Thomson v. Swank
Thomson v. Swank
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The admitted facts are that on April 2, 1912, the plaintiff, owning at No. 1137 Glen Avenue, Portland, Oregon, a house and lot, published in a newspaper of that city a notice offering to sell and convey the premises for $2,450, one half thereof to be paid down, and the remainder on time. The defendant Swank, having seen the advertisement, telephoned the plaintiff to call upon him with a view of effecting a sale of the property. Pursuant to the invitation Thomson called upon Swank, who, acting for his wife, offered for the lot the sum so demanded by assigning a mortgage of 40 acres of land in Coos County, executed to Mrs. Swank September 19, 1911, by C. L. Burton and his wife, to secure the payment of a promissory note of $2,500 due on or before three years, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum, payable at maturity. By this proposal the plaintiff was to give, in addition to a conveyance of his lot, the sum of $50, one half of which was to be paid when he accepted the offer, and the remainder when, upon an examination of abstracts of title to the mortgaged land and to the
The plaintiff testified that Swank represented to him that he had owned in Coos County the 40 acres of land which he had sold to Burton for $6,000, receiving on account thereof $3,500, and taking the mortgage referred to of $2,500 as security for the payment of the remainder of the purchase price; that, in negotiating the trade, Swank took the witness to see Burton, who said the land was valuable for coal, timber and fruit; that, after an exchange of the deed and the assignment of the mortgage, the witness visited and examined the 40-acre tract in company with the county surveyor of that county, and found about five or six acres of bench land that was fairly level, the remainder being broken and cut up by ravines; that about three acres had at one time been under cultivation, but had been allowed to grow over with brush; that about 60 years prior thereto a fire had consumed most of the timber in that vicinity, and only a second growth was then standing on the premises; and that the value of the land did not exceed $1,000.
• The deposition of S. B. Cothcart, the county surveyor of Coos County, is to the effect that he examined the 40 acres of land referred to in company with the plaintiff, whose testimony is corroborated with respect to the condition and character of the premises. In referring to the cleared land, Cothcart further deposed that a part of it consisted of an orchard containing about 100 apple trees that had been neglected and were more or less broken. He also stated, upon oath, that he did not consider the timber of any value; that he found a prospect hole on the premises, but did not discover any evidences of coal; that about two miles from the land coal had been discovered, the value of
His sworn declarations are corroborated by the deposition of Arthur Demarest, who further stated that he had cultivated an adjoining tract, in referring to which he said it was very poor land.
The defendant J. D. Swank, as a witness, denied that he represented to the plaintiff that the Coos County land was of the value of $6,000, but that he asserted such sum was the price he asked for the premises. Referring to what he declares he detailed to Thomson about the 40-acre tract, Swank stated, upon oath: “I told him that I considered the greatest value of the land to be from a mineral standpoint and from a coal standpoint, and that it was good timber land. * * I told him that is the way they were represented to me by a fellow who had seen the property. * * I told him that I had not seen the property. ’ ’
On cross-examination Swank testified that the mortgage note was transferred to plaintiff “without recourse” because he indorsed all notes in that manner, and that he knew the mortgage was given to secure a part of the purchase price.
"W. W. Sinclair, as defendants ’ witness, testified that he was sitting at a desk a few feet away from Swank, and heard the latter tell the plaintiff that he had never seen the Coos County land, but that this defendant thought it was chiefly valuable for minerals; that it would raise fruit; that there was on the premises considerable timber which when removed would render the land good for agriculture and for fruit.
W. W. Groves, as defendants’ witness, testified that he had seen the 40-acre tract, and that it would be difficult to farm the land in any condition.
The evidence indisputably shows that the 40-acre tract is valueless for timber, and nearly worthless for agriculture and for fruit, that no coal had ever been found in the land, and that its worth for that purpose was wholly problematical.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THOMSON v. SWANK
- Status
- Published