62 P. 635 | Or. | 1900
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff and the defendant Kester were married in 1876, and that about four or five months prior to the execution of the notes sued on she disobeyed his commands by attending church, whereupon he said to her, as she testifies, that he would cut her throat and take her heart out. The difficulty thus occasioned finally resulted in an agreement for their separation. At that time Kester owned a farm near Lebanon, Or., which he and his wife conveyed to the defendant Denney, and she received on account thereof the sum of $1,000 and the note in question as the share of her husband’s property to which she was entitled, whereupon she.immediately left him, and went to Albany, Or., to live with her father. But she and her husband, having become reconciled, subscribed their names to the following memorandum: -“Albany, Or., November 24, 1892. This is to certify that we, the undersigned, do agree to come together with the understanding that we pay $1,500 each on lands, half to be deeded to James Kester and half to Emma
Affirmed.