72 Wash. 255 | Wash. | 1913
The appellant, who was the plaintiff below, brought this action in her maiden name, to set aside a deed conveying certain real property to the defendant corporation. A judgment dismissing the action without prejudice was entered upon the pleadings, on the ground that the action had been prematurely commenced, and that, at the time of its commencement, no cause of action existed in her favor.
The action was commenced in November, 1911. It is alleged in the original complaint that the appellant and the respondent R. B. Parks were husband and wife, at all times mentioned in the complaint until the 22d day of April, 1911; that in 1906 the respondent, her then husband acting for the community, entered into a contract for the purchase of the land in controversy; that the payments were made from community funds conformably to the requirements of the contract, so that the community became entitled to a conveyance of the property on the 12th day of February, 1911; that the respondent husband, intending to cheat and defraud the ap
In June, 1912, the appellant filed a supplemental complaint, wherein she alleged that, in the divorce action in the state of California wherein her husband was the plaintiff and she was the defendant, it was adjudged, on or about the 27th day of April, 1911, that the husband had established grounds for the dissolution of the marriage bonds, and that “an interlocutory decree” was entered directing a final judgment of divorce, and that thereafter, and on or about the 3d day of May, 1912, a final judgment was duly entered in accordance with the provisions of the interlocutory decree. She prayed relief as in the original complaint.
The respondents, in separate answers, after denying certain averments of the complaint, set forth portions of both the interlocutory and final decrees in the divorce action vn haec verba. The former recites that the respondent husband, the plaintiff therein, “is entitled to an interlocutory decree” adjudging that he has established grounds for the dissolution of the marriage bonds, subject to the provisions of the statute, “and that upon the expiration of one year from the entry of this decree, final judgment granting said decree and restoring said parties to the status of single persons be en
“Wherefore, it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed and this court does hereby order, adjudge and decree that the marriage between said plaintiff and said defendant be and the same is hereby dissolved and the said parties are and each of them is freed and absolutely released from the bonds of matrimony and all obligations thereof and restored to the status of single persons; and it is further ordered that said defendant is permitted to resume her maiden name to wit, Mabelle A. Keeler.”
The affirmative answers set forth the provisions of the statutes of the state of California, defining the effect of an interlocutory decree in divorce actions and directing the time when the final decree may be entered. It is then alleged that the statutes pleaded have been construed by the court of last resort in the state of California to mean that the marriage relation is not dissolved by the entry of the interlocutory decree, but that it is only dissolved when the final decree has been entered; that at the time this action was commenced, in November, 1911, the marriage relation had not been dissolved; that no cause of action had accrued in favor of the appellant, and that her action “was prematurely commenced.” The appellant replied, admitting that at the time of the commencement of the action the bonds of matrimony existing between herself and her husband had not been dissolved.
The motion for a judgment dismissing the action upon the pleadings was properly sustained. The pleadings show that the action was premature. A state of facts that had not ripened into a cause of action when the suit was commenced cannot be supplemented by a class of facts that came into being later so as to make a cause of action. In other words, it is not allowable in a supplemental complaint to set up a class of facts which are at complete variance with and antagonistic to the facts which existed when the action was commenced. The original complaint is based upon a state of facts which did not then exist. The office of a supplemental
“To entitle the plaintiff to file a supplemental bill, and thereby to obtain the benefit of the former proceedings, it must be in respect to the same title, in the same person, as stated in the original bill. Thus, if a person should file an original bill,.as heir-at-law of the mortgagor, to redeem; and it should turn out, upon an issue and hearing of the cause, that he is not the heir-at-law, and he afterwards purchases the title of the true heir-at-law, he cannot file a supplemental bill to have the benefit of the former proceedings; for he claims by a different title from that asserted in the original bill. His true course would be to file an original bill.” Story, Equity Pleadings (10th ed.), § 339.
In Gunby v. Ingram, 57 Wash. 97, 106 Pac. 495, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 232, an action was commenced to foreclose a mortgage for an alleged default in the payment of interest, which by the terms of the note matured the whole debt. Thereafter a supplemental complaint was filed, in which it was alleged that the principal debt had matured and was unpaid. After holding that there had been a valid tender of the interest, the court said:
“Of course, if the first action was premature, which we are constrained to hold, it is manifest that it could not be the basis for the supplemental complaint which was filed in the case.”
See, to the same effect: Otto v. Griffin, 54 Wash. 506, 103 Pac. 789; Commercial Bank of Tacoma v. Hart, 10 Wash. 303, 38 Pac. 1114; Augir v. Foresman, 23 Wash. 595, 63 Pac. 201; Davis v. Erickson, 3 Wash. 654, 29 Pac. 86; Lawrence v. Pederson, 34 Wash. 1, 74 Pac. 1011; Andrews v. Andrews, 3 Wash. Ter. 286, 14 Pac. 68; Maynard v. Green, 30 Fed. 643.
In Augir v. Foresman a writ of attachment was sued out upon a note which had not then matured, conformably to the provisions of the statute permitting the issuance of the writ
“The office of a supplemental complaint is merely to enlarge or change the kind of relief to which a party may be entitled upon a cause of action existing at the time of the commencement of the suit.”
In Andrews v. Andrews, the wife sought to vacate a judgment entered against her husband by confession, on the ground that the indebtedness upon which the judgment was confessed was fictitious, and to set aside a sale of real estate upon an execution issued upon the judgment, alleging that the real estate was community property. After the cause was at issue, she asked leave to file a supplemental complaint showing her divorce from her husband, a judgment against him and her purchase of his interest in the community real estate at an execution sale under her judgment, alleging that her judgment became a lien prior to the time the judgment lien of the other defendant attached. This was refused, and her action was dismissed. In affirming the judgment,'it was held that the proposed supplemental complaint “would have effected a revolution in the issues to be determined, and would have amounted to a substitution of a new cause of action.”
The appellant argues, that the contract for the purchase of the land vested the equitable title in the community; that under the statute, a married woman may maintain an action against her husband or any other person for the protection of her property rights, both separate and community, where the requisite facts exist; and that, upon the entry of a decree of divorce when no disposition is made of. the community property, the former members of the community hold title to the community property as tenants in common. The vice of the argument lies in the fact that the appellant did not commence
The judgment is affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Parker, Chadwick, and Mount, JJ., concur.