62 F. 539 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon | 1894
This is a suit to declare void any. claim of right on the part of the defendants to lands comprising a grant to the Willamette Valley & Cascade Mountain Wagon-Road Company, and to enjoin the defendants, or either of them, from asserting any claim or right in such lands adverse to plaintiff’s claim therein. The controversy is between the complainant and the Willamette Valley & Coast Railroad Company, by its receiver. The complainant’s title comes from one Alexander Weill. The railroad claims under a contract of sale made by T. Egenton Hogg, as the attorney in fact of Weill. Prior to the execution of this power, the legal title to the lands in question was in one Clark, by conveyance from the road company for Hogg, Weill, and himself. Clark conveyed to one Cahn, in trust for himself, Hogg, and Weill. On February 18, 1879, Hogg conveyed to Weill all Ms right and interest in the land grant, and in the stock, franchises, and property of every description of the road company and of the Deschutes River Bridge Company. On the 9th of the following April, Weill acquired the interest of Clark in the properties in question from Clark’s heirs and widow. By the agreement of sale under which Weill acquired Hogg’s interest in the property, it was stipulated on the part of Weill as follows:
“Said Weill grants to said Hogg full and irrevocable power for a term of two years, commencing on January 1, 1879, and ending January 1, 1881. in which to negotiate and conclude a sale of all the lands, stocks, and franchises of said wagon-road company; provided, that no sale shall be made for a sum or amount of money less than ($445,000) four hundred and forty-five thousand dollars, which amount is now estimated as a sum equal to all the outlays, advances, payments, charges, expenses, and disbursements with which the property will be chargeable, for principal and interest, at the date of any sale which may be made by said Hogg within the period aforesaid; and any avails or realizations that may be realized or received upon any such sale in excess of said sum of $445,000, and the further sum of all the charges, expenses, outlays, disbursements, and amounts that shall be hereafter expended, paid, laid out, and incurred in selecting the lands and procuring the certification thereof, provided for in this agreement, including the sum of all taxes that may be assessed on said lands, with interest at the rate of five (5) per cent, per annum charged thereon, shall be divided between the parties hereto in the following proportions, that is to say: To said Weill ten per cent, of all avails of such sale over and above the aforementioned sums and the expenses of negotiating the sale, and the remainder to said Hogg. And said Alexander Weill covenants and agrees that, upon any such sale of the said property being concluded by said Hogg as is herein provided, he will convey, or cause to be conveyed, to the purchaser or purchasers the legal title to the extent of all the interest he now has, or may at any time hereafter acquire, of, in, and to the said lands and property, free of all incumbrance committed or suffered by him; but, in case said Hogg- shall fail to negotiate and- conclude a sale of all the said lands within the said time, his said power to sell as aforesaid shall cease and determine on the 1st day of January, 1881; and time is agreed to be of the essence of this provision.”
TMs is the power under which the railroad company now claims. By this agreement, Hogg bound Mmself to act as land agent, at Weill’s expense, to select the most desirable lands within the grant to an amount of not less than 400,000 acres, nor more than 600,000
“If my parties should be able to provide the money to complete the purchase of the wagon-road company’s lands, etc., will you accept payment in a check or checks certified by the Chemical Bank, City Bank, Bank of New York, Bank of Commerce, or any banks of like standing? Please send'answer at foot of this, and oblige * ⅜ ⅜.”
Weill answered this letter in the affirmative. Hogg’s letter, in his own handwriting, is in evidence. If the phrase, “my parties,” in this letter, refers to the Willamette Valley Railroad, it is, of course, impossible that Hogg should have completed a sale and made a conveyance of the property nearly two months - before he had ascertained whether such parties would “be able to provide the money to complete the purchase.” If he sold and conveyed when the parties were not able to provide the money to pay for the property sold, he acted in violation of the trust reposed in him, and in excess of his authority. If, as is probable, the deed dated November 3, 1880, • was in fact executed on March 28, 1882, the date of its acknowledgment, it is evidence of a fraudulent contrivance between Hogg and the pretended vendee company to effect a transfer of the land grant to the latter. There is no explanation of these facts consistent with fair dealing. It is probable that the deed dated November 3, 1880, was in fact executed on the date of its acknowledgment, — March 28, 1882,— and that it was in consequence of the discovery by Hogg that, while he had pretended in the instrument of September 29, 1880, to transfer his “right to purchase under his agreement with Weill,” that agreement gave him no such right, but simply made him Weill’s attorney in fact to malee sale of the grant, and, moreover, while, as such attorney, he was authorized to sell for $445,000, yet he was liable to account to his principal for 10 per cent, of whatever amount the property sold for, no matter how much above $445,000 that figure might reach. If, therefore, the sale of his so-called “option” should be construed to be within the “power,” he would be liable to account for 10 per cent, of the difference between the $445,000, for which he was authorized to sell and the $600,000 consideration agreed to be paid. These considerations probably suggested the device of an absolute conveyance for $445,-000, antedated so as to appear to have been executed during the continuance of the power. Hogg became a large stockholder in the Willamette Valley Railroad Company in August, 1880,
As already stated, upon receipt by Weill, on December 30th, of Hogg’s letter asking if a certified check for the money would be accepted if Ms (Hogg’s) parties should be able to provide the money to complete the purchase of the lands, Weill answered that, it would. On the forenoon of the succeeding day, Weill sent Hogg a second letter, stating that he is led to think from nogg’s note of the preceding day that he (Hogg) may avail himself of “the refusal” which he has for the lands in the agreement of February, 1889, and requesting that anything to be signed by Weill be handed to him at once, so (hat he may submit the same to his attorney. There was no answer to this letter, but thereafter Hogg appeared with Turner and another gentleman in Weill's office, and made the following statement: “Here is a certified check for $445,000 for your Oregon property. I have sold it to a company which Mr. Turner here represents as attorney. I wish you would give me a deed for the property at once,” — to which Weill answered, in substance, that he was ready to do so within a. reasonable time, and he added: “But you must only ask of me that which is possible. If you are acting in good faith, we will certainly come to a satisfactory conclusion.” Weill turned to a clerk, whom he requested to run over to his lawyer’s office, and ask him to come at once; but iu the meantime Hogg and his companions left the room. It is contended that Hogg’s statement amounted to a tender of §415,000, and that Weill’s failure to produce a properly executed deed on the instant, conveying, by exact description, several hundred thousand acres of land to a grantee whose purchase and name had just been made known (Weill testified that the name of the pretended purchaser was not stated), places Weill in default, and entitles the defendant to be considered as the equitable owner of the lands in question. It is not worth while to consider such a claim. Hogg well knew that Weill could not produce, executed for delivery, the required deed at a moment’s notice, and that he was under no obligation to do
The answer of the Willamette Valley Railroad Company in this suit alleges that the tender claimed to have been made by Hogg was of $600,000, and conforms, therefore, as to price, to the recital in the mortgage deed of the two companies to the Farmfers’ Loan & Trust Company that the Willamette Valley Company “has acquired the right to become the owner” of the property in question, “upon payment of six hundred thousand dollars.” It was not