136 P. 343 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
On August 14, 1908, S. M. Barr and others leased to J. M. Toomey for the period of 25 years, lots 6 and 7 in block 37 in Couch’s Addition to the City of Portland, Oregon. In addition to paying a monthly rent for the use of the premises, the lessee covenanted that he would erect on said premises a new building covering said lots. Said new building was required by
“It being further understood that there is a certain mortgage on said leased property made in favor of S. J. Barber for the sum of $20,000.00 and bearing date on or before August 1, 1909, wherein and whereby the said party of the first part has agreed to deposit on account of said mortgage and other expenses $1,000.00 per month in the Portland Trust Company of Oregon, it is further understood and agreed that $500.00 of each of the said rental payments shall be deposited by the parties of the second part with the Portland Trust Company of Oregon, and will be credited with like payments on this lease, and the balance due the party of the first part on this lease, to wit: One hundred dollars per month, shall be placed to the credit of the party of the first part in the U. S. National Bank of Portland, Oregon.”
After the defendant Casey purchased of Toomey a one-half interest in said lease made to Toomey by S. M. Barr, and others as aforesaid, he conveyed one half of his said one-half interest therein to the defendant Hutchinson. The defendants Casey and Hutchinson own a one-half interest in said leasehold estate created by the lease made by S. M. Barr and others to said Toomey, each of them owning an undivided one fourth thereof. The defendants Hurley and Daniels claim some interest in said leasehold estate, subsequent in time and subordinate in equity to The rights of the plaintiff. In the court below the plain
Under Section 550, L. O. L., a party to a decree is authorized to appeal from the whole decree “or from some specified part thereof ,” and his notice of appeal should specify the particular part of the decree from which he appeals, if he does not appeal from the whole thereof.
Section 557, L. O. L., is as follows: “Upon an appeal the appellate court may affirm, reverse, or modify the * * decree appealed from in the respect mentioned in the notice, and not otherwise,” etc.
In Roach’s Estate, 50 Or. 189 (92 Pac. 122), the court says: “In construing these provisions (those referred to supra) it has been held that the final decree of Circuit Courts was to be modified only in the manner specified in the notice of appeal, and that, when no cross-appeal is taken, it will be presumed that the respondent is satisfied with the determination of the cause, as made by the court below.”
In Shook v. Colohan, 12 Or. 242 (6 Pac. 505), the court, referring to the section of the statute cited, supra, says: “Subdivision 1 of Section 527 of the Civil Code provides ‘that such notice (the notice of appeal) shall state that the appellant appeals from the judgment or decree of the Circuit Court, or some specified part thereof.’ And Section 534 of the Civil Code provides that: ‘Upon appeal, the appellate court may affirm, reverse or modify, the judgment or decree appealed from, in the respect mentioned in the notice and not otherwise.’ * * These two provisions, taken together, seem to restrict the review to the part of the decree specified in the notice, although the latter portion of Section 533 of the Code provides that, upon
In this case, we can review only that part of the decree of the court below appealed from by Casey and Hutchinson. We cannot review the decision of the court below refusing to render a personal decree against the defendants Casey and Hutchinson for the payment of the money which the plaintiff asked in his complaint. The failure of the plaintiff to appeal from that part of the decree precludes our examining that subject.
The question for decision on this appeal is, Does the plaintiff’s mortgage cover the one-half interest in the leasehold estate described in the complaint and in said mortgage which J. M. Toomey conveyed to J. D. Casey on March 16, 1909 ?
Toomey, as a witness, for the plaintiff, testified, on pages 27 and 29 of the evidence, that Casey refused to assist him to borrow said $20,000, and that after Casey refused to join with Toomey in executing the mortgage to the plaintiff, Toomey went about and executed it himself. But, in order to get the money, Toomey had to obtain the signatures of Mueller, Kiesendahl and Jennings to the note and mortgage. The note for the $20,000 bore interest at 8 per cent per annum, and until July 16, 1910, the interest was payable semi-annually, and after that date quarterly. It seems, also, that $2,000 of the amount had to be paid to some money broker as commission for obtaining the loan. It is hardly surprising that Casey refused to be a party to such a loan. The evidence shows that Casey refused, in the presence of five witnesses, to have anything to do with said loan.
The decree of the court below is modified as above stated. Modified.