172 P. 123 | Or. | 1918
“At most, the relationship is but a circumstance to be taken into consideration with other facts, if there be such and that too, for or against the conveyance according to the situation; but standing alone it is a false quantity. Even if it could be said that relationship might raise a presumption that the conveyance was voluntary it would not follow that the presumption could not be met by evidence which would be sufficient in any other case unless indeed, the position*463 should be taken that the presumption was stronger than ordinary presumptions, a position not likely to be taken”: Bigelow, Fraud. Conveyances, 222, 223. See, also, pages 220, 221; Schroeder v. Walsh, 120 Ill. 403 (11 N. E. 70); Davis v. Zimmerman, 40 Mich. 24.
A first and conclusive negative of the right of defendant to urge this defense is that it has not been pleaded. It is an invariable rule in this state that an estoppel cannot be taken advantage of without pleading it if there is an opportunity to do so: Rugh v. Ottenheimer, 6 Or. 231 (25 Am. Rep. 513) Remillard v. Prescott, 8 Or. 37; Bays v. Trulson, 25 Or. 109 (35 Pac. 26); Nickum v. Burckhardt, 30 Or. 464 (47 Pac. 888, 48 Pac. 474, 60 Am. St. Rep. 822); First Nat. Bank v. McDonald, 42 Or. 257 (70 Pac. 901); Christian v. Eugene, 49 Or. 170 (89 Pac. 419); Tieman v. Sachs, 52 Or. 560 (98 Pac. 163); Gladstone Lumber Co. v. Kelly, 64 Or. 163 (129 Pac. 763); Lane v. Myers, 70 Or. 376 (141 Pac. 1022, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 649).
The opinion of Justice Burnett in the case last cited is instructive, dealing as it does with facts very similar to those in the case at bar. Here defendant had ample opportunity to plead the estoppel in its answer and failed to do so and it follows that that defense cannot be here considered. Even upon the facts it is not shown that plaintiff knew that the conveyances in question had been taken in her husband’s name, or
Affirmed.