12 Wash. 313 | Wash. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action in ejectment brought by Maria Owen and her husband, Neis Owen, against the St. Paul, Minneapolis and Manitoba Railway Com
Many points are discussed by appellant in this case which it seems t.o us are not pertinent to the case, but there are one or two main propositions upon which the cause must depend: first, was the respondent in any way bound by the decree of the court in the condemnation proceedings pleaded by appellant ? If the court in that case had jurisdiction of the subject matter and jurisdiction of these respondents, it cannot be denied that they are estopped from bringing this action, if it did not, then the respondents had a legal right to bring this action in ejectment, and under the testimony in this case they should prevail. It is conceded that no notice was directly given to respondents in the condemnation proceedings, and that they are not made parties to the action. The Us pendens in the proceedings was filed April 23, 1892, and the condemnation suit was tried May 26, 1892.
The testimony in this case shows that the respondents made a verbal agreement with Graves to purchase this lot in question, in the month of April, 1891,
The contention of appellant is that by reason of the filing of its notice of pendency of action in the condemnation proceedings it acquired a right in lot eleven prior to the claim of respondents upon an un-, recorded deed, and that the decree of appropriation subsequently obtained on June 4, 1892, related back to the time of the filing of the notice of the pendency of the action on April 23, 1892, so as to complete its title and give it priority over the unrecorded deed of respondents.
We do not think this contention can be sustained under the facts in this case, for, whatever may have been their rights under the statute in the case where no actual notice of the respondents’ interests existed, the record in this case overwhelmingly shows that appellant, the railroad company, through its authorized agents had actual notice of the title and claim of these respondents, and that being the case, appellant cannot rely upon the lack of constructive notice provided for by the statute, for where actual occupancy and visible possession is proven notice is presumed, and the parties in a case of this kind would require to be brought into court by a due process of law. This, outside of
Conceding that the testimony of witness Crook is absolutely true, it was the duty then of appellant, by. supplemental proceedings, to have made these respondents parties to the action, but under the testimony in this case the court had a right to conclude that appellant had notice of the ownership of respondents prior to the commencement of the condemnation proceedings. .
It is urged by appellant that respondents ought to be now estopped from the fact that respondent Neis Owen was in attendance at court at the trial of the railroad company with Graves, and that he gave testimony
We do not think that the court abused its discretion in allowing respondents to modify their complaint so as to show that the property was community property. This, under the circumstances of the case, was in furtherance of justice, and appellant was in no way injured by the change allowed. There was no attempt on the trial of the cause .to prove the allegations of fraud and collusion made in the answer, so that it appears to us upon an examination of the whole record that respondents entered into this agreement to purchase this lot in good faith; that they entered into possession of the same, and made valuable improvements upon it, and received title to the same be
Hoyt, C. J., and Scott, Anders and Gordon, JJ., concur.