14 Wash. 16 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The first error complained of by the appellant is the refusal of the lower court to sustain his objection to the introduction of testimony on account of the defective complaint, for the alleged reason that there was no allegation in the complaint which would show that the property in controversy was the separate property of the respondent. The allegation of the complaint is that the plaintiff is the owner and that the property is her sole and separate property. This, it is contended by the appellant, is a conclusion of law, and is not an allegation of the existence of one
In this case the record shows that the respondent, a married woman, had left her by her mother’s will a certain amount of money; that during the time her husband was engaged in fhe mercantile business in Seattle she invested this money by his advice in the land in question, the deed to which was made out in his name and so recorded. During the time the record title remained in the husband, he contracted certain debts which he was unable to pay, and closed up his mercantile business. After the debts were incurred, and about six months prior to the commencement of the suit to collect the same, the husband deeded the property to his wife (respondent here) so that the question is, is the wife estopped from claiming land, the record title of which was in her husband at the time he contracted the debts which are sought to be collected from the proceeds of the land? This is a question that has never been decided by this court.
The judgment will be affirmed.