158 P. 274 | Or. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
“After considering the certified accountant’s report and giving full consideration to the situation of your company and your proposal to accept properties in payment of the bonds, I hold of your company, I submit the following proposal to be accepted or rejected by 2:00 p. m. this 4th day of June. * * The properties enumerated and listed by you as under the Bradshaw mortgage of $10,000, leaving an equity of $33,336.”
By this letter Mr. Henry required payment of a cash balance of $11,464. By letter of June 15th, the company informed Henry that they could not raise the money, but submitted for his consideration additional properties and $5,000 for a return of a portion of the property. The arrangement having been made, Henry departed for California and authorized the Title & Trust Company of Portland to deliver to the Provident Trust Company, or Mr. Gr. F. Johnson, bonds of
“And the said grantor does covenant to and with the said grantee, Ms heirs and assigns, that it is lawfully seised in fee of the above-granted premises; that they are free from all encumbrances, save and except taxes, street and sewer improvements and bonded indebtedness and a mortgage of $2,100 in favor of I. Gr. Davidson and interest on said mortgage and conditions and restrictions above mentioned”—there being no covenant that the grantee assumed to pay the mortgage.
Henry claims that he did not examine the deed embracing the property covered by the Bradshaw mortgage, but was informed that the deeds were all alike, except that some were typewritten, as the descriptions of the property were too lengthy for the printed form.
A careful examination of the evidence does not show .that there was any proposition made or agreed to that Henry should assume the mortgage in question. Mr. Johnson, the president of the Provident Trust Company, states that the matter was not discussed at the time. Afterward, when the question was called to his attention, he appeared to think that it made no difference whether the clause was inserted or not. He testifies that it was inserted intentionally. It was certainly for his interest that such a covenant be contained in the deed. In view of the fact that it was, as it were,
The value of the equities in each class of the properties was admitted by the parties in the letters which passed between them on June 5,1914, and the sum total thereof did not equal the amount of the debt by $5,000, which amount was to be liquidated and paid by the owner. This, in addition to the express words of the respective letters, tends to show that Henry did not agree to assume and pay the plaintiff’s mortgage as a part of the consideration of the conveyance of the title to these properties. There is some conflict in the evidence of Henry and of Johnson, president of the Provident Trust Company. John F. Daly, an officer of the Title & Trust Company, who had considerable to do with the adjustment of the matter and was familiar with the arrangement, understood that Henry was to take over all the equities in the properties according to the lists which he had. His evidence tends strongly to corroborate that of Henry. The latter had deeded a large amount of real estate to the Provident Trust Company for the bonds which he held. Some of this had been encumbered heavily by the Provident Trust Company, and it appears to have
“Although a deed for lands contains the grantee’s personal assumption to pay a mortgage thereon, he cannot be held liable for a decree for deficiency after foreclosure of the mortgage, if it appears that such assumption was not part of his bargain for the purchase of the premises, and that he had no notice of its insertion in his deed. ’ ’
In Andrews v. Gillispie, 47 N. Y. 487, the attorney who drew the mortgage in question therein made it payable in five years instead of ten, as agreed between the parties. The court held that the mortgagor could have it reformed. In that case he could have discov-' ered the mistake by simply reading the mortgage, and no artifice was used to prevent him from so doing. He executed it believing that the attorney had drawn it correctly, just as Henry in this case accepted the deed,