated by the grantee-defendant, John Meyer, on the grantor-plaintiff, Edward O. Spulak. The property involved is described as tax lot 2, southeast % °f section 18, township 5 south, range 4 east, Willamette meridian, in Clackamas county, containing 158.5 acres, more or less. After the trial, and while this appeal was pending, plaintiff Spulak died, and the United States National Bank of Portland, executor under his will, has been substituted as plaintiff-respondent herein.

Prom a decree granting rescission, and also rescinding a subsequent deed from the defendant Meyer to the intervenors, Avison Lumber Company, the defendant Meyer appeals. A separate appeal has been filed by Phillip Suetter, who was made a defendant by the complaint in intervention, and against whom judgment was entered jointly with defendant Meyer for return of the consideration paid by the intervenors. The intervenors, Avison Lumber Company, have not appealed, nor have they appeared in response to the appeals of Meyer and Suetter.

[4]*4 The Pleadings

The complaint which originated the suit was by Spnlak against Meyer only. While it lacks the clarity which is desirable in charging fraud, it alleges in substance that on January 29,1953, Meyer induced Spulak to sign a deed to the property by: (1) orally agreeing to pay plaintiff’s asking price of $2,500,000, when he had no intention of paying any such sum; and (2) misrepresenting the contents of the document which plaintiff signed.

Defendant Meyer, after denying generally all the complaint, alleged affirmatively that on or about January 29, 1953, Spulak and Meyer entered into a written option, for a consideration of $100, whereby Meyer was granted an option to purchase the property on or before March 29, 1953, for a price of $35,000. He alleged that simultaneously with the option, plaintiff executed and delivered the deed in question. He then alleged that on or about February 11, 1953, “in pursuance of exercising his said option,” Meyer tendered to plaintiff the full amount of $35,000, but that plaintiff refused to accept it and demanded instead that Meyer pay $500 per month, without interest, until the amount of $35,000 was fully paid; and that Meyer then paid $1,000, representing the installments for January and February, 1953.

Although neither the deed nor the option made any mention of mineral rights, Meyer contends that mineral rights were reserved, and he alleged a separate agreement as to minerals with which we need not be concerned at this time. Meyer alleged that during early March, 1953, he tendered the March installment of $500, but that plaintiff refused to accept it and notified Meyer that he would refuse to accept all future payments. (The complaint herein was filed February 23, [5]*51953.) Meyer then alleged a tender into conrt of the balance of $34,000, and a willingness to perform, hnt it does not appear that the money was actually paid into court. He also alleged that subsequent to January 29, 1953, the exact date being unknown to Meyer, he gave plaintiff a promissory note to evidence the $34,000 balance due, which he asked to have cancelled, apparently on the basis of the purported tender.

Before answering, Meyer sought and obtained leave to bring in as new parties defendant, William Avison and Robert E. Avison, doing business as Avison Lumber Co., to whom Meyer stated' he had conveyed the standing timber on the property on February 11,1953. Before any further action was taken by Meyer to bring in the Avisons as parties, however, the Avisons themselves moved for permission to intervene, and, their motion being granted, they filed a complaint in intervention which added still another party, Phillip Suetter, as a defendant.

In the Avisons’ complaint in intervention it was alleged that when Meyer received the conveyance from Spulak, Meyer and Suetter acquired the property together, and that Meyer held an undivided one-half interest for the use and benefit of Suetter. It was then alleged that Meyer, acting for himself and also on behalf of Suetter, sold the timber on the property to the Avisons for a total price of $60,000, of which $30,000 was paid on the execution of the deed, February 11, 1953, and the balance of $30,000 was to he paid within 45 days, and that the first payment of $30,000 was divided between Meyer and Suetter.

With their complaint in intervention, the Avisons tendered into court the balance of $30,000 alleged to he due on their purchase of the timber. They took no position as to whether the Spulak-Meyer deed was [6]*6valid, but they prayed that if it was upheld, their own timber deed should be declared to be valid, and in that event their deposit in court would be for the benefit of Meyer. In the alternative, they prayed that if the deed from Meyer to Spulak should be set aside, then the timber deed from Meyer to the Avisons should also be rescinded, and that they should then receive back the $30,000 paid into court as well as the first $30,000 paid to Meyer and Suetter. It was not alleged that the Avisons were bona fide purchasers of the timber, without notice of any infirmity in Meyer’s title. The complaint in intervention showed affirmatively that the Avisons had not been let into possession nor been permitted to cut the timber. Subsequently the $30,000 paid into court by the Avisons was withdrawn, pursuant to a stipulation and order of the court, and a personal bond was substituted.

Phillip Suetter, who was made a defendant by the complaint in intervention, filed an answer in propria persona (apparently prepared by a lawyer in California) in which he denied substantially all the complaint in intervention, denied that Meyer had acted on his behalf, and disclaimed any interest in the money tendered into court by the Avisons. Suetter appeared personally at the trial, without a lawyer, but has since obtained an attorney to represent him on this appeal.

In his answer to the complaint in intervention, defendant Meyer denied that he was acting for Suetter or that Suetter acquired any interest in the property, but he alleged that on January 29, 1953, (the date of the option and deed from Spulak to Meyer) he gave to Suetter an option to purchase the timber on the property on or before February 30, [sic] 1953, for the sum of $47,000.00, which option was cancelled on February 11, 1953 (the date of the timber deed from [7]*7Meyer to the Avisons) upon the payment of $10,500 by Meyer to Snetter.

The Evidence

Plaintiff, Edward O. Spulak, was 77 years old at the time of the transactions involved. He had homesteaded the land in 1906, received the original patent in 1912, and had lived on it continuously since that time. He was something of a recluse and lived alone, except for a flock of goats. His dwelling was a log and shake cabin with a dirt floor, he slept on rails, and his only means of cooking and heating was a makeshift fireplace. His eyesight and hearing were poor, and he could read only with the aid of an eight-power magnifying glass. He apparently had grandiose ideas about the value of the timber and minerals on his property, and over the years various people had tried to buy the timber, without success.

Defendants, John A. Meyer and Phillip Suetter, were in the business of buying and selling timber. They were described by the trial judge, in his findings which are incorporated into the decree, as follows:

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

Related

Larson v. Trachsel
577 P.2d 928 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
321 P.2d 1054, 213 Or. 1, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-national-bank-v-meyer-or-1958.