15 Wash. 393 | Wash. | 1896
Plaintiff and appellant loaned to one F. L. Stinson the sum of $3,000 and took as collateral security therefor his promissory note for $3,500, payable to Stinson and signed by Stinson and Parke and L. O. Gilman. This action was brought on the collateral note to collect a judgment against Parke only. Fannie M. Parke, wife of the defendant,’ filed a complaint in intervention in which she alleged that she and defendant were the owners of community real property in King county, Washington; that the note sued on was a separate debt of the defendant and not a community debt, and that a judgment rendered thereon against her husband, the defendant, would be a cloud upon the community land. Her prayer was that any judgment that should be rendered against him should adjudge that the debt was not a community debt and that it should not be satisfied out of the community property. To this complaint in intervention the plaintiff demurred on the ground that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a ground for intervention. The court overruled the demurrer. At the close of the evidence the court withdrew the case from the consideration of the jury and directed a judgment to be entered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant, and further directed that the judgment should adjudge that the debt was a separate debt of defendant, and that it was not to be satisfied out of the community property.' Judgment was entered accordingly and an appeal was taken from so much of the decree as adjudged that the debt was not a community debt, and that it should not be satisfied out of the community property.
It is urged by the appellant that the wife showed no right to intervene because she had no interest in the
“ This leaves for consideration only the question of practice as to the time when this prima facie presumption can properly be made conclusive. That the one having such a claim may at some time have this prima facie presumption made conclusive so evidently results from well-settled rules of practice that it will not be questioned; and if this is true, there would seem to be no good reason why this should not be done at the earliest possible moment, when the necessary parties can be brought before the court for that purpose.”
And again :
“ It necessarily follows that the plaintiff is entitled to have his judgment show upon its face the fact that it is for a community debt.”
The other proposition urged by the appellant raises the question whether the community real property is liable for the satisfaction of a judgment rendered upon an accommodation paper of the husband, negotiable in form, in favor of a bona fide holder who acquired the paper before maturity without notice of its accommodation character. It is urged by the appellant that in McDonough v. Craig, supra, and Bierer v. Blurock, 9 Wash. 63 (36 Pac. 975), it was held that all business which the husband transacts is presumed to be community business; that all contracts and obligations entered into by the husband are presumed to be contracts and obligations of the community. This is true, but the holding only went to the extent of a presumption, and the case of McDonough v. Craig was to the effect that this presumption could be overturned by testimony, and that the fact that the debt contracted was not for the benefit of the community would relieve the community real estate from liability. A lucid and strong argument is made by the appellant in his brief against the policy of this law, but it is an argument which should be
From the record, however, we can easily determine that no good purpose would be subserved in reversing the case and ordering a new trial, and the case will therefore be remitted with instructions to the lower court to modify its judgment in the manner above indicated, and as so modified it will be affirmed, the appellant to obtain costs of his appeal in this court.
Hoyt, C. J., and Scott, J., concur.
Anders, J., concurs in the result.