54 Wash. 581 | Wash. | 1909
This action was commenced by America C. Bramel against Fred S. Ratliff, sheriff of Whitman county,
The sheriff and intervener each failed to deny any material allegation of the complaint, but pleaded affirmative matter only, and the only question before us is whether the answer, or the complaint in intervention, stated facts sufficient to constitute a defense. The pleadings of the two appellants being in substance the same, a consideration of the complaint in intervention will be sufficient. The respondent alleged that T. E. Bramel was her husband; that the appellant, William Vecans, had obtained a judgment against T. E. Bramel in the superior court of Asotin county; that he had caused a transcript thereof to be filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court of Whitman county; that an execution had been issued thereon, out of the latter court, which the sheriff had levied on land in Whitman county, respondent’s separate property; that respondent was not a party.to the action in which the judgment had been obtained in Asotin county; and that the sheriff was about to sell her separate property and cloud her title.
In his complaint in intervention, the appellant William Vecans in substance alleged, that on February 15, 1906, the respondent America C. Bramel and T. E. Bramel, her husband, had, by written contract, agreed to sell and convey to Henry Vecans and Otto H. Olson certain land in Whitman county, which was the vendors’ community property; that on April 21, 1906, Henry Vecans and Otto H. Olson commenced an action in the district court of the second judicial dis
It affirmatively appears, from the complaint in intervention, that the land described in the contract of sale, which was the subject-matter of the action in Idaho, was not the land involved in this action. The land here involved is alleged by respondent to be her separate property, and that allegation is not denied by either appellant. The Idaho judgment was entered against T: E. Bramel alone, in an action in which the demurrer of America C. Bramel had been sustained, and was obtained upon the theory that the land then under consideration was the separate property of T. E. Bramel. It has not been alleged, nor does it appear, that America C. Bramel had contracted any obligation or incurred any liabil
The respondent was entitled to an injunction in this action for another reason. The judgment upon which the execution was issued was rendered in the superior court of Asotin county, while the execution under which the sheriff was proceeding was issued out of the superior court of Whitman county. Any sale made under such an execution would not convey any interest in the land, but would only cast a cloud upon respondent’s title. Murray v. Briggs, 29 Wash. 245, 69 Pac. 765; Humphries v. Sorenson, 33 Wash. 563, 74 Pac. 690.
The judgment is affirmed.