254 P. 464 | Wash. | 1927
The plaintiff brought this action to foreclose a real estate mortgage. The defendants E.J. Collins and wife resisted the action, claiming that they had a mortgage covering the same property which was prior. The cause was tried to the court without a jury and resulted in findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment sustaining the prior right of the plaintiff's mortgage and ordering a foreclosure *25 thereof. From this judgment Collins and wife appeal.
The facts are these: The respondent was a corporation engaged in the banking business in the state of Oregon. Appellants owned a ranch in Clark county, Washington. Soren Peterson and wife owned property in South Bend. Thompson, Swan and Lee were engaged in the real estate business in the city of Vancouver. On the 9th day of June, 1924, appellants exchanged the Clark county farm for the South Bend property owned by Peterson and wife. To cover the difference in the value of the respective properties Peterson and wife gave to appellants a mortgage upon the ranch for the sum of four thousand one hundred dollars. On the same day they gave to Thompson, Swan and Lee a mortgage for one thousand one hundred twenty-five dollars. There was a two thousand five hundred dollar mortgage upon the property which was prior to either of these mentioned, but that mortgage is not involved in this proceeding. The mortgage to Thompson, Swan and Lee was filed for record in the auditor's office of Clark county at eight o'clock a.m. on the 10th day of June, 1924. The appellants' mortgage was filed for record on the day following or the 11th day of June at 8 a.m. The appellants claim that it was agreed that their mortgage should be second only to the two thousand five hundred dollar mortgage that was on the property at the time of the exchange and that it should be superior to any other mortgage. On July 10, 1924, Thompson, Swan and Lee sold and transferred their mortgage to Estella McGrail. On June 1, 1925, Mrs. McGrail sold and transferred this mortgage to the respondent and received full value therefor. Before purchasing the mortgage the respondent caused its attorney to examine the record and it was ascertained from this examination *26 that the Thompson, Swan and Lee mortgage was filed prior to that of the appellants.
The principal question in the case is whether, when the attorney examined the record and ascertained that the mortgages were dated on the same day but the appellants' mortgage filed for record one day subsequent, he was required to make inquiry as to whether there was any agreement at the time the mortgages were executed as to which should have priority. Before considering this question two preliminary questions will be disposed of.
[1] The appellants claim that the action should fail because there was no proof of the corporate existence of the respondent. The complaint alleged that it was a corporation, and this was denied by the answer. The trial court found that the respondent was a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the state of Oregon and this finding was not excepted to. There being no exceptions the findings of the trial court established the fact for the record upon appeal. Hruby v. Lonseth,
[2] The appellants also claim that there was no proof that the respondent had paid its annual license fee last due as required by Rem. Comp Stat., § 3842 [P.C. § 4647]. The respondent being a foreign corporation and not engaged in business in this state was not required to comply with this section of the statute in order to maintain its action. Port Blakely Mill Co. v.Springfield F. M. Ins. Co.,
[3] Returning now to the question upon the merits it did not appear upon the face of the Thompson, Swan and Lee mortgage that it was to be junior to the mortgage *27
of the appellants. Neither did it appear on the face of the appellants' mortgage that it was to be prior to that given Thompson, Swan and Lee. There was nothing on the face of either mortgage that would indicate or hint at any agreement or understanding as to which mortgage should have priority. InWeldfelt v. Hart,
"When a deed is inspected, the person making the inspection is charged with notice of only those facts which the contents of the deed reasonably import, and he should not be charged with constructive notice unless the contents of the deed are such as would naturally necessitate a suspicion in the mind of a reasonably prudent man and result in inquiry."
There was nothing on the face of the mortgages in question which would naturally cause a suspicion to the mind of a reasonably prudent man of the necessity of making inquiry as to what understanding or agreement there may have been, if any, at the time the mortgages were executed.
Something is said in the briefs relative to the claim of the appellants that their mortgage was for purchase money or what amounted to the same thing. The Thompson, Swan and Lee mortgage being filed for record first, and the respondent having acquired it without knowledge or notice as to any outside agreement, is prior and superior even though the appellants' be a purchase money mortgage. Thompson on Real Property, vol. 5, § 4142;Wakefield v. Fish,
The judgment will be affirmed.
MACKINTOSH, C.J., MITCHELL, FRENCH, and FULLERTON, JJ., concur. *28