162 P. 1069 | Or. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
Defendants, Troutdale Land Company and Joseph Mossi, contest the right of plaintiff Frank H. Brown to a decree for the amount of the first note of $8,428.75, with interest and attorney’s fees, and for $1,116.49, interest on the second and third notes secured by the mortgage, which sums were advanced by Brown to stay an earlier foreclosure of the mortgage. It is the contention of these defendants that this note and amount
*508 “It is only in those cases where it is perfectly indifferent to the party in whom the interests had united whether the charge or term should or should not subsist, that in equity the term is merged. But if the owner has an interest in keeping them distinct, or there is an intervening right, there will be no merger. * * In the absence then of an express intention to the contrary, the intention to keep the two estates separate will be implied and presumed, when it is for the interest of the party that they should be kept separate. It will not do, then, as was said by Elliott, J., to assume, as a matter of course, that there was a merger, for there are many cases in which, in order to prevent injustice, courts will not allow merger to take place, although all the essential elements of a technical merger combine in the particular case. ’ ’
See Katz v. Obenchain, 48 Or. 352 (85 Pac. 617, 120 Am. St. Rep. 821); Fogarty v. Hunter, 83 Or. 183 (162 Pac. 964). Brown, however, obtained his right to an interest in the mortgage security not from the Syndicate but from Roth and Michel. He, therefore, has a kind of partnership interest with the mortgagees in the mortgage and is entitled to have the same foreclosed.
Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.