13 Wash. 298 | Wash. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action for damages for breach of a covenant of warranty contained in a deed made by the appellants M. A. Schwab and Franziska Schwab to Angus McAuley, conveying certain real estate, which was afterwards by said McAuley by warranty deed conveyed to the plaintiff. After a demurrer to the complaint had been interposed and overruled, an answer was put in by the appellants which was replied to by the plaintiff. Upon the issues thus made, the cause went to trial before the court without a jury, and findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and filed, and thereupon judgment in favor of the plaintiff was rendered, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
From the record it is not made to appear that there were any exceptions to the findings of fact, and the result under the rule established by numerous decisions of this court ist that such findings must be taken to be true, and, if they are sufficient to support the judgment rendered, it will not be reversed by reason of the fact that the evidence is not sufficient to
1. That there was another action pending between the same parties and as to the same subject matter.
2. Misjoinder of parties defendant.
3. That the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
There was nothing upon the face of the complaint which in any way indicated that there was another action pending as to the same subject matter between the same or any other parties, and since a demurrer can only reach defects which appear upon the face of the complaint, this ground of demurrer was without any foundation. If there was a misjoinder of parties defendant, that fact furnishes no ground for the reversal of the judgment for the reason that the cause was dismissed as to the defendant which it was claimed had been improperly joined with the appellants. The reason for claiming that the complaint did not state a cause of action, as we gather it from appellant’s brief, was that the covenant contained in the deed was one only for quiet enjoyment, and that the breach shown in the complaint was the existence of an encumbrance upon the property.
The facts alleged in the complaint were that the appellants before making the deed in which the covenant was contained executed a mortgage to one William S. Ladd, that said mortgage had been foreclosed in an action to which the appellants were par
The judgment must be affirmed.
Anders, Scott and Gordon, JJ., concur.
Dunbar, J., concurs in the result.