83 Wash. 666 | Wash. | 1915
This is an action to quiet title, or in the alternative to rescind a sale of land and obtain other equitable relief. For some years prior to 1905, the defendant Alfred C. McNeley and one M. Jennie McNeley were husband and wife, and the record owners of twenty acres of land, in Spokane county, admitted to be their community property. They also held an unrecorded contract to purchase forty acres of adjoining land from W. A. Wright and wife, on which partial payments of purchase money were made during the lifetime of M. Jennie McNeley. On August 10, 1905, M. Jennie McNeley died intestate, leaving three minor children as her heirs at law. Two of these minor children, Harold J. Mc-Neley and William J. McNeley, are defendants herein. The third minor child died intestate on October 6, 1906. After the death of M. Jennie McNeley, the defendant Alfred C. Mc-Neley was appointed and qualified as administrator of her estate. In the inventory which he filed he included the twenty-acre tract to which they held title, but did not include the forty-acre tract upon which they held a contract of purchase. Later Alfred C. McNeley married the defendant Minnie McNeley, his present wife. The estate of M. Jennie McNeley, deceased, was closed, and the defendant Alfred C. McNeley was appointed and qualified as guardian of the person and estate of his surviving minor children. After the death of M. Jennie McNeley, Alfred C. McNeley completed payments to Wright and wife on the forty-acre tract, and took a deed therefor in which he was named as grantee. Later he and his present wife contracted to sell the forty-acre tract and the twenty-acre tract to the plaintiffs Alex. Battyany and Steve Battyany, for the total consideration of $3,900. Judicial proceedings were instituted which authorized Alfred C. McNeley, as guardian of the minor heirs, to sell their interest in and to the twenty-acre tract, and it was included in the sale to Alex, and Steve Battyany. Later deeds were delivered to plaintiffs, although there is some dispute as to whether they intended to accept them or approve
At the time plaintiffs purchased the land, they had neither knowledge nor notice of the unrecorded contract of sale running from W. A. Wright and wife to Alfred C. McNeley and M. Jennie McNeley, but had knowledge of the recorded deed which had been executed and delivered to Alfred C. McNeley, a widower. Later plaintiffs learned that the minors and relatives of their deceased mother were claiming the forty-acre tract had been the community property of Alfred C. McNeley and M. Jennie McNeley, and that the minors each claimed a one-sixth interest therein. When plaintiffs, who had made valuable improvements on the land, learned of these claims, they demanded of Alfred C. McNeley that he take the proper and necessary steps to perfect their title. This he refused to do. Thereupon they commenced this action against Alfred C. McNeley, Minnie McNeley, his wife, and Harold J. McNeley and William J. McNeley, minors, and Alfred J. McNeley as their guardian, to quiet title or obtain alternative equitable relief. They pleaded substantially the facts above stated and asked, in the event their title could not be quieted, that their contract of purchase be rescinded; that they be given judgment for the purchase money they had paid and for the value of the permanent improvements they had made; that these sums be made a lien on the land, and that their notes and mortgages be canceled and returned to them.
The record shows that, when plaintiffs learned of the cloud on their title, they declined to pay interest on their notes and mortgages until their title could be quieted. The defendant Alfred C. McNeley, individually and as guardian for the
The principal issue tried was whether the forty-acre tract was the community property of Alfred C. McNeley and his deceased wife. During the trial, the plaintiffs announced their willingness to retain the land if their title could be quieted. To this, the guardian ad litem does not seem to have taken any exception, provided the interests of his wards could be so protected that they would receive their share of the purchase price for which the forty-acre tract had been sold.
After hearing the evidence, the trial judge found and decreed, that the forty-acre tract was community property; that the sale to plaintiffs had been made for a fair and valuable consideration; that plaintiffs were willing to retain the land; that the interests of the minors in the purchase price which plaintiffs had agreed to pay was $975; that to secure this sum, that proportion of the unpaid purchase money mortgages should be decreed and paid to them; that the plaintiffs were justified in failing to pay interest until their title was quieted; that the mortgages should not be foreclosed; that the guardian ad litem should be authorized to make an application to the superior court to increase the bond of Alfred C. McNeley as guardian of the minors; that a fee of $100 should be paid to the guardian ad litem, the
The controlling issue before us is whether the forty-acre tract was the community property of Alfred C. McNeley and M. Jennie McNeley, his former wife. The appellants have filed a brief in which no assignments of error are made. Their arguments, however, indicate their contention that the forty-acre tract was the separate property of the appellant Alfred C. McNeley, that he acquired title thereto after the death of his former wife, that the payments made prior to her death were made by him from his separate funds, that he conveyed good title to the respondents, and that the minors had no interest in the forty-acre tract.
The respondents have filed no brief, nor have we had the benefit of any oral argument. There is an abstract which has not been helpful, and we have examined the statement of facts. This examination shows that a portion of the evidence has been omitted from the statement, and that certain exhibits which should be attached are not before us. However, there is sufficient before us to show beyond question that the evidence on the issue whether the forty-acre tract was community property was conflicting. The original Wright contract, which is in the record, ran to Alfred C. Mc-Neley and M. Jennie McNeley, as grantees. While this fact may not be controlling, it indicates the intention and under
On the record before us, we conclude the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Morris, C. J., Mount, Fullerton, and Parker, JJ., concur.