46 Wash. 387 | Wash. | 1907
In the month of December, 1900, the plaintiff, Alice Heintz, entered into a contract with the Northern Pacific Railway Company for the purchase of fractional section 5, Tp. 20, N., R. 38 E., W. M., containing 208 and a fraction acres. Under the terms of this contract, the purchase price was to be paid in five annual installments of about $62 each. Three of these installments were paid by the plaintiff out of her separate funds, acquired by bequest from tier deceased father. On the 25th day of January, 1904;, she borrowed money on this land from the Holland Bank to pay the deferred payments, or balance due, and on that date
In the year 1902 the plaintiff entered into a further contract with one Kohl for the purchase of fractional section T in the same township and range. No payments have been made on the last-mentioned contract, except interest paid out of separate funds. On the 24th day of July, 1905, the defendant Gilson, as sheriff of Adams county, levied on all the above-described lands under and by virtue of an executions issued out of the superior court of Lincoln county on a certain judgment therein entered in an action wherein Charles B. Brown was plaintiff, and the plaintiff herein and John T. Heintz, her husband, were defendants, and gave notice that he would sell the same at public auction to satisfy the above-mentioned judgment and execution. John T. Heintz and the plaintiff, Alice Heintz, were husband and wife during all the times herein mentioned. The judgment sought to be enforced against the plaintiff was for a community debt, and the character of the land in controversy, whether community property or the separate property of the wife, is the only question presented on this appeal. The plaintiff had judgment below enjoining the execution sale, and from that judgment the defendants appeal.
The respondent has moved to dismiss the appeal for the reason that the appellant sheriff has no interest in the con
From the foregoing statement it will be seen that the property acquired from the railway company and the mortgage company was paid for in part by the separate funds of the wife, and in part by money borrowed on the property in which she had invested her separate funds. Under the rule announced by this court in Yesler v. Hochstettler, 4 Wash. 349, 30 Pac. 398, and reaffirmed on rehearing in Main v. Scholl, 20 Wash. 201, 54 Pac. 1125, the funds borrowed by the wife, even though borrowed on her separate property, or on property in which she had invested her separate funds, was community property, and to that extent at least the property in controversy was paid for with community funds and became community property. See, also, Schuyler v. Broughton, 70 Cal. 282, 11 Pac. 719; Heidenheimer Bros. v. McKeen, 63 Tex. 229.
In the states where community property laws prevail, the rule seems to be established that property purchased in part with community funds and in part with separate funds is community property to the extent and in the proportion that the consideration is furnished by the community, the spouse supplying the separate funds having a separate interest in the property in proportion to the amount of his or her investment. 21 Cyc. 1644; Schuyler v. Broughton, supra; Jackson v. Torrence, 83 Cal. 521, 23 Pac. 695; Northwestern etc. Bank v. Rauch, 7 Idaho 152, 61 Pac. 516; Love v. Robertson, 7 Tex. 6, 56 Am. Dec. 41; Braden v. Gose, 57 Tex. 37; Parker v. Coop, 60 Tex. 111; Goddard v. Reagan, 8 Tex. Civ. App. 272, 28 S. W. 352; Clardy v. Wilson, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 196, 58 S. W. 52.
A rule which permits married persons to commingle separate and community funds in the acquisition of property
Hadley, C. J., Mount, Dunbar, Crow, and Root, JJ., concur.