145 P. 674 | Or. | 1915
The testimony shows that the parties were married at Mandan, North Dakota, June 24, 1882. Prior to their wedding the plaintiff had been engaged in teaching school and the defendant in practicing medicine. Desiring to obtain a better education, the plaintiff, after the birth of her eldest son, now 29 years old, attended a medical college, from which she received a diploma, and is a licensed physician. In the year 1891 the parties moved to Portland, Oregon, where the defendant resumed the practice of his profession. Soon thereafter he commenced as a specialist to treat patients afflicted with nervous and mental ailments. In September, 1899, he incorporated the Sanitarium Company with a capital stock of $30,000, to which corporation he transferred the business, furniture, equipment, etc., receiving in payment thereof 157 shares of the capital stock of the par value of $15,750. In the year 1903 the Sanitarium Company secured the title to about 15 acres of land at Mt. Tabor, then a suburb of Portland, and erected on the premises buildings and equipment for the service in which it was engaged. In the succeeding year the Sanitarium Company entered into a contract with the United States for the care and treatment of insane patients from Alaska for the term of five years, which agreement has been renewed and is now in force. The rapid growth of the, City of Portland greatly increased the value of the Mt. Tabor lands, and the care of the patients by the Sanitarium Company became quite profitable, so much so that other physicians secured shares of the capital stock of the corporation, and Dr. Coe, though nominally in charge of the hospital, left much of the actual management to his associates, while he engaged in
The defendant in July, 1910, in order to obtain what he regarded as a much-needed rest, made preparation for a trip to the Orient. Mrs. Coe urged him to go, and furnished him with $1,000 with which to pay his
“We have tried to get money at the banks but because of the ‘crop moving period’ money has been awful tight. This coupled with the fact that ‘Dr. Coe spent money like a drunken sailor’ (at Stanfield); ‘Dr. Coe does not know the value of a dollar’; ‘Dr. Coe is a fugitive from justice and his affairs have gone to the dogs and he is now a bankrupt’ — all stories spread broadcast by Moody and repeated so many times that even our friends have begun to believe there is some truth in the statements. * * Now to get to the real point. We have got to ask you to cut down your expenses. The way I figure it out you have been gone*152 12 weeks and have spent 1,200 dollars or at the rate of 100 a week. This (100) is too muck and we can’t stand it. You can live very comfortably on 75 a month and luxuriously on 100 and you not only ought to but you must do so. * * Carey does not want you to come home until we get everything settled. * * So you stay there until we send for you. Of course on 75 or 100 a month you can’t do very much [many] ‘millionaire’ stunts but that is the best we can do. This will all come out all right in time but it will take time. Meanwhile we are nearly broke (living here on borrowed money only).”
George Coe on October 22, 1910, wrote his father, again saying in part:
“I am extremely sorry but I must say to you that we cannot provide you with any further funds. Don’t draw any more checks on us; that is, against either your own account or of the sanitarium. * * Sell the presents you wrote you had bought on your journey and that will give you some money. Get into a cheap boarding-house and look around and find some light job which will make you self-sustaining and remain out of the country. You could do no good here. Carey agrees with us in this matter.”
Dr. Coe reached San Francisco on his return trip October 29, 1910, and wired his son George as follows:
“If not needed Oregon will go to Berkeley for month. Have seen telegram. If indicted would come immediately. Answer. ’ ’
In response he received a message on the same day, signed “M. Coe,” which reads:
“Carey says come. Conditions might be worse. Wire when starting.”
Replying he telegraphed George Coe as follows:
“Leaving to-night for Portland to help whip our outside enemies.”
It is needless to detail the circumstances of such sale or to narrate the business that was subsequently conducted for about two years under the plaintiff’s management. The facts referred to have been stated in order to show the relation of the parties to each other and to determine therefrom who, if either, is entitled to the divorce. Mrs. Coe testified: That, while she objected to selling the home because she feared that all the money derived therefrom would be lost in the Eastern Oregon venture, she was ready and willing to mortgage the property to aid in liquidating Dr. Coe’s debts. That she desired him to make the trip abroad because of the nervous strain which a close attention to the sale of the irrigated lands had imposed upon him, and she wrote him that the business was in a flourishing condition because she did not wish to burden him with any more anxiety, and that she was unable to write him but once, since she did not know where to address him. This latter statement seems to be confirmed by the fact that the letters written him by his son, to which reference has been made, were not delivered but returned and received after the defendant reached home. George Coe testified that these letters were written after having received the photographs referred to, and while he believed his father was associating with immoral persons. The defendant’s testimony shows: That it is the custom at Honolulu, as evidenced by the larger picture, to adorn guests at a banquet with floral wreaths. That in the smaller photograph the women represented as sitting
“Sell cigars to send last 100. Sloan is having a heap of a time collecting his 20,000.00, as every one says, ‘Dr. Coe said he would take care of me.’ ”
It appears from the testimony that prior to July, 1910, and before Dr. Coe left home Mrs. Coe visited and consulted with a mental alienist at Seattle, "Washington, and detailed to him the symptoms and conduct of a person whose name was not given, and, based upon the hypothetical case, the physician informed her that the individual referred to was afflicted with “paranoia.” At Portland, Oregon, she also conferred with two physicians, who are experts in mental ailments, and, predicated upon the same hypothetical case, they informed her that the supposed patient was troubled with “paranoia.” George Coe testified that with this information, which did not consist of a written opinion from either physician, his mother had instructed him to meet his father in San Francisco, upon his return from China, and have him incarcerated in some hospital for the insane in California. Mrs. Coe denied this statement and testified that its mere recital demonstrated its absurdity, saying that commitments to asylums were not made upon such showings. She on February 3, 1913, subscribed her name and made oath to an
After Dr. Coe returned from the Orient, he made an amicable settlement with the Inland Irrigation Company, whereby he secured the legal title to some land in Umatilla County, Oregon, in recognition of the amount due him. He executed to Mrs. Coe a deed to most of the lands thus obtained. In disposing of the property interests, it was decreed that the plaintiff holds the legal title to lots 1, 2, 6 and 7 in block 15 in Goldsmith’s Addition to the City of Portland, with-the house thereon, in trust, however, for the defendant as a home and place of residence for him and his family, and that the plaintiff and the defendant and their sons, or any or either thereof, shall have the right to make all reasonable use of the house, grounds and equipment as a home and place of residence. The defendant, in referring to the purchase of these lots and the building of the house thereon, testified as follows :
“I had a talk with her, I — I talked with her as a man would naturally talk to his wife. She said she wanted a home in her name; and I said, ‘ Certainly, you shall have the home in your name.’ It was her home, but, of course, I did not think that she would ever claim it as her own property to the exclusion of the rest of the family. I said, ‘You would have to sign a deed with me if I sold my property, and I with you;’ and I said, ‘I am building a home for my children, my wife, and myself ’; so I put it in her name — the lots. I did not dream that there would be any difficulty in doing so. It was a home for my children, my wife, and myself.”
“And did the Columbia Land Company owe Mrs. Coe anything at that time?” (referring to the time the mortgage for $33,000 was given).
He answered:
“The Columbia Land Company owed that house and it was in her name.”
Counsel, not considering the answer responsive to the inquiry, requested the question to be read to the witness, whereupon the court remarked:
“I think that is an answer to your question. I think he meant that house was conveyed to her for the benefit of the family, and not as her own personal property, to do as she saw fit to do with it. Of course, he put up the money, and it was conveyed to her as trustee for the family.”
To which observations the witness responded:
“You bet your life.”
“Moreover, the onus of establishing a resulting trust rests upon him who seeks its enforcement; and before a court of equity will be warranted in making a decree therefor, the evidence must be clear, definite and free from doubt. Hence, to entitle the plaintiff to conveyances of the premises in controversy to himself he must fairly establish, if he paid for the property and took title in the name of his wife, that at that time it was mutually understood and was the intention that she should hold the title to the premises, not in her own right, but in trust for him, or, if it was money*158 in her possession belonging to him with which she bought the property and paid for it and took the title to herself, that it was done without his knowledge or consent or direction. As advancements are ordinarily, if not always, voluntary, in order to ascertain whether the transaction was a trust or intended as an advancement, when the title is in the name of the wife, the intention at that time is the point of inquiry, and to which we must look.”
In the language thus quoted, what is said about the evidence necessary to establish a resulting trust being “free from doubt” is a degree of proof not required in ciyil cases.
When the lots were purchased for the purpose of erecting thereon a house, Dr. Coe considered himself possessed of adequate means to construct a dwelling, the entire cost of which property, when improved, would not exceed his expectations. No agreement was entered into by Dr. Coe and Mrs. Coe when the real property was purchased and the deed secured whereby she stipulated to hold the legal title in trust for him or for any purpose. This being so, an error was committed in the part of the decree disposing of the home. The defendant is entitled to the undivided third part in his individual right in fee of the whole of lots 1, 2, 6 and 7 in block 15 in Goldsmith’s Addition to the City of Portland, and the plaintiff is entitled to the remainder of the estate in such premises: Section 511, L. O. L. The defendant’s interest in these lots to be charged, as is also all other real property conveyed by him, to the plaintiff, with the mortgage of $33,000. All the furniture, furnishings, etc., in the dwelling-house, that are not fixtures, having been purchased with the money furnished by the defendant, are hereby set apart to him.
Modified. Rehearing Denied.