279 P. 599 | Wash. | 1929
Lead Opinion
The question in this case is whether certain real property in Yakima county was the community property of Edward Parker and Julia A. Parker, his wife, or the separate property of Mrs. Parker.
Edward Parker died testate April 16, 1926. In his will, he named his wife, Julia A. Parker, executrix, and Fred Parker and Dan H. Williams, executors. Williams declined to qualify. In due time, an inventory of the estate was filed, and thereafter Eliza Parker, a daughter of Edward Parker by a prior marriage, filed objections to the inventory, and petitioned that the executors be required to include therein as community property certain tracts of orchard land in Yakima county. The tracts of land are referred to as the Fruitvale place, Ditter Brothers' Orchard tracts, the McCoy place, the Joyce place and the Poole tract. The matter came on for hearing before the court commissioner, who made findings to the effect that all the property in controversy was purchased with the separate funds of Julia A. Parker and was her separate property. Eliza Parker then caused the matter to be taken before the superior court for review. The findings of the court commissioner were approved by the court, except as to the McCoy place and the Joyce place.
Each of these tracts the court held to be in part the separate property of Julia A. Parker and in part community property of Mr. and Mrs. Parker. Subsequent to the hearing before the court commissioner, Mrs. Parker died testate. She named Lillian L. Case executrix of her will. The executrix of the will intervened individually and as such executrix. From the judgment entered by the superior court determining that the McCoy place and the Joyce place were each in part community property, she appeals. Fred Parker, *394 the qualified executor named in the will of Edward Parker, did not appeal. Eliza Parker prosecuted a cross-appeal, claiming that all of the property in question was community property of Edward Parker and Julia A. Parker, his wife.
[1] At the time of the purchase of the McCoy place, a part of the purchase price was paid in cash out of the separate funds of Mrs. Parker. For the balance of the purchase price, Julia A. Parker and Edward Parker, her husband, signed a promissory note, which they secured by executing a mortgage upon the property. The same is true of the Joyce place. The appeal of Lillian L. Case presents the question as to whether any part of either of these tracts was community property. In Katterhagen v. Meister,
"Upon the merits of the controversy we think the learned trial court reached a wrong conclusion in holding that the property was the separate property of George Meister. He paid $1,600 upon the purchase price from his separate funds. To that extent the property was separate. The remainder, or $5,060, was paid by the community. When the husband and wife united in the promissory note, the debt created was a community debt, and the money borrowed upon the note belonged to the community. It is not material whether they borrowed the money of a third party and paid it to the vendor or gave their note direct to him as a part of the purchase price. The rule would be the same in either case. Nor does the fact that the husband later paid the note out of his separate funds change the situation. The status of the property was fixed at the time of the purchase. These views are supported by an unbroken current of decisions in this court. [Citing authorities.]"
The rule of that case was approved and restated in Rawlingsv. Heal,
"It is now equally well settled in this state that the status of the property is fixed at the time of the purchase, and that, if the husband and wife unite in a promissory note secured by a mortgage, payable direct to their grantor as a part of the purchase price, or, by the same means, borrow the money to be used in payment from a third party, in either such event the money borrowed becomes community property, and to that extent the purchased property is community property."
As already stated, at the time of the purchase of the McCoy and Joyce places, notes and mortgages were given as a part of the purchase price signed by the husband and wife, and under the rule of those cases the property to that extent became community property. This was the holding of the superior court, and it is here approved.
In the case of Dobbins v. Dexter Horton Co.,
In Guye v. Guye,
The case of In re Finn's Estate,
[2] Upon the cross-appeal of Eliza Parker, little *396
need be said. This appeal is based almost entirely upon the presumption that property acquired during coverture is community property. In re Brown's Estate,
The judgment upon both appeals will be affirmed.
PARKER, MILLARD, and FRENCH, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
Upon the principal appeal, I cannot view the facts, and, consequently the applicable law, as do the majority.
The facts here seem to me to overthrow the presumption as to the property being community. There is no evidence that the community furnished any part of the consideration paid for the two properties, or that they were purchased on the credit of the community, even though notes and mortgages were given, as mere expedients, as in Guye v. Guye,
In United States Fidelity Guaranty Co. v. Lee,
"She did not desire to pay cash, and credit was extended for her accommodation. . . . The appellant, however, had money available sufficient to make the payments, and intended to do so out of her separate funds without assistance from her husband,"
just as was intended and was done in this case. And in that case, we held the real estate to have been the separate property of the wife, even in the face of a creditor's attack.
To the facts in this case, the foregoing cases fit, as do, also, upon certain features: Dobbins v. Dexter Horton Co.,
I concur in the decision upon the cross-appeal. *398