247 P. 1013 | Wash. | 1926
On November 7, 1899, James L. Mills and Marie L. Mills, husband and wife, executed *2 a note due November 7, 1904, for the sum of $3,500, payable to Phoebe J. Catlin, with interest at ten per cent payable annually. To secure this note, a mortgage was made by the husband and wife on their community property, and the debt was a community obligation. On February 22, 1922, Marie L. Mills died, and James L. Mills died on March 24, 1924. The respondent, John Catlin, became the owner and holder of the note and mortgage, and in July, 1925, began this suit to recover the balance due on the note and to foreclose the mortgage security. The action was brought against the appellants, who are the children and sole beneficiaries under the wills of Marie L. Mills and James L. Mills. In the complaint, in addition to the amount due on the note, there was sought to be recovered payments made by the respondent of delinquent taxes upon the mortgaged land. After judgment in favor of the respondents, this appeal was taken, which presents, as the first question to be determined, the right of the respondent to recover for taxes paid by him as mortgagee, even though the mortgage obligation might itself have been extinguished by the statute of limitations.
[1] Under the law, a mortgagee, who pays taxes to protect mortgaged property, is subrogated to the liens of the county and state upon such property, and those liens not being subject to the operation of the statute of limitations, the mortgagee is entitled to recover tax payments, even though the mortgage may be no longer enforcible. In Childs v. Smith,
The question is, however, whether these payments, having been made by James L. Mills, had any effect in keeping alive the obligation against the community. The appellants take the position that the payments made by the husband, after the statute had once run against the note, could only result in continuing the obligation against him individually, and would not have any effect as against the community. The general rule is relied on that, where there are joint debtors on an obligation, a payment, after the statute has run, by one of the joint debtors binds him only and starts the statute anew as to him only. This rule has found its last statement by this court in Farmers MechanicsBank v. San Poil Consol. Co.,
"So, that, generally speaking, the rule in this state is that a payment made by one of two or more joint and several makers of a promissory note will start anew the running of the statute of limitations only as to the person making the payment. But circumstances may arise where, although payment was made by one co-maker, the intention was that it should be made for and its effects be binding upon the other makers. So that the rule adopted by this and many other states is that a payment made by one joint debtor shall affect the statute of limitations only as to him, unless such payment was `authorized or ratified' by the other maker."
But this rule, as is noted in this quotation, bears the qualification that, if the payment was "authorized or ratified" by the other joint maker, the statute then begins to run anew as to both makers, where one has made the payment after the statute has run. The question then becomes, whether a payment by the husband on a community note, after the statutory period of limitations has run, revives the note as against the community. Under our law (Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 6892, 6893) [P.C. §§ 1433, 1434], the husband has the management and control of the community personal property and of the community real property, except that he cannot sell, convey or encumber real property without the wife joining him. He is the community agent. Schrammv. Steele,
Some justification for the contrary view is discoverable in the early case in this court of Stubblefield v. McAuliff,
The judgment of the trial court is correct and is affirmed.
TOLMAN, C.J., PARKER, MITCHELL, and ASKREN, JJ., concur. *6