24 Or. 251 | Or. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court:
'1. A careful examination of the question has satisfied us that the decree, so far as the first cause of suit is concerned, should be affirmed. The contract of the defendant, S. K. Thomas, to give his father a home and support upon the land, as a part of the consideration for the conveyance, was a personal obligation, to be performed by him alone, and could not be assigned, without the consent
In Clinton v. Flye, 10 Me. 292, (which was a writ of entry brought against the defendant as assignee of one Roundy), a contract had been made by the plaintiff and Roundy, by which it was agreed that Roundy should support and maintain his father and mother and an idiotic brother during their natural lives, for which the plaintiff agreed to give him the use and occupancy of a certain farm during the lives of the father and mother, and at their death to give him a deed to the land. It was held that the contract was a personal trust, unassignable, and the plaintiff recovered the land from Roundy’s grantee, the court saying: “ If the contract is held assignable, they (the persons to be supported) are liable to be transferred, at the convenience and pleasure of successive assignees, whether they possess, or not, the temper and qualites which would enable them satisfactorily to fulfill the trust.” So, also, in Flanders v. Lamphear, 9 N. H. 201, the plaintiffs gave a deed to their son, and he gave back a mortgage conditioned for the support of the grantors during their natural lives, and to pay sundry debts of the father.. Subsequently, the son conveyed the premises to a third person, and they were again transferred so that Lamphear, the defendant, had them by mesne conveyance from the son. The plaintiffs then brought a writ of entry agaii st
It was claimed at the argument that the sale to Delaney was made with the knowledge and acquiescence of the plaintiff, but in our opinion the evidence fails to sustain the contention. Plaintiff testifies that the first knowledge or information that he had of the sale, or contemplated sale, was from Delaney, after the deed had been made, and but a few days before this suit was commenced. The only evidence to the contrary is the testimony of the two de_ fendants who are to be benefitted by the sale, if sustained and their evidence is only to the effect that the contemplated sale was talked over by them in the presence of the plaintiff, and he made no objection thereto; but they do not testify that he was ever consulted about the matter, or
The second cause of'suit is to enforce a grantor’s lien for the unpaid purchase price of certain land sold and conveyed by plaintiff to the defendants jointly, the consideration for which was evidenced by promissory notes payable to certain of plaintiff’s children, but never delivered by him. The first of these notes matured January 1,1890, and was paid before the commencement of this suit. The second note became due on January 1,1891, and while it was not paid at the commencement of this suit, the evidence shows that defendants made every reasonable effort to pay it, by tendering and offering to pay the same to both the plaintiff and the payee named therein. The other notes were not due at the time this suit was commenced, and hence there was no default on the part of the defendants; and as to this cause of suit the complaint must be dismissed, conceding, but without deciding, that the doctrine of a grantor’s lien prevails in this state.
2. There is also an appeal from the action of the court below on a motion for the retaxation of costs. After issue joined, this cause was referred to a referee for trial, and a stenographer appointed by the court to take the testimony under his direction. The referee charged for seven days’ services in hearing the testimony and arguments of counsel, and one and one half days’ for the examination of the case and the preparation of findings, at twenty dollars per day, making a total of one hundred and seventy dollars, one half of which is alleged to have been actually paid by plaintiff and is included in his cost bill as filed. The stenographer charged for six days’ services in taking testimony at ten dollars per day, and fifteen cents a folio for
It appears from the objections to the cost bill, and affidavits in support thereof, that the objection to the allowance of the items for referee’s and stenographer’s fees is based upon the fact, as claimed, that the referee was actually engaged only five and one half days in the trial of the cause, and had already exacted from defendants, and required them to pay, sixty-five dollars before he would report their part of the testimony, and that this length of time was made necessary by the fact that the referee permitted and allowed the stenographer to take the testimony on a typewriter, instead of in shorthand, and thus prolonged the hearing, and increased the per diem of both the referee and stenographer largely in excess of what it would otherwise have been; 'and that the stenographer was only entitled to ninety dollars for taking and extending the testimony, and defendants had already paid him seventy dollars, which he demanded before he would allow their testimony to be filed. If these objections are well founded, they certainly should have been sustained. The referee was entitled to his compensation only for the time actually and necessarily spent in the business of the reference, and, having been provided with a stenographer, he
The decree of the court will therefore be affirmed as to the first cause of suit, reversed and complaint dismissed as to the second, plaintiff to recover his costs and disbursements in this court and in the court below, and the cause remanded with directions to retax the costs in the court below. Modified.