152 P. 488 | Or. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
On August 28, 1912, Cooper and others addressed a communication to the Ada Land Company, requesting a statement ‘ ‘ of the inducements and improvements of property the Ada Land Company offered to” them “if they would purchase land from the Ada Land Company. ’ ’
On December 12, 1912, Cooper wrote a letter to the defendant, expressing a desire to lease 2% acres owned by the corporation and located near the land occupied by plaintiff. On April 23, 1913, Cooper
An analysis of Sperry v. Stennick, 64 Or. 96 (129 Pac. 130), and kindred cases and an examination of the other two classes of adjudications will at once reveal the fact that there the maintenance of a judicial proceeding, even though resting upon an accusation of fraud, is quite consistent with the act of assignment. When A conveys land to C, after having deeded the same land to B, the very act of making the conveyance to C is of itself a declaration that A refuses to abide by the transfer to B, where the latter, employed fraud in procuring the land. It must be borne in mind, how
Dismissed.