Wimer v. Smith

30 P. 416, 22 Or. 469, 1892 Ore. LEXIS 78
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 30 P. 416 (Wimer v. Smith) 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
Wimer v. Smith, 30 P. 416, 22 Or. 469, 1892 Ore. LEXIS 78 (Or. 1892).

Opinion

Lord, J.

This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage, executed and delivered to plaintiffs by the defendant Anna F. Smith through the defendant W. I. Wadleigh, her duly authorized attorney m fact, conditioned for the payment of six promissory notes of the same date, and described in the complaint; and also for the payment of reasonable attorney fees. It is alleged that these notes were executed and delivered to the plaintiffs as aforesaid for the payment of thirty-eight thousand one hundred and sixty-eight dollars and ten cents, the same being the amount of a balance due and unpaid by the defendant Anna F Smith on the purchase price of certain mining properties and water ditches connected therewith, set out and described in the complaint and mortgage, which had been sold and duly conveyed by the plaintiffs to the said Anna F. Smith, through her said attorney in fact, about two years prior thereto.

The defendants answered admitting the execution of the notes and mortgage, based on the consideration alleged in the complaint; but as a defense to the enforcement of said notes and mortgage, alleged that the defendant Wadleigh had been induced to purchase the mining property, ditches, etc., at the agreed price of seventy thousand dollars, by false and fraudulent representations as to the grade upon which the upper and most valuable portion of said mining grounds in Butcher gulch, in the vicinity of Simmons' shaft, could be mined and worked by hydraulic process; that the said Wadleigh relied upon said false representations in making said purchase, and that all of said upper portion of Butcher gulch was worthless, for the reason that it could not be bottomed and worked by means of hydraulic pipes and giants in the represented grade; and that by reason thereof the defendants had been damaged in the sum of sixty-one thousand five hundred and two dollars and fifty-eight cents, for which they asked a decree against the plaintiffs. These affirmative allegations of the answer were put in issue by the denials of the reply.

[474]*474To aid in the explanatiqn of the case, there are some facts which need to be outlined that are not disputed. It appears from the evidence that the plaintiffs were the owners of the mining grounds and ditches connected therewith situated near Waldo in Josephine county, comtnonly known as the Wimer mines; that W. I. Wadleigh, an experienced hydraulic miner, visited that country and place in the month of May, 1888, in company with' a man by the name of Thomas Bailey, for the purpose of prospecting and purchasing some gravel mines; that while there, meeting with George W. Wimer, one of the plaintiffs, .their attention was attracted to the Wimer mines, and negotiations were commenced for the purchase of the same; that while such negotiations were in progress, the said Wadleigh, assisted by the expert Bailey, spent several days in examining and prospecting the mining grounds and ditches, and on the twenty-second day of May, 1888, thereafter, he made an oral agreement with George Wimer to purchase the same for the agreed price of seventy thousand dollars, and at that time gave his check to George W. Wimer for two hundred and fifty dollars to bind the bargain; that between the twenty-second day of May, 1888, and the eighteenth day of July, 1888, the defendants paid on the purchase price of said mine the sum of thirty-four thousand four hundred and fifty dollars, including two thousand two hundred dollars allowed as discount; that on the last date aforesaid a written memorandum of agreement was entered into between the plaintiffs and defendant Anna F. Smith by her attorney in fact, W. I. Wadleigh, by which, inter alia, she agreed to execute and deliver certain promissory notes for the balance due on the purchase price of said mine; and to secure the payment of the same, she agreed to execute and deliver to plaintiffs a good and sufficient mortgage on said mining grounds and certain improvements thereon; that in pursuance of said agreement, the notes and mortgage aforesaid were executed and delivered [475]*475and that during all the times from and after July, 1888, up to the time of the commencement of this suit, the defendants have been in possession of and working said mining . property.

The defense is based upon fraudulent representations, alleged to have been made by the plaintiffs to induce Wadleigh to purchase the mining property. These alleged false representations being denied by the plaintiffs, the burden of proof rests upon the defendants to establish them by a preponderance of the evidence. The counsel for the appellant recognizes this as the correct rule of law, applicable to the issue, and that the main question in the case is, as to whether George W. Wimer did or did not make the fraudulent representations alleged. The facts show that Wadleigh, acting as the agent for his sister, Anna F. Smith, conducted all the negotiations on behalf of the defendants, and that George W. Wimer, as the agent for himself and Wm. J. Wimer, conducted all the negotiations for the plaintiffs. Wadleigh testified that George W. Wimer made the fraudulent representations alleged, and George W. Wimer testified that he did not make such alleged misrepresentations. It is admitted that if the evidence of these two witnesses is entitled to equal credit, there is no preponderance of evidence, and the defense set up must fail.

The contention for the appellant is, that where two witnesses swear directly contrary to each other, and one of them is impeached by evidence that his general reputation' for truth is bad, the preponderance of the evidence is then in favor of the other party. To effect this result, or to make the evidence preponderate in support of the allegation of fraudulent representations, the defendants have sought to impair the value or weight of the testimony of George W. Wimer by evidence that his reputation for truth is bad. Quite a number of witnesses who had been the neighbors of the defendant George W. Wimer several years [476]*476before, at the time of, and after the alleged purchase of the mining property, testified that they were acquainted with his reputation for truth in the neighborhood where he had resided, and that it was bad. To sustain his reputation, the plaintiffs introduced quite a number of witnesses; but the large majority of them never resided in the vicinity where the Wimers resided when the transaction occurred, or their residence near them was at some period antedating the trial many years. Some one or two others testified that his reputation for truth was good. It must, however, be noted that some of the witnesses, introduced by the defendants to impeach the reputation of George W. Wimer, were hostile in feeling toward him; and some one or two were objectionable in other particulars, which need not be noted in detail. Still, it is quite probable, judging from the evidence in the record, that his reputation for truth in the community where he had resided when the mining property was sold, was bad among his neighbors; and if the case depended entirely upon his testimony, considered apart from other evidence or circumstances in the case, we might feel bound to disregard it.

In considering the weight to be attached to the testimony of an impeached witness, the rule is the same in equity as at law In either case, the only object of an inquiry into the character of a witness is to ascertain whether his statements are entitled to credit. In equity, the facts constituting fraud are found by the court; but a court of equity is not justified in finding such facts upon any less or different kind of proof than would be required to satisfy a jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 P. 416, 22 Or. 469, 1892 Ore. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wimer-v-smith-or-1892.