Root v. Martin

W'HÍTING, J.

Plaintiff executed a deed to a tract of land. This deed did not have the name of any grantee inserted therein. An agent of plaintiff afterwards wrote in the name of defendant as grantee and placed the deed of record. This action was brought to have such deed and the record thereof held for naught and canceled upon the ground that such agent had no authority to write, the name 'of defendant into such -deed as grantee and no authority to deliver such deed. Findings, conclusions, an-d judgment were for plaintiff. From the judgment and an order denying a new trial this appeal was taken.

The appellant is correct in saying that "there is no room for dispute about the facts.” The material facts are all disclosed by *19the contents of letters and telegrams. One M., writing in the name of a bank of which he was cashier, wrote to plaintiff asking him to place a price on some land he owned. This led to correspondence wherein plaintiff agreed to take a certain price net to •him for said land. Being advised that M. had a purchaser w'ho would take the land at that price, plaintiff forwarded the deed with positive instructions as to the delivery 'thereof which should only occur upon the payment to the bank for plaintiff of the amount named. M. thereafter wrote plaintiff that there was a fence on the land which plaintiff’s tenant claimed, and M. asked advice in relation thereto. Further correspondence took place in which M. was fully advised that the sale must be consummated, if at all, by the payment, net to plaintiff, of the amount he had agred to sell the land for.

Disregarding his instructions, M. then wrote in defendant’s name in the deed in question and placed same of record without advising plaintiff of such action. Both defendant and M. at all times refused to pay plaintiff the full amimnt coming to plaintiff tinder his instructions. Plaintiff, learning that the deed had been filled up and' put of record, brought this action.

[1] That the trial court did not err in holding that there never was a valid delivery of the deed is too clear to need argument; and this is true whether we consider that this deed was in the bank as a escrow or whether we consider the bank or M. the agent for plaintiff. The following from Sharp v. Kilborn, 64 Or. 371, 130 Pac. 735, is applicable to the facts of this case:

“It is needless to deal in refinements about whether the deed was an escrow, or whether the bank was merely the agent of the grantor named therein. In the first place the delivery of the deed in violation of the terms of the escrow passed 'no title, and in the other case, if the agent delivered the deed contrary to his instruction, it would still pass no title.”

[2] An examination of the record explains — but does not excuse — M. Without the knowledge of plaintiff, M. was the active agent for the defendant in this whole transaction; defendant is M.’s father, though the fact that the prospective purchaser was M.’s father was never revealed to plaintiff.; and M. used his efforts to get for his father the lowest possible price on the sale. Respondent in his brief well says of M.’s double-dealing:

*20“In essaying this dual role, he did just what he ought not to have done, he betrayed the plaintiff, who had trusted him, and his bank as depositary, for the sake of reaching for a financial advantage for his father”

—though the bank was more than a mere depositary, the bank acting through M., or else M. was plaintiff’s agent, a fact admitted by defendant in his answer.

In view of the above, it becomes unnecessary for us to consider whether M. had any authority to insert defendant’s, name as grantee in the deed.

The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.