20 Wash. 636 | Wash. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Suit was commenced by appellant to foreclose a mortgage executed on the 26th day of Hovember, 1894, by the Puget Sound Loan, Trust & Ranking Company to appellant, to secure the payment of a certain promissory note for $8,000 of the same date. The complaint is an ordinary one in foreclosure. The banking company did not answer. Rennett, as receiver of the banking company, appeared, and filed an answer and cross complaint. The answer admitted the allegations of the complaint, with the exception that it denied the power and authority of the banking corporation to execute the mortgage, but in an affirmative defense alleged that the mortgage was executed to secure an antecedent indebtedness
Many exceptions have been taken by appellant to the findings of fact of the superior court in this suit. The record and evidence brought here are extensive, and a careful examination has been made of all the evidence in the case. It does not appear from the record that any other creditors purported to be represented by 1 he receiver here than those creditors who consented to the extension of time for the payment of their claims when the first receiver was discharged; but we assume that they were the same. The superior court found that the mortgage executed to secure the antecedent indebtedness of $8,000 “was not affirmatively brought home to Mr. White, whose claim was about $170, Markley, whose claim was about $100, and Mrs. G-rimmette, whose claim was about $2,000”; but upon the exception made to this finding by counsel for the appellant, and a review of the evidence, -
It is immaterial here to discuss to what extent the receiver, in 1894, at the hearing, when the court allowed the defendant bank to resume business, represented the general creditors, because, as stated, such creditors acquiesced in the conclusion there reached, and for a year raised no objection thereto. The case must be reversed, and it is remanded to the superior court, with direction to establish the priority of the appellant’s mortgage over all creditors claiming at the time the order was made in the superior court, in November, 1894.
Goedobt, O. J., and Duetbab and Audebs, JJ., concur.