17 Or. 347 | Or. | 1889
This appeal is from a decree rendered in a suit brought by the respondent against the appellant to set aside a deed to real property executed by the former to the latter on the fifteenth day of February, 1881, or, as alternate relief, that a claim in favor of the latter for service and expenses be charged upon the said real property.
The parties are husband and wife, and it is claimed by
The appellant filed an answer in the suit, denying the allegations of the complaint, and the case was heard upon depositions and proofs, and the circuit court decreed to the respondent one half of the land deeded.
Neither party has printed the evidence and proofs in the briefs furnished, as required by the rules of this court, and we have no means of ascertaining the facts of the case without reading the depositions, which have been sent here with the transcript, unless we adopt the findings of the circuit court. The findings are full, and as neither party claims but that they were warranted by the evidence, we feel justified in relying upon them.
The circuit court found that the parties were married in Scotland in the year 184fi, and had lived together, as
I conclude from these and other findings made by said circuit court that the parties married and lived together about the same as married people usually do; that they
When one party duly executes his deed to real property to another; he is precluded from showing by parol testimony that the object and purposes of the instrument were different from that implied by its terms, except in the case of deeds executed as a security for the payment of debts. “The grantor in an absolute-conveyance of land-, not alleging fraud or mistake, cannot prove by parol that
Nor can a deed be invalidated by parol evidence that there was no consideration for its execution, where there is one acknowledgment in it.
“In every case where a consideration is required, it is not necessary that the consideration be actually passed to the grantor, if the receipt of a proper'consideration is acknowledged by him in the deed. But it must be acknowledged in the deed, or it must be proved aliunde; to have actually passed to the grantor. But while parol evidence is inadmissible to contradict the acknowledgment of consideration in order to invalidate the deed between.the grantor and grantee, yet the acknowledgment is only prima facie evidence of the character and amount of the consideration. The amount and kind of consideration acknowledged is presumed to be the consideration agreed upon; but it may be shown by parol evidence, in an action to recover the consideration, that a different kind or amount of consideration had. been agreed* upon.” (5 Am. & Eng. Encye. of Law, 436, 437..
Transactions of great importance would have no stability if the parties thereto were permitted to show by parol- proof that written instruments solemnly'executed by them-did not mean what the-language of the instrument purported. An absolute-deed to real property conveys from the grantor to the grantee, all the- title of the former, and he will not be allowed to prove by parol evidence that it was made in trust for him, or that there was a reservation in- his favor of any right not expressed therein, nor that the deed is invalid for the- want of consideration’, where be acknowledges therein the receipt of one.
A deed may be reformed in case of a mistake made in reducing its terms to writing, or it may be set aside for fraud'or duress; and a trust will often arise out-of a trans
No implied trust can arise from the facts in this case; nor could any trust have been created in favor of the respondent in the' premises'conveyed except by an instrument in writing declaring the same.
The deed in question can Only be avoided by proof that the appellant procured it to be made through fraud, and it is apparent that the findings of the court are not sufficient to warrant the conclusion that such was the fact. The fact that the appellant solicited and importuned the respondent to execute the deed, and that the parties about three years and a half thereafter had difficulty, and the appellant asserted her legal rights as owner of the premises, and attempted to ex-pél the respondent therefrom, do’ not establish a fraudulent intent on her part to deprive him of his property. She had a right to persuade him to make her a deed of a part of the property, which her labor and earnings had helped to accumulate, and after obtaining it, to manage, sell, convey, or devise the same by will, to the same extent and in the same manner that he could property belonging to him. Section 2992 of the Annotated Code of Oregon vests her with that right, and the provision was in force at the time of the execution of the deed. She was also empowered, in case the respondent had possession or control of the property, to maintain an action growing out of the- same, in the same manner and- extent as if they were' unmarried. (Ann. Code, sec. 2870.)
I cannot discover from the' findings that any such deception was practiced upon the respondent in procuring the execution of the deed as- would justify the court in setting' it aside. The appellant undoubtedly, in urging
The respondent should have protected himself by a condition in that instrument against the consequences of such an occurrence.
• Courts cannot relieve parties from imprudent bargains; they must suffer the consequences of their indiscretion, unless an undue advantage has been taken of them. Fraud will vitiate.a contract; but where the parties to it stand upon an equality of footing, the fraud must consist of a false representation of a material fact, and the party to whom it is made not be able, by the exercise of reasonable caution and vigilance, to detect its falsity. But upon the other ground of- relief claimed in the complaint in the suit, I think the respondent should prevail. The. circuit court found that he was induced and led to believe, and did believe, that in doing the work and labor in building the new house, making the fencing and other improvements upon the premises, he was making for himself and appellant a more comfortable home, which they would enjoy the benefits of and of the profits of the land during the remainder of their lives, and that the fact of his making the deed would not prevent his enjoyment of the land and the improvements thereon, or in any manner disturb the relation between himself and the appellant, and that they would hold the property jointly.
- Under such circumstances, the respondent should, when he has been expelled from the premises by the act of the appellent, be paid for the labor and the expense incurred by him. It would be inequitable to allow the appellant
This court held in Frasey v. Wheeler, 4 Or. 190, that a court of equity would not encourage a married woman to perpetrate a fraud; and that where she had received money upon a contract for the sale of her land, and the purchaser was induced to put valuable improvements upon it, the amount of the money and value of the permanent improvements should be charged upon the lands. In that case the woman was dealing with an outside party; but I think a husband has rights in such matters which a wife is bound to respect.
The facts in this case show that the respondent bestowed labor and expense upon the land in question, after the execution of the deed to the appellant, to the amount at least of four thousand dollars, and that he was induced to do so upon the assurance that he should occupy and enjoy the property; that in October, 1884, the appellant notified him that he should not remain on the premises any longer, and that since that time he has had no use of them. In view of these facts, I am of the opinioii that the respondent is entitled to be paid said sum of four thousand dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the first day of November, 1884; and that the amount should be made a charge and lien upon the premises conveyed by the respondent to the appellant; and that in default of the payment of the same, with accrued interest, within ninety days after the entry of the decree herein, that the