Opinion by
This latter case seems to’ have settled the practice until the rendition of some later decisions. In Lovejoy v. Chapman, 23 Or. at page 574, (32 Pac. 687,) Mr. Justice Moobe says: “The conflict in the testimony as to the amount due the defendant renders the true account between the parties difficult of ascertainment. There are, however, some circumstances which seem to illustrate the dealings of the parties, and no doubt aided the referee in reaching a conclusion that the plaintiff's theory was correct.” Then after stating three several facts upon which it is supposed the referee acted in coming to his conclusion, he continues: “The referee had the advantage of seeing the witnesses and of hearing them testify, and from this fact he is better able to pass upon the weight of evidence than any court can be
This latter proposition, in so far as it seems to state a general rule of law, is perhaps too broad, and possibly misleading; but to the extent that it indicates the method of the court in arriving at the conclusions it is not open to criticism. It will be noted that in each of these later cases this court has carefully gone through and weighed all the evidence. Indeed, it is the constant habit of the court in equity cases, though arduous and oftentimes burdensome, to carefully read and consider all the testimony accompanying the transcript, and without special reference to the findings of the referee of the court below. The statutory requirement is that the “ suit shall be tried anew upon the transcript and the evidence accompanying it,” and the court has in every instance of which we have any knowledge followed the direction of the statute in that respect. But it sometimes transpires that evidence is adduced for and against a contested proposition of apparently equal weight, when read from the depositions, as it must be here, or the evidence touching the same is very conflicting and unsatisfactory, as where one witness affirms and another of seemingly equal credit flatly denies, in such cases the findings of the referee and the court below have
The features of the controversy thus delineated mark the line of dispute between the parties. The
.In this connection the testimony of Ephraim Hammock is pertinent. He says: “ He (Howell) left the place either in seventy-one or seventy-two. Cale Howell himself, I think, lived on it in the winter of seventy-two, or in the spring afterwards. After he sold out, he left it. He fed hogs there, after that he went off and left it. I heard John Ladd tell him that he would give one thousand dollars for the place. The trade was considered good at that time but there was no money paid, no papers made, no exchange nor anything of the kind.” This witness also states that Howell had offered the place a day or two before to his father-in-law, Mr. Pro, for one thousand dollars. This is the sum and substance of the evidence touching the execution and delivery of this deed. John was the older of the two brothers, was a man of some education, and at times transacted business for Freeman, who was illiterate. It is impossible to reconcile the testimony of Howell with that of Freeman S. Ladd, but we think the attendant circumstances support that of Ladd rather than Howell. Howell says he executed the deed to John E. Ladd, but it shows for itself that it was executed to Freeman. Howell says that John paid
Homer Nessley testifies that he saw the deed from Freeman to John in the fall of eighteen hundred and seventy-three, that he read it entire, and that it was duly witnessed and acknowledged. Mrs. Hilts, the widow, says John handed her the deed immediately after she arrived home from the east. She did not read it, but saw the indorsement on the back, which showed it was a deed from Freeman to John. After much vacillation as to the time when she first saw the deed, she finally and positively fixes it at the time she returned home from the east. This was in April, eighteen hundred and seventy-three. The date fixed is in disparagement of their testimony, as the deed from Howell to Freeman was not made until January, eighteen hundred and seventy-four; but it cannot be expected that witnesses can fix with exactness the dates of transactions of such long standing. T. J. Hilts says while looking through a trunk with John, where he kept his valuable papers, he (witness) picked up a deed, and said to John “Here is a deed from Freeman to you,” to which John replied, “Yes; I must have that re
Affirmed.