118 P. 1032 | Or. | 1911
The contention that there was a subsequent oral agreement that the payments were not to be made until the litigation between the Willow River Company and Cole should have been settled is not sustained by the preponderance of the testimony.
In the first place, it is not in the ordinary course of business that a transaction, involving so large an amount of money, and a radical change in a written contract, should be made verbally and without witnesses. In the second place, the alleged terms of the contract are improbable.
Counsel frankly states in his affidavit for continuance that it was expected that the litigation would consume practically the entire amount of Cole’s claim for purchase money. In brief, we are asked to believe that, if he were finally to be declared owner of the property, its value would be taken by the Willow River Company for attorney’s fees and expenses. If the courts decided adversely to his claim, he lost entirely. If he was not sucked under in the Charybdis of defeat, he was to be swallowed to satisfy the hunger of the legal Scylla for fees and disbursements.
Judge Lowery testified that Cole stated to him, while he was examining the titles to the property of the Willow River Company that he had been paid for the property; and that Cole afterwards admitted this in the presence of Mr. Rand. In this he is contradicted by both Cole and Rand.
Now, were Cole seeking to enforce a vendor’s lien against the property transferred through him, plaintiff, as subsequent mortgagee, might well urge the recital in his deed by way of estoppel; but Cole has not sought to impose a specific lien against the property conveyed. All he seeks is a personal judgment against the corporation which owes him money, and, in the absence of actual fraud practiced by him.upon plaintiff to its injury,
The decree is affirmed. Affirmed.