92 Wash. 180 | Wash. | 1916
This appeal is founded on the cross-complaint of a junior mortgagee, seeking to enforce a deficiency judgment against O. C. Moore as a subsequent grantee, who is alleged to have assumed the mortgage indebtedness. There was no contest over the foreclosure of the senior mortgage, and no deficiency judgment sought by the senior mortgagee against the subsequent grantees of the original mortgagor.
The International Mortgage Bank elected to declare the whole of the principal mortgage to be due by reason of default in payment of interest, and on July 14, 1914, filed its complaint in foreclosure, making parties defendant the mortgagors, Louis F. Hachez and wife, the junior mortgagee, W. H. Matthews, a.nd certain junior lien claimants. The senior and junior mortgagees entered into a stipulation by which they agreed to make the subsequent grantees, Shot-well and wife, Sprague and Moore, parties defendant, and the court, on October 15, 1914, made an order to that effect and
The cross-complaint alleged the execution of the two junior mortgages in favor of W. H. Matthews, one for the sum of $1,200, on which a balance of $30, with interest, is alleged to be unpaid, and one for $660, on which it is alleged that no payments have been made except interest up to December 30, 1913; that the mortgagee had elected to declare the whole amount due, under the terms of the mortgages; that Moore, as a subsequent grantee, assumed and agreed to pay the mortgages; and that Moore had paid all installments of principal and interest thereon up until November 28, 1913. The prayer of the cross-complaint was for foreclosure of the two junior mortgages, with attorney’s fees on each foreclosure, and for a deficiency judgment against Moore.
Moore, in his answer, admitted the conveyance of the property to him, but denied that he agreed to assume or pay the mortgages, and affirmatively alleged that it was distinctly understood and agreed between him and his grantor, at the time the property was conveyed to him, that he would not personally assume or obligate himself to pay such mortgages, and that any provision in said deed to the contrary was inserted by fraud or mistake, without consideration, and without his knowledge, consent, or approval; that he had agreed to purchase the equity only of his grantors, and that he had made payments on the principal and interest of the mortgages merely to protect such equity; that he did not see or come into possession of the deed to himself until after the same had been placed of record; and that he had transferred and disposed of all interest in the mortgaged premises long prior to the institution of the present suit. The
The deed to Moore was executed by the Shotwells, in Oregon, on September 28, 1911, and forwarded to the real estate firm of Chambers & Larson, in Spokane, by whom it was filed for record October 26, 1911, without the knowledge of Moore, with instructions to the county auditor to deliver it to Moore after the recordation had been completed. Moore testified that he did not know at the time that the deed was recorded that the assumption clause was in it, and did not discover it until after he had transferred the property some two years later; that he had told Shotwell that he would not assume the mortgages or obligate himself personally. The transfer was negotiated through the real estate firm of Chambers & Larson. Chambers and Larson both testify that Moore stated to them that he would not take the property if he had to assume the incumbrances upon it; that he was willing to purchase the equity, and would keep up the payments as long as he held the property, but did not want to be personally bound. Larson testified that this fact was made known to the grantors, and that they consented to make the deed on those terms, J. K. Shotwell, who acted for himself and wife, saying: “We don’t care whether he assumes it or not; that is all right with us.” There was no evidence contradicting the testimony of Moore, Chambers or Larson, and no explanation was offered as to how the assumption clause came to be inserted in the deed. It can be inferred, however, that it was copied from a preceding deed by the scrivener who drafted it. After receiving the deed, Moore paid the mortgage installments regularly falling due from October 25, 1911, until November 30, 1913, in which time he paid $900 of the principal sum of the $1,200 mortgage, together with accrued interest amounting to $107.80; and paid the accrued interest on the $660 mortgage during the same period, which amounted to something over $100.
The court found that Moore had assumed and agreed to pay the mortgages held by the cross-complainant, Matthews, and rendered judgment against Moore for any deficiency thereon. From this judgment, Moore appeals.
It is our opinion that the evidence does not justify the holding that Moore had assumed the mortgages. It is contrary to the positive testimony of Moore, Larson and Chambers, and is supported only by the fact that Moore for a period of two years had met the monthly installments of principal and interest falling due under the mortgages. But this fact, standing alone, is not sufficient to show an assumption of the mortgage indebtedness. In passing on this same question in Drury v. Hayden, 111 U. S 223, the court said:
“The payment of interest on the mortgage notes would naturally be made by Drury to prevent a foreclosure of the mortgage on his land, and cannot be held to be an affirmance of an agreement of which he had no actual knowledge. The clause containing the agreement being conclusively proved to have been inserted in the deed by mistake of the scrivener, without the knowledge and against the intention of the parties, a court of equity, upon a bill filed by Drury for the purpose, would have decreed a reformation of the deed by-striking out the clause.”
And in Elliott v. Sackett, 108 U. S. 132, the court says:
“The fact that Elliott made two payments of the interest on the incumbrance is not inconsistent with his not having assumed the payment of the incumbrance. As owner of the property subject to the incumbrance, and desirous of retaining it so long as there was any value in the equity of redemption, he would naturally pay the interest to save a foreclosure.”
To estop a grantee from showing that a clause assuming incumbrances was inserted in a deed by mistake, it must be shown that some party or privy to the instrument has acted thereon to his prejudice. Here there is no such showing. The
The judgment against appellant is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment of dismissal as to him.