155 P. 195 | Or. | 1916
Opinion by
This is an appeal by the plaintiff, Otelia Hadley, from a decree dismissing her suit. On a former appeal herein the plaintiff, as the widow of C. B. Hadley, sought, as against the other heirs of the deceased, to have it decreed that for several years prior to and at the timé of her husband’s death he had been and was a partner with his son, the defendant C. E. Hadley, who was in possession of firm assets of the value of $255,000, of which the administrator, the defendant C. W. Talmage, refused to make an inventory, and that she -had a dower estate in the partnership realty and owned a moiety of the personalty thereof. The answer of the defendant C. E. Hadley denied the partnership, and for a separate defense alleged he was the owner of all the property described in the complaint; after the cause was at issue, but before it was tried, that defendant paid the plaintiff $7,000 for all her interests in the property, and she executed to him a
“When she filed her reply to the supplemental answer, she should have' proved the fraud and offered to put the defendant in statu quo by tendering back the $7,000. The question of fraud was not tried out or passed upon by the Circuit Court, and there Avas no tender back of the $7,000 as a condition of her right to proceed with the trial”: Hadley v. Hadley, 73 Or. 179 (144 Pac. 80).
The language thus employed was controlling upon the trial court, whose duty it was to cause the mandate to be entered and to enforce the condition prescribed: 3 Cyc. 488; Apex Trans. Co. v. Garbade, 32 Or. 582, 592 (52 Pac. 573, 54 Pac. 367, 882, 62 L. R. A. 513). It remains to be seen whether or not the expression last quoted correctly states the rule applicable to the facts
“In legal actions, brought as though the contract had been rescinded, a complaint which does not allege restoration, or an offer to restore, does not state a cause of action. * * In a suit in equity for a decree of rescission, the complaint need not allege a tender of [or] offer to perform.”
These excerpts are set forth in the case of Crossen v. Murphy, 31 Or. 114, 122 (49 Pac. 858, 860), where it is said:
“The maxim that ‘he who seeks equity must do equity’ is evidently not violated by the failure of the plaintiff in a suit to rescind a contract for fraud to allege a restoration of, or an offer to return, the consideration, or a willingness even to do so; for by his application to the court for equitable redress he concedes that before it will be awarded, he must do equity, which will compel him to account for everything of value he may have received, thereby tacitly inviting the court to protect the rights of the defendant by decreeing a restoration in consideration of the rescission. This method would permit a vendor who had been defrauded, but who was unable to restore the consideration, to institute a suit to rescind a contract voidable for fraud; for the court could do equity by all parties by decreeing that the amount so received should be a lien upon the property in favor of the vendee.”
Judge Belt, on the motion to set aside the order complained of, inferentially determined that Judge Holmes had not been interested in the compromise that was entered into by the plaintiff, and in this conclusion we concur.
It follows that the decree should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.