58 P. 527 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
•The object of this suit is to have it decreed that the defendant J. W. Kern holds the title to an undivided one-fifth of the wife’s half of the donation land claim of. William Kern and wife in trust for the plaintiff. It appears that after the final proof of residence and cultivation required by the donation law had been made by Kern and wife, and accepted by the land department, but before
There are no controverted questions of law presented by the record. The only question is one of fact, viz., whether the defendant, at the time of his purchase under the Kahn judgment, stood in such a relation to the property in' controversy as would, in equity, prevent him from purchasing on his own account, and for his own use. The plaintiff’s contention, as we understand it, is : (1) That the defendant was in duty bound to pay and discharge the interest upon the mortgage as it became due, and therefore can reap no advantage from his negligence to perform such duty ; and (2) that the Kahn judgment was, in equity, a common charge upon the property of all the tenants in common, and, therefore, one tenant could not purchase thereunder for his own use. It would promote no useful end for us to notice the testimony in detail. We deem it sufficient to say that we have examined it with care, and have reached the conclusion that neither of the positions assumed by the plaintiff is supported by the evidence. There was no personal obligation on the part of J. W. Kern to pay either the mortgage debt or the interest thereon. It was the debt of his father, who agreed to and did take care of the several interest notes as they matured except the one due June 1, 1878 ; and the mere fact that the defendant did not pay this note would not prevent him from purchasing the plaintiff’s interest in the property under a judgment against him. And it appears from the evidence that the judgment under which the purchase was made in fact for a personal