18 Wash. 341 | Wash. | 1897
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Respondent herein instituted an action in the superior court of Thurston county against appellants A. H. Chambers and Robert Trost, and other parties, to recover the amount due on a promissory note for $8,000 executed by the Olympia Light and Power Company to the said defendants, and by them indorsed to the plaintiff. The defendants set up in their answer as a defense, among other things, that the money for which the note was given was borrowed and used by the Light and Power Company, and that the defendants were mere sureties upon the note. A
For a second cause of action the complaint alleged, in addition to the averments already set forth, that execution was issued on the judgment and returned by the sheriff, in substance, “no property found;” that the property described in the complaint was mortgaged to an amount equal to its value; that the communities composed of A. H. Chambers and wife and Robert Frost and wife, were insolvent, and that the said conveyances to David J. Chambers were without consideration and were made and received for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the creditors of said grantors, including plaintiff. Appellants A. H. Chambers and wife and Robert Frost and wife admitted in their answer that the property described in the complaint was their community property, but denied that the judgment sued on was a community debt, or that it was a lien upon their community property, or that they, or either of the defendants, borrowed the money mentioned in the complaint from the plaintiff. The executors of the will of David J. Chambers alleged affirmatively in their separate answer that the defendants A. H. Chambers and Robert Frost were sureties for the Olympia Light and Power Company, on the note upon which the original action was based, and that the money for which the note was given was borrowed and used by said company, and that they were induced to write their names upon the back of said note by the representation of the plaintiff, who was
Appellants excepted to the fifth and sixth findings of fact made by the trial court, which were to the effect that the origin of plaintiff’s demand was a loan of $8,000 made by him on the first day of June, 1893, to Ceorge D. Shannon, A. LL Chambers, E. T. Young, Eobert Frost and Alexander Farquhar on a note of that date and amount, executed by the Olympia Light and Power Company to said Shannon, Chambers, Frost, Young and Farquhar, and indorsed by them to the plaintiff; that said money was bor
After this cause was submitted to the court for its determination, and before its findings and conclusions Were filed, appellants moved the court to' re-open the case, and for leave to submit evidence upon the question as to whether the plaintiff’s judgment was a community debt or the separate debt of A. H. Chambers and Robert Prost. The court denied this motion and the appellants excepted. After the judgment of the court was rendered and filed, appellants made a motion for a new trial, upon the statutory ground, among others, of surprise which ordinary prudence could not have guarded against. The court also denied this motion and an exception was taken by appellants. The action of the court in denying these motions is assigned as error, and the assignment presents the only serious question for determination upon this appeal. Both these motions are supported by the affidavits of counsel for appellants,
Assuming, then, the law to be as stated in the foregoing authorities, does the surprise alleged in this instance relate to a mere misapprehension of the law, acccording to those authorities? The appellants claim that they had a right on the trial of the case to rely upon the law as previously announced by this court in relation to the status of a debt contracted by a husband by becoming a guarantor or surety for a corporation in which he is an officer and stockholder. We think that appellants, in determining what would be necessary proof on their part at the trial of this cause had a right to reply upon the ruling of the court in the case of Spinning v. Allen, supra, and to believe that the community property mentioned in the complaint and the evidence would, in no event, be liable for appellants’ indebtedness to the respondents; and, that being so, it follows that appellants may well be said to have been surprised by the decision of the court, which was, though in harmony with the Horton case (and therefore correct), apparently directly opposed to the former ruling of this court in the Spinning case, when viewed in the light of the facts as stated in that opinion. Hpon the facts stated in that ease, and the decision therein, appellants might reasonably have assumed that, upon the testimony adduced at the trial, the judgment would be in their favor. They can not be blamed for not knowing that the corporation stock owned by Spinning was his separate property, for that did not appear
That appellants are entitled to a new trial upon the ground of surprise under such circumstances as appear in this case is shown by the case of Starkweather v. Loomis, 2 Vt. 573. That was an action of debt-on a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace in the state of New Hampshire. Defendant in the action pleaded nil débet, expecting to impeach the judgment in accordance with a decision of the supreme court, which held that such a judgment was a foreign one, and could be impeached and did not preclude a defendant from going into the merits of his case. The judgment was produced, properly certified by the justice, and was admitted in evidence by the court. The defendant, relying upon the former ruling of the supreme court, then offered to show that plaintiff had no cause of action against him, which offer was refused by the court on the ground that he should have introduced this evidence before the justice of the peace, in the state of New Hampshire. Exception was taken to the ruling by the defendant and the cause was taken to the supreme court, where the judgment was affirmed because the decision relied on had been overruled, but the judgment of affirmance was not entered, and the
The cause will therefore be remanded for a new trial, on the terms that appellants pay all costs accrued up to the time of filing their motion for a new trial, and that they do not recover the same back in case the action should eventually terminate in their favor.
It may not be improper, however, to state in conclusion that, under the circumstances appearing in this case, it will be incumbent upon appellants, in order to recover in this action, to prove by clear and satisfactory evidence that the stock held by A. H. Chambers and Robert Frost in the Light and Power Company is their separate property, and that the money borrowed from the respondent was not used for community purposes.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial in accordance with this opinion.
Scott, C. L, and Reavis, J., concur.
Dunbar, I., dissents.
Gordon, J., not sitting.