Vincent v. Logsdon

20 P. 429, 17 Or. 284, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 12
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 P. 429 (Vincent v. Logsdon) 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
Vincent v. Logsdon, 20 P. 429, 17 Or. 284, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 12 (Or. 1889).

Opinion

Thayer, C. J.

This appeal is from a decree rendered in a suit brought by the appellants against the respondent Charles Logsdon, to compel a certain noto cojo! mortgage in the hands of J. R. Bryson to be.an.piv a m payment of an indebtedness originally owiiig to Belknap Brothers Kennedy Brothers, fpt Vné machinist labor, machinery, and materials furnished by them in repairing a certain saw-mill known As, the Caledonia Mill.

The appellants alleged in their complaint that from the thirty-fijist day of March, 1885, until the seventh day of March, ^1886, the respondent Charles Logsdon was owner of yhe saw-.mill, which was situated upon lots No. 2 and 3 and the southwest one fourth of' the southwest one fourth , ; rnd the east half of the southwest fourth of section 17, tovTíslip 11 south, range 11 west, Willamette meridian, count,yiaf Benton, state of Oregon; that William Stevens and Alina Stevens, his wife, were the owners, of said describe^ land for the. term of their natural lives, and upon their [death it wa£ to revert, to the, appellants; that on or abouit the twenty-seventh day of July, 1886, said appellant ' J T. Vincent became, the owner of said saw-mill property, and appurtenances thereunto belonging, and wac 'Bill the owner of the same; that the respondent Charles Logsdon, together’ with the appellants, between the thirty-first, day of March, 1885, and the twenty-second day; of August, 1885, became indebted to Belknap Brothers ! & Kennedy Brothers for the machinist, labor, ma[286]*286chinery, and materials furnished on and for said saw-mi'll in the sum of $444.50; that the appellant, at the special instance and request of the respondent Charles Logsdon, became security, and not otherwise, for the said respondent, and personally responsible as aforesaid to said Belknap Brothers & Kennedy Brothers for said machinist labor and materials furnished upon and for said saw-mill for the said sum of $444.50; that said respondent, to indemnify and save harmless the appellants, for and in consideration of their becoming bound for said indebtedness, agreed to deliver, and did deliver, on or about the first day of November j 1885, to said Bryson the said note and mortgage, which \Vere signed by J. A. Hawkins in favor of the respondent, to the-amount of $918; that, by mutual consent and agreement between the respondent and the appellant J. T. Vincent, said no\te and mortgage were taken up, and in lieu thereof the note and mortgage set out in the complaint were substituted; that the said note and mortgage were delivered to said Bryson with the intention and purpose that he should borrow a sum of money sufficient to pay said demand of Belknap Brothers & Kennedy Brothers; that suit was commenced in said circuit court by said Belknap Brothers & Kennedy Brothers to enforce payment of said indebtedness' against appellants and the respondent, and a decree obtained in favor of the former, by which it was decreed thjat the latter pay said $444.50, also attorneys’ íees, amounting to $60, together with the costs and disbursements of the suit; also that the saw-mill and appurtenances belonging thereto, and three acres of land upon which the infill is .situated and adjacent to it, be sold to pay said debt,\ fees, costs, and disbursements; that the appellant J.'T. \Vincent has paid in full said debt, fees, costs, and disbursements, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $'637; and that the said respondent was wholly insolvent, land [287]*287had no other means to pay said indebtedness except said note and mortgage.

The respondent Charles Logsdon, and Margaret Logs-don, his wife, the latter in the mean time having been made a party defendant in the suit by order of the court, filed an answer to the said complaint, in which they denied all the material allegations contained therein. Said parties then attempted to set up a further defense, but the matter is so awkwardly and unskillfully stated, and contains so many repetitions, that it will puzzle any one to find out what is meant by it. It contains a statement, in substance, that Charles Logsdon assigned to said Bryson the first note and mortgage alleged in the complaint to have been delivered to the latter on or about the first day of November, 1885, in trust for the benefit of the said Margaret Logsdon, the Philomath College, and J. E. Henkle & Co., with the understanding that Bryson should collect it, and after deducting his fees for collection, should pay one hundred dollars of the balance to the college, two hundred dollars to said J. E. Henkle & Co:, and the remainder, about six hundred dollars, to £he said Margaret, who was alleged to be the owner and holder of the note and mortgage to the extent of that sum. They further alleged, in substance, that, in consideration of the said note and mortgage, said J. T. Vincent agreed to make and execute to Margaret Logsdon a good and sufficient deed of conveyance to said saw-mill, together with sufficient ground for the convenient use of it; and that thereupon, relying upon said agreement, the said Charles Logsdon deposited the said note and mortgage with said Bryson with the express understanding with said J. T. Vincent and said Bryson that a part of said note and mortgage, when collected by said Bryson, should • be applied upon said indebtedness to Belknap Brothers & Kennedy Brothers, provided that said J. T. Vincent should [288]*288first make and execute such deed of conveyance of the saw-mill, appurtenances, and ground as aforesaid free from all liens and encumbrances; that said J. T. Vincent had wholly failed and neglected to make and execute such deed, although often requested so to do; that said Charles Logsdon, after the said failure, on or about March, 1886, took up and canceled the said note and mortgage first deposited, and that the second note and mortgage was upon the conditions and terms set out therein, and not otherwise.

The appellants filed a reply to the new matter in the answer, denying the material allegations contained therein. It appears from the transcript that the Philomath College and J. E. Henkle & Co. were also made defendants in the suit by order of the said circuit court.

Upon the hearing of the case, on the allegations and proofs taken therein, the said court decreed that the appellants’ complaint be dismissed, which is the decree appealed from. The affairs of the parties involved herein are so badly complicated that it is nearly impossible to ascertain their respective rights and liabilities.

The appellants are husband and wife, and the latter, Mrs., J. T. Vincent, seems to have had the principal control of their matters. Logsdon appears to have had extensive business, relations with them, and to have been largely in their debt, but what the business consisted of, or how the debt arose, is only hinted at in the evidence submitted. Mrs. Vincent testified that she began trusting him and selling him goods about the middle of July, 1884, and trusted him to goods and paid his. bills right along to August, 1885, he assuring her all the time that he had plenty of property to pay her for everything. But what Logsdon’s business was is not shown. I infer that he had a saw-mill at a place called Depot Slough, which he moved around to Caledonia, and set up on land [289]*289belonging to Mrs. Vincent, subject to a life estate in her father and mother, William Stevens and wife.

Mrs.

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

Related

McCall v. W. J. Schoenberger Co.
29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 456 (Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 P. 429, 17 Or. 284, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-v-logsdon-or-1889.