The defendants Emery appeal from a decree foreclosing real and chattel mortgages on two motels in Baker and from the denial of affirmative relief prayed for in a cross complaint filed by defendants. There were other defendants named in the complaint, but none of them is involved in this appeal with the exception of the defendant Emrich Furniture Company, a corporation. For convenience we will refer to defendants-appellants Emery as “defendants” and the corporate defendant as “company.”
Prior to this foreclosure proceeding the defendants were the owners of the two motels in Baker. The more valuable of the two was situate on the outskirts *90of that city and, at the time this proceeding was filed, was known as Emery Motel. The other was known as the City Center Motel and was so situate. For several years prior to the filing of the complaint herein plaintiff, the defendants and the company had engaged in extensive financial and property transactions. The transcript of testimony contains almost 900 pages, plus numerous exhibits, from which the parties seek to infer conflicting legal relationships and commitments from a confusing tangle of poorly kept records and verbal undertakings. We think it would serve no useful purpose to fill the many pages that would be required to attempt to describe these events in detail. The facts are of interest only to these parties. The law involved is well settled and not in dispute. It is sufficient for our purpose to state that during the years involved the plaintiff and, to an extent, company, gave financial assistance to defendants to enable the latter to furnish the motels and refinance obligations incurred in their construction. At the time of this foreclosure the indebtedness thereby created was in excess of $52,000. Since the decree was entered all the property has been sold in accordance with the provisions thereof, and there now remains a substantial deficiency.
Dedendants attempted to avoid the foreclosure by asserting that plaintiff had been guilty of conduct which induced defendants to believe he would not foreclose and would accept payment other than that specified in the mortgages; that he should be estopped from any foreclosure. We agree with the trial court that there is just no evidence to sustain this defense. It is only necessary to mention that no payment of any kind had been made upon the mortgages foreclosed by the decree herein. The defendants also *91contended that plaintiff is without clean hands. There is no merit to this contention. Each party was guilty of carelessness and laxity in failing to make or preserve any record or writing of the alleged agreements they now seek to prove. This was apparently the result of the confidence and trust, as well as affection, each possessed for the other during most of the time involved. There is certainly no evidence of deliberate misleading or overreaching, nor of any act or omission on the part of plaintiff to intentionally lull the defendants into a belief that he would indefinitely overlook their continuing default. We find the equities to be more evenly balanced. True, the defendants have lost substantial property interests acquired by hard work and extensive credit. But the plaintiff has also sustained substantial loss on the money he advanced to the defendants in the efforts made to avoid default on the antecedent indebtedness. The defendants’ brief attempts to show that plaintiff will acquire property of much greater value than the amount of the indebtedness mentioned. The record does not sustain this statement.
By cross complaint the defendants sought to transpose a deed into a mortgage. The property conveyed by the deed was a lot immediately adjacent to the City Center Motel. The property was directly across the street from the furniture store operated by defendant company. This lot and the City Center property were acquired by defendants at the same time and by the same transaction.
The deed from defendants was absolute on its face and warranted good title free and clear of liens or encumbrances. The grantee therein was the defendant company. This deed was dated and executed on November 18, 1952.
*92In September or October of 1952, however, defendant Emery had started construction of a pumice block building on this lot. It is admitted that this building was being built to provide the defendant company with a warehouse and second hand store it desired. The evidence would support a finding that the officers of defendant company had previously sought such a building located close to the company’s store. The defendant company, through its manager, advanced approximately $7,400 toward the cost of the building. The first advances were made prior to the date of the deed previously mentioned. During this period of time defendants were heavily indebted to plaintiff and others, including a mortgage encumbrance on the lot in question upon which the building was being built.
Defendants contend that they were to retain ownershop of the lot and building and that the advances made to them were a loan to pay for materials and other costs of the building. Most of the labor was performed by Emery personally. They say the deed was given and accepted to secure these advances or loans and should, therefore, be declared a mortgage; that a monthly rental was agreed upon and that this rental was to be credited upon the so-called loan until the loan, plus interest, was thereby satisfied. The defendant company has been in possession of the building since December of 1952. The plaintiff, who is the president of defendant company, and the company, by its manager, contend that Emery agreed to build the building for the company at a contract price of $7,500 and to sell company the lot upon which it was built for $1,000. It is conceded and established, however, that this $1,000 was to be paid to the person then holding the mortgage on the lot as consideration *93for a partial release thereof to clear title to the property. This was not accomplished. The trial court found that defendants had failed to prove that the deed was a mortgage by a preponderance of the weight and clarity of evidence required to sustain this contention. Sweek v. Bennett, 133 Or 388, 396 290 P 747; Harmon v. Grants Pass Banking & Trust Co., 60 Or 69, 118 P 188. We concur in this finding. Other than the defendants’ own assertions the evidence is to the contrary. There is no evidence to establish that they had ever made this claim until the filing of the cross complaint herein. Prom the date of the deed until the filing of the cross complaint the acts and writings of the defendants contradict this later claim of ownership. The deed was executed without reservation. When defendants later prepared written statements purporting to include all the property then owned by them this property was not included. Most persuasive is their failure to include it in depreciation schedules filed with income tax returns and the equal failure to include as income in such returns the rental alleged by them to have been credited on the indebtedness they assert existed. Nor is any interest accruing on such a loan charged as a deduction in the tax returns. The only explanation offered by defendants for these omissions is that the value thereof was included in the returns with the City Center Motel property; that they “lumped” the property together for the depreciation schedule of the tax returns. However, the value listed as the City Center Motel property in the returns is much less than the combined value these defendants placed upon these properties for other purposes, including their testimony in this case. The explanation is wholly inadequate to explain this most conclusive evidence. There is no evidence that there *94was any agreement to reconvey the property in the event the alleged indebtedness was satisfied. We have not attempted to recite all the detailed evidence presented on this issue. Its omission should not be taken as any indication that all the record has not been fully considered. However, the evidence is conclusive that defendants were never paid for the lot in any amount. The trial court accordingly found that the value of the lot at the time the deed was delivered was $3,500 and awarded defendants a judgment in that amount. We likewise concur in that finding and portion of the decree.
There is a similar lack of evidence to sustain plaintiff’s and the company’s contention that defendants contracted to build this building for $7,500. The only evidence of such an agreement is the testimony of the manager of the defendant company. It is not supported in any way. The manager’s explanation of the transaction and the attendant circumstances he relates are simply not capable of persuasion or belief. It is admitted that the $7,500 would no more than pay for the material, if it would do that. It was established that this would have fixed the entire cost of construction at about $2 per square foot, an absurd cost for even the type of building mentioned. It is further conceded that this would have paid defendant Emery nothing for his labor. The manager’s explanation that Emery told him that it was being done as a favor is not quite realistic considering the rather dire financial straits of the defendants at the time. We are, therefore, left with a rather anomolous situation. The company has enjoyed the possession of a lot and building for which they have never paid adequate consideration. This peculiar result can only be explained by the haphazard and unbusinesslike eon-*95duct of these parties previously mentioned. The plaintiff and company should not be permitted to profit by these mutual mistakes. The trial court did award defendants an additional judgment of $1,000 which the court found to have been expended by defendants in the construction of the building. Prom what has been said it appears that this award does not fully compensate defendants for the reasonable value of labor expended on the building nor the full value of materials used. The evidence is not sufficient to enable us to find the value of such labor and materials. We are of the opinion that the full determination of the equities of all the parties requires that this be done. The pleadings can be construed to permit the introduction of evidence sufficient to make this finding.
It has previously been stated that the complaint seek foreclosure of real and chattel mortgages. It also seeks a deficiency judgment. The defendants’ answer, in addition to the obligations previously mentioned, contains averments seeking to require plaintiff and company to account for amounts defendants allege are due to them. This, together with a prayer for general relief, is sufficient to enable the court to make this determination. Monese v. Struve, 155 Or 68, 81, 62 P2d 822. We think it equally appropriate to apply the rule that a “court of equity, having jurisdiction of the subject matter of a suit or having acquired jurisdiction over some portion of the controversy, will proceed to decide the whole issue and award complete relief, although the rights of the parties are strictly legal and the final remedy is of a kind that may be granted by a court of law. [Citing cases.]” Ruby v. West Coast Lumber Co., 139 Or 388, 393, 10 P2d 358.
We, therefore, remand the case to the trial court to take such additional testimony as may be necessary *96to find the reasonable value of the labor and materials supplied by defendants for which consideration has not been paid.
The defendants also claim damages for wrongful foreclosure. The answer to this is obvious. Complaint is also made of the inadequacy of damages awarded by the trial court for windstorm damage to one of the buildings involved for which plaintiff had become an insurer. The award was in keeping with the only relevant evidence submitted. The decree as entered will be modified to this extent and is otherwise affirmed. Neither party shall recover costs.
The decree is affirmed as modified.