52 P. 26 | Or. | 1898
delivered the opinion.
This is a suit to cancel and set aside a conveyance from the plaintiff to the defendants of certain real property in Polk County, and comes here on an appeal from a decree dismissing the complaint. The material facts are that some time during the life of the donation law one George K. Gay and his then wife acquired a title thereunder to 640 acres of land in Polk County. Soon thereafter Mrs. Gay died intestate, leaving her husband and seven children surviving her, among the number being Henry Gay, and Louisa Gay, and an elder daughter, who intermarried
The answer denies the material allegations of the complaint, except the fact of the conveyances from one to the other, and affirmatively avers that the deed from defendants to the plaintiff was intended to and does convey only their right, title and interest in and to the premises described therein, and that they never intended or agreed to convey to plaintiff any other or greater interest; that since the conveyance referred to in the complaint the defendants had made valuable and permanent improvements upon the lands
The testimony is quite voluminous, but there is really little conflict upon any of the material questions in the case. The contention for the plaintiff, as disclosed by the brief and argument of his counsel, is (1) that the transaction between him and the defendants which is the subject of this litigation was a common-law exchange of lands, and that he therefore has a right to rescind on failure of title to the premises conveyed to him by the defendants; and (2) that defendants knew, at the time of such exchange, that they had no title to the land which they attempted to convey, but fraudulently concealed the same from him. Of these questions in their order:
Nor is there any merit in the contention that the ■defendants knew they had no title to the property conveyed by them to the plaintiff, and fradulently concealed such knowledge from the defendants. It is true the witness Childers testified that some time during the taking of the testimony in the litigation between Windsor and Simpkins concerning the land in question, in a conversation between the respondents, the witness, and one McLench, concerning the alleged title of Mrs. Gay, the defendant Booth said “he never did believe the old lady had any right,” and that he “ always knew there would be trouble if any one bought her right out,” and if “she had no right to deed to us we had none to deed to Ben Windsor”; and that “ Ben is always getting into trouble. If we -didn’t get him into that, he would have got into something else. We have got the lands we want, and are out of it, and don’t care who beats.” But these alleged statements are denied by both respondents; and ■the witness McLench, who was present at the time, gives an entirely different version of the matter.
Affirmed.