69 Wash. 643 | Wash. | 1912
On January 5, 1903, Thomas H. Ellis and Sarah C. Ellis, his wife, the owners of three hundred and twenty acres of land in Whitman county, their community property, mortgaged the same to Ladd & Bush, to secure their note for $4,600. Sarah C. Ellis died intestate on or about September 17, 1906, leaving surviving her Thomas H. Ellis, her husband, and certain children of herself and husband, hereinafter mentioned. On March 4, 1908, Ladd & Bush commenced an action in the superior court of Whitman county to foreclose the mortgage. A decree was entered, and on June 13, 1908, the land was sold by the sheriff of Whitman county to J. M. Mohney, the plaintiff herein. Subsequent to the foreclosure, Thomas H. Ellis leased the land to R. W. Hall, who raised a crop of wheat thereon. On June 19, 1909, a sheriff’s deed was executed and delivered to Mohney, and on August 11, 1909, he commenced this action against Thomas H. Ellis and R. W. Hall, to recover possession and for other relief.
On October 22,1909, Lon L. Ellis, of the age of majority, son of Thomas H. Ellis and Sarah C. Ellis, deceased, and brother of Elmer T. Ellis, Elga J. Ellis, Dora A. Ellis, and Claude H. Ellis, all of whom were minor children and heirs at law of the deceased, petitioned the court to appoint a guardian ad litem for the minor heirs, alleging that he and they claimed an interest in the real estate. The petition was granted, the guardian ad litem was appointed, and with leave of court Lon L. Ellis and the minor heirs by their guardian ad litem filed their complaint in intervention. The defendant Thomas H. Ellis in his answer, and interveners in their complaint in intervention, pleaded their interest in the real
Most of the assignments of error involve the contention that the facts found by the trial court are not supported by the evidence. We have carefully examined the evidence and conclude the findings must be sustained. While in many instances these findings rest upon the oral evidence of J. H. Ellis, as against appellant’s testimony, yet we conclude the preponderance is in favor of the findings made, as the statements of J. H. Ellis harmonize more perfectly with undisputed facts and circumstances, and are corroborated by other witnesses. The trial judge saw the witnesses, observed their demeanor, passed upon their credibility, and found in favor of the respondents. From his findings, which must be sustained, the following facts appear, in addition to the foreclosure proceedings above stated: That about six weeks before the year of redemption had expired, to wit, on or about May 1, 1909, J. H. Ellis, acting for Thomas H. Ellis and the interveners, asked appellant if he would accept a mortgage on the land for the sum necessary to redeem; that appellant replied he would require the money; that J. H. Ellis then informed appellant he could obtain the money to redeem, but that he would have to raise it by mortgage upon the land; that as there were minor heirs who could not execute a mortgage, it would be necessary for him to acquire the title, execute the mortgage, and then convey to Thomas H. Ellis and the heirs; that for such purpose it would be necessary that appellant assign the certificate of sale and make a quitclaim
Upon these facts, we fail to understand how any court of equity could enter a decree other than the one of which appellant now complains. The appellant relies on the fact that no redemption was made in the manner or within the time provided by statute, that the sheriff’s deed was issued, and that the respondents have lost all their rights. He testified that on June 12, 1909, when the first tender was made, he believed that J. H. Ellis, who made the tender, was defrauding the minor heirs; that, if they were not to have the land, he thought he might as well have it himself; that he then told J. H. Ellis to pay the money to the sheriff to whom he would then surrender his certificate of sale. There was not a shadow of proof nor a syllable of evidence, outside of appellant’s suspicions stated by himself, which tended to show or even suggest that J. H. Ellis intended to defraud the minor heirs. Appellant claims he wanted' to protect the minor heirs, yet he made no effort to do so by any practical method or procedure, nor did he attempt to find a trustee whom he could trust. On the contrary, he asserted and still asserts his right to hold land worth $20,000 which but for his acts, the respondents might otherwise have arranged to redeem for about $8,000. When on June 12, 1909, appellant directed J. H. Ellis to pay his borrowed money to the sheriff, he well knew that J. H. Ellis had perfected his plans in the belief that he was to obtain the title, upon which he could by mortgage obtain funds to repay the money he had temporarily borrowed from the bank before he conveyed the title to the respondents. He also knew that, if the money J. H. Ellis had borrowed from the bank should be paid to the sheriff, and appellant should surrender to the sheriff the certificate of sale, and should at the same time waive the statutory notice to redeem, which he did not agree to do, the title would pass
Citing §§ 594, 595, and 599, Rem. & Bal. Code, appellant argues that the only right a judgment debtor has remaining after an execution sale is the statutory right of redemption, which must be asserted in the exact manner and within the limit of time prescribed by the statute. He further insists that the statutory method to be available must be strictly pursued. Even though no criticism be made on this contention, it will not avail appellant. Respondents’ failure to redeem within the statutory period, or by exact compliance with the statutory method, resulted from appellant’s acts which misled them into the belief that he would cause the title to vest in J. H. Ellis so that he might mortgage the land, raise the redemption money advanced by him, and then in turn permit respondents to redeem by accepting the title subject to the mortgage lien, for the satisfaction of which the land then worth $20,000 would have been primarily liable and ample security. In other words appellant, with the assistance of J. H. Ellis who was acting for respondents, agreed upon a procedure for redemption other than that provided by the statute, and then refused to perform his agreement when it was too late for respondents to perfect other arrangements or give the statutory notice. Agreements to extend the time for redemption have been repeatedly enforced by courts of equity, and we see no reason why appellant’s agreement to change the form of procedure for redemption should not be likewise enforced.
“So, if any agreement is entered into subsequently to the sale, though by parol, the substance of which is that the pur
In Newman v. Locke, 66 Mich. 27, 36 N. W. 166, the court, in holding that the time for redemption should be extended, said:
“The equity of redemption was of considerable value, and a relinquishment of it would have been too great a sacrifice to make, unless it was absolutely hopeless to save it. Considering all the testimony, it has convinced me that complainant, from the acts and conversation of defendants, was led to giving up efforts' to get money in other quarters, and to rest on the assurance that his interests were secure from further peril.”
In the recent case of Murphy v. Teutsch (N. D.), 132 N. W. 435, the supreme court of North Dakota, citing authorities, stated the equitable rule, saying:
“The power of courts of equity to give relief in certain class of cases and permit a redemption of real estate sold under execution after the statutory period of redemption has expired has been generally recognized, and such power has been exercised when a proper state of facts required it. See Prondzinski v. Garbutt, 8 N. D. 191, 77 N. W. 1012; Laing v. McKee, 13 Mich. 124, 87 Am. Dec. 738; Wilson v. Eggleston, 27 Mich. 257; Graffman v. Burgess, 117 U. S. 180, 6 Sup. Ct. 686, 29 L. Ed. 839; Schroeder v. Young, 161 U. S. 334, 16 Sup. Ct. 512, 40 L. Ed. 721; Hart v. Seymour, 147 Ill. 598, 35 N. E. 246. Such power has been exercised by courts of equity most frequently upon a sufficient showing of either fraud, accident or justifiable mistake.”
The judgment is affirmed'.
Dunbae, C. J., Pabkee, and Gose, JJ., concur.