Waymire v. Shipley

97 P. 807, 52 Or. 464, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 147
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 97 P. 807 (Waymire v. Shipley) 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
Waymire v. Shipley, 97 P. 807, 52 Or. 464, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 147 (Or. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Commissioner King.

1. The first point demanding attention is the error assigned by plaintiff in respect to the order of the court in opening the default and permitting defendants to answer, which, if tenable, disposes of the controversy. Section 59, B. & C. Comp., among other things provides that “the defendant against whom publication is ordered, or his representaitves, * * may, * * upon good cause shown and upon such terms as may be proper, be allowed to defend after judgment, and within one year after the entry of such judgment on such terms as may be just. * *” And the term “judgment,” as there used, includes decrees: Words & Phrases, p. 3835; see, also, Section 396, B. & C. Comp.

2. It is thus apparent that, if sufficient showing was made by defendants, the order setting aside and vacating the decree .and permitting them to answer and defend was proper; and when once properly set aside, whether upon the showing made, or for other sufficient reasons disclosed by the record, the court was without power thereafter to enter a decree confirming any sale made under the vacated decree, and only by entry of another decree upon the facts thereafter found could any rights in the property be acquired by the purchaser under the foreclosure sale.

3. It is disclosed by the record that the complaint was not filed until March 31, 1906, long after procurement of the order for publication of summons, but the default for failure to appear or to plead was taken but two days later. It is obvious, therefore, that since no complaint was filed at the time the order for publication of summons was procured, and the default was based on a failure to answer within the time thus demanded, the default was [469]*469erroneously, as well as prematurely, entered, and the decree thereon accordingly void.

4. Defendants were therefore entitled to have the same set aside, and, having tendered the answer upon which the cause was tried, before default was legally entered were entitled to defend.

5. It follows that the order vacating the decree, although entered on other and insufficient reasons, was proper, and no error can be predicated thereon.

6. Defendants, however, by their voluntary appearance, submitted to the jurisdiction of the court (Mayer v. Mayer, 27 Or. 133: 39 Pac. 1002), leaving for determination the points urged by defendants on the merits.

7. Defendants assert that the consideration for the notes and mortgage consists of the sale of a right to sell a patent right, with the privilege of selling the tool patented in the State of California. The instrument alluded to is termed a “mitre square” or “caliper rule,” the patent to which was obtained by plaintiff’s husband, Albert A. Waymire, who sold it to P. A. Shipley for $2,000.

Defendants admit the execution of the notes and mortgage, and, as an affirmative defense, charge fraud in the sale thereof, a summary of which charges are: That at and before the sale and execution of the notes and mortgage, Albert Waymire, the owner of the patent, falsely, fraudulently, deceitfully, and with intent to deceive defendants, represented that the patent was a mitre square or caliper rule, of great commercial value, intended for the use of all mechanics, and that it was a useful instrument and invention, for which there would be a great demand, and one which every mechanic and architect in California would need; that the instrument would do the work and take the place of 10 other instruments then in use, insuring rapid building; that the purchaser could take the patent to California, sell it for $3,000, and easily make $2,000 from the profits arising from its sale; and [470]*470that the instruments patented were being manufactured by the Streator Metal Stamping Co. in Illinois, from which he could purchase them at the same rates, figures, and prices as the inventor could, at the same time executing to him (Shipley) written authority to make such purchase, and presenting him with 200 tools made under the patent then in Waymire’s possession.

8. The execution of the notes and mortgage being admitted, the burden of proving the fraud in their execution was upon the defendants, and it devolved upon them to establish every necessary element thereof by clear and explicit evidence: 6 Enc. Evidence, 8; Keel v. Levy, 19 Or. 450 (24 Pac. 253). Defendants have not brought themselves within any exception to this rule.

9. The written assignment of the patent and contract set out in the answer and admitted by the plaintiff, taken together, clearly and specifically convey to Shipley the letters patent to the device to and in the State of California, subject only to certain restrictions as to the price for which the articles might be sold, in the event Shipley desired to sell them at retail, with a further grant of a right and privilege to purchase and receive the instruments from the Streator Metal Stamping Co., when manufactured, at the same rate and prices paid for the goods and articles by Waymire. That the patent was duly and regularly issued, and that the seller was the owner and holder thereof, is not questioned, which, in itself, was prima facie evidence of its utility, to overcome which, clear and strong evidence to the contrary, is necessary: 22 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 334, 335; Reckendorfer v. Faber, 92 U. S. 347 (23 L. Ed. 719). When, therefore, it is disclosed that the patent was in fact -issued, the burden of proving its uselessness was cast upon defendants.

The testimony discloses that, among the witnesses called as to the utility of the invention, Charles Waymire, [471]*471although a brother of the owner and seller of the patent, was a disinterested witness, in whose word defendants at the trial manifested implicit confidence; that he testifies that while stopping with the defendants, and before the arrival of Albert Waymire, he first showed Shipley a sample of the instrument, whereupon Shipley became .interested, and, immediately upon the arrival of his brother, sought to purchase from him a right to the patent for the State of California; and that while he (the witness) had considerable confidence in the invention, he had not as much faith therein as did Mr. Shipley, and accordingly advised defendants, prior to the sale, against giving the mortgage as security for the right to the patent. As to the utility thereof, we think the witness practically states the real situation, in respect to which he says:

“Q. You have testified you are a mechanic. What is the fact about this tool here being such an instrument? As a matter of fact, it can be used for the other different tools that your brother claimed for it?
A. Well, it would be a matter of my own opinion.
Q. That is what I want you to state.
A. Well, to start out with, just suppose I had that in my pocket and wanted to square a board, and didn’t have a square, if that die was made perfect, there is no reason why that could not be set perfectly square. The die was imperfect. The tool there is evidence of itself. If it was a perfect made tool I could use it for a square.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 P. 807, 52 Or. 464, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waymire-v-shipley-or-1908.