74 Wash. 68 | Wash. | 1913
— On May 17, 1910, Roberge, Steele & Roberge entered into a contract for lathing a building, at Vancouver, B. C. For some reason, not now material, one member of the firm retired, and it was agreed that the two remaining members should complete the contract,, receiving therefor an additional sum of $1,000, or $11,700 for the work; that in all other respects the contract should stand as before; and that security should be given to respondent for performance of the work for the benefit of Raftery & Company. Thereafter defendants Callie L. Steele and Mary E. Steele executed a mortgage upon certain property in the city of Tacoma. The mortgage was conditioned as follows:
“Whereas, the said Callie L. Steele, William Roberge and Al Roberge have . . . entered into a written agreement as sub-contractors with Raftery & Co., wherein said subcontractors . . . are to do the lathing . . . according to the plans and specifications annexed. Now, therefore, it is agreed . . . that this instrument shall be . . . security . . . that the said William Roberge and Callie L. Steele will forthwith proceed to the due completion of said contract . . . It is also agreed that this document shall be taken as security mentioned in said agreement of the 21st day of March, 1911, . . . for all moneys that said Raftery & Co.
Roberge and Steele did not perform their contract, and Raftery & Company had to pay $1,081.31 in addition to the contract price to discharge incumbrances and pay debts contracted by Roberge and Steele. The plaintiff, who is trustee for Raftery & Company, began this action to foreclose the mortgage. From a decree in favor of plaintiff, the defendants have appealed.
It is first contended that Mrs. Steele was in no way bound to sign the mortgage which covered the home of the defendants Steele, and which would otherwise have been exempt; that she signed as a surety, and being now released because of certain alleged omissions on the part of the principal subcontractors, the mortgage has become void for the want of an obligation to'sustain it. If Mrs. Steele signed the mort-gage as a principal and not as a surety, it will be unnecessary to comment upon the evidence and the cases relied on to show a release, although in passing we will say that we have examined both the facts and the law, and are of the opinion that the defense of release cannot, in any event, be sustained.
Roberge and Steele were subcontractors, and engaged to do certain work for a stipulated price. They failed to meet the terms of their contract, and the firm is chargeable with the amount that Raftery paid for them. The primary test in this, as it has been in all of the later decisions of this court, is to ascertain the character of the debt. If the debt is a separate debt of the husband, the community would not be bound. If it is a debt incurred in the prosecution of a business or an enterprise out of which the community would have reaped a benefit, it is a community debt, and the husband and wife are principals in so far as their community property is concerned. Measured by this standard, we have no doubt that the obligation assumed by Mrs. Steele was direct
Since the decision of this court in Oregon Imp. Co. w. Sagmeister, 4 Wash. 710, 30 Pac. 1058, 19 L. R. A. 233, the holding that any business that the husband is engaged in is prima facie the business of the community and prosecuted or carried on for its benefit, has not been questioned or denied, and we do not find anything in this record that would overcome this presumption. Nevertheless many cases are cited to sustain the contention that the test of a wife’s liability is “whether she received in person or in benefit to her separate
It has been said in many cases that the separate property of the wife is not liable for a community debt, nor can a personal judgment be rendered against her. Philips & Co. v. Langlow, 55 Wash. 385, 104 Pac. 610; Anderson v. Burgoyne, 60 Wash. 511, 111 Pac. 777; White v. Ratliff, 61 Wash. 383, 112 Pac. 502. That question is not before us. We have here a community debt and a mortgage upon community property. We assume that it will need no citation of authority to sustain the proposition that the wife may voluntarily pledge community property or her separate property to secure such a debt, and that when so pledged a judgment may be rendered against her foreclosing her right, title, and interest in the property so pledged.
Finally, it is contended that there is no competent evidence to prove the debt. The defendants Steele agree in the mortgage that the affidavit of the auditor “shall be taken as final between the parties hereto.” The same contention was made in the case of Lazelle v. Empire State Surety Co., 58 Wash. 589, 109 Pac. 195. It was there said:
“As to the next assignment, the contract provided that, in case the owner should be compelled to take charge of the building and finish the contract, the cost should be audited and certified by the architects, and such audit and certificate should be conclusive upon the parties. Such stipulations are usual in contracts of this character, and the courts recognize the same binding force of the agreement made by the parties in this respect as in any other. Having stipulated that such certificate should be conclusive, it cannot now be said it was inadmissible or incompetent to prove the damage to the owner. Eldridge v. Fuhr, 59 Mo. App. 44; Norcross v. Wyman, 187 Mass. 25, 72 N. E. 347; Carlton v. Scoville, 144 N. Y. 691, 39 N. E. 394.”
Affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Mount, Gose, and Parker, JJ., concur.