25 Wash. 597 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The record in this case discloses about the following facts: That one Robert C. Oates and Sarah R.
Two questions are presented upon the appeal, as follows: (1) Could the court in the foreclosure proceedings try the question of title? and (2) Was Sarah F. Oates, having been made a party, and personally served, and having made default therein, bound by the findings and decree that her husband, Eobert C. Oates, was the sole and separate owner, and that she had no interest in said property ? This court, in California Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Cheney Electric Light, Telephone & Power Co., 12 Wash. 138 (40 Pac. 732), held that a claim of prior and paramount adverse title could not be litigated in a foreclosure suit. It was alleged in the complaint in foreclosure, “that at all times herein mentioned the said above described property was the sole and separate property of said defendant Eobert 0. Oates,” and “that defendant Sarah F. Oates has no interest in or to said described premises.” These allegations were for the sole purpose of determining that Eobert 0. Oates was the owner at the time the mortgage was given, and that Sarah F. Oates at said time had no interest in the property. They could have no other office. Under the authority of California Co. v. Cheney Co., supra, Sarah F. Oates was not a proper party to appear to litigate that question, because she could not be required to plead her paramount title in a foreclosure suit. Hot being a proper party for that purpose, and not being required to appear and set up her paramount title, it was in excess of jurisdiction for the court to determine the question of title upon her default. Mr. Wiltsie, in his work on Mortgage Foreclosure, at § 191, says:
*600 “Persons who own an interest in mortgaged premises paramount to the mortgage, are neither necessary nor proper parties to its foreclosure, for the reason that they did not acquire their rights under the mortgagor or the mortgagee, subsequent to the execution of the mortgage. Whether they are made parties or not, the decree in the action will not in any way affect their rights. Thus a widow, who did not sign a mortgage executed by her husband, should not be made a defendant to its foreclosure; and even if she is made a defendant, her rights will not be affected in any way by the decree. This is specially true if the complaint does not contain allegations setting forth her real rights in the property and asking to have them foreclosed; and even with such allegations in the complaint, it was held in one case that the judgment passing upon her rights and foreclosing them was erroneous and void.”
See, also, Jones, Mortgages, §§ 1439, 1440, 1445, and authorities there cited.
Appellants argue that because Sarah P. Oates signed the note for which the mortgage was given, and because she was the wife of the mortgagor in possession, she was a proper party for these reasons. This contention is no doubt correct, but it is only for these reasons, and for the purposes named, that she is a proper party. Where, under a statute like ours, a deficiency judgment may be had against the makers after the mortgaged property is exhausted, and where such judgment is demanded in the complaint, then she is a proper party for those purposes only. As was said in Bradley v. Parkhurst, 20 Kan. 462, 467:
“An action on a note and mortgage involves two things —first, an inquiry as to the amount due on the note; and in that, it is personal; and second, a proceeding to charge the real estate mortgaged with the payment of the amount found due; and in that respect it is in the nature of a proceeding in remP
See, also, Jones, Mortgages, § 1431.
When she failed to appear, she thereby, in effect, confessed that she was liable on the note personally, and that the separate interest of her husband in the property was subject to its payment, but she was not bound to appear in the cause, and litigate her paramount claim thereto. It is true, she might have appeared in the action, and voluntarily submitted the question of her paramount title for determination, and would, in that event, have been bound by the decision thereon; but, not having appeared, the court could adjudicate only those questions properly before it for determination, and she would be bound by the decree in so far as the court had jurisdiction to make it, and m> further. The question whether the mortgagor or some other person owned the mortgaged premises at the time the mortgage was given was not, as we have seen, proper to be determined in foreclosure.
We conclude, therefore, that Sarah F. Oates was not bound by the decree in so far as it determined that she was not the owner of the property, even though she was a proper party to the suit for other purposes. The judgment will be affirmed.
Reavis, O. J., and Fullerton, Anders, Hadley and White, JJ., concur.