88 Wash. 57 | Wash. | 1915
The respondent, Kate Johnson, in an action instituted in the superior court of King county, recovered a judgment against the appellant W. A. Morse, on a contract conceded to be his separate obligation. Later on she caused a writ of execution to be issued on the judgment and placed in the hands of the sheriff of King county for service. The sheriff levied the writ upon two several tracts
The tract adjudged to be the separate property of W. A. Morse consisted of lots 1, 2, and 3, in block 22, of H. L. Yesler’s 1st addition to the city of Seattle. The evidence shows that Morse acquired title to lot 3 thereof on November 8, 1900, paying at that time the purchase price in full; that he contracted to purchase lots 1 and 2 sometime in the year 1900, agreeing to pay for them the sum of $6,800; that on January 7, 1901, he obtained a deed to the lots, paying of the purchase price $4,300 from his own funds, and the remainder, $2,500, from money borrowed on the security of the property. He married his present wife, the appellant Josephine Morse, on June 17, 1902, something over a year and a half after he had acquired the legal title to the property last described.
From the foregoing facts, it is plain that the real property mentioned was the separate .property of W. A. Morse from the time of its acquisition by him up to the time of his marriage, and it is equally plain that the marriage did not in itself change its status in that respect. If, therefore, it has since become the community property of himself and his wife, it is because of the manner in which the parties have dealt with the property since their marriage. We said in the case of In re Deschamps’ Estate, 77 Wash. 514, 137 Pac. 1009, that the status of property is fixed at the time of its purchase,
It is our opinion that these facts do not justify us in holding that the community has any interest in the real property in question. Since it was originally the separate property of the husband, and since its status in this respect has not been changed by deed, or due process of law, the utmost interest the community could have therein would be some proportion thereof less than the whole. But this proportion is not definitely defined in the evidence. Indeed, as we have said, the evidence justifies the conclusion that the parties drew from the property and devoted to community uses a much greater sum than the community expended thereon. To establish a community interest of this nature in separate property, when the rights of third persons are involved, the evidence establishing the interest and the extent thereof must be clear and convincing. It is not so here.
After the court had made its findings and entered its judgment, the appellants moved for a new trial, basing their motion upon newly discovered evidence and insufficiency of the evidence to justify the judgment. The motion was accom
The judgment is affirmed.
Mourns, C. J., Ellis, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.