108 P. 214 | Or. | 1910
Opinion by
In the former opinion in this cause it was determined that the description set forth in the contract, if properly delineated in the complaint, was sufficient to authorize the admission of parol testimony to identify the premises. Bogard v. Barhan, 52 Or. 121 (96 Pac. 673.) From a reexamination of the question so involved, we are satisfied that the conclusion correctly states the law applicable thereto. Burns v. Witter, 108 Pac. 129.
“The delivery of the deed to the recorder for the purpose of having it recorded did not amount to a delivery to the defendant, for the recorder was not the agent of defendant, and hence had no authority to accept it. Besides this, he did not undertake to accept it for or in behalf of the defendant. He received it, recorded it, and transmitted it to the grantor. The grantor did not part with his dominion over the deed until after it had been recorded. * * Recording a deed by the grantor, without the grantee’s knowledge or assent, does not of itself operate as a delivery of the deed. 1 Devlin, Deeds, § 290, and cases cited. There was therefore no delivery of this deed until the defendant received notice of its existence, and that was long after the date of the judgment.”
It follows from these considerations that the decree should be affirmed; and it is so ordered. Affirmed.