73 Wash. 78 | Wash. | 1913
This action was commenced by Annie B. Phillips', Charles G. Phillips, Jr., and Josephine R. Ker, heirs at law of Charles G. Phillips, deceased, against Louise A. Tompson and other defendants, to quiet title to eighty acres of land in King county, and redeem the same from a mortgage lien. A demurrer to their third amended complaint
The single question presented is whether the third amended complaint states a cause of action. It is voluminous; details at length judicial proceedings hereinafter mentioned, and in substance states the following facts. On April 21, 1891, one Annie M. Phillips, a widow, now deceased, became the owner in fee simple of the eighty acres of land in the third amended complaint described, which she mortgaged to respondent Louise A. Tompson. On October 15, 1900, Annie M. Phillips died intestate, leaving Charles G. Phillips, a son, who resided in the state of Ohio, as her only heir at law. On October 1, 1904, Louise A. Tompson commenced cause number 44,558 in the superior court of King county against Annie M. Phillips to foreclose the mortgage deed. The pleadings indicate that, at the date of the commencement of the foreclosure action, Louise A. Tompson was ignorant of the previous death of Annie M. Phillips. On or about May 11, 1905, C. H. Rollins was appointed and qualified, by the superior court of King county, as administrator of the estate of Annie M. Phillips, deceased, and on May 13, 1905, was substituted as defendant in the foreclosure action, which thereafter was entitled “Louise A. Tompson, plaintiff, vs. C. H. Rollins, administrator of the estate of Annie M. Phillips, deceased, sustituted for Annie M. Phillips, defendant.” The administrator appeared, filed an answer, a decree of foreclosure was entered, sale was made by the sheriff of King county, and on July 9, 1906, a sheriff’s deed for the land was executed and delivered to Louise A. Tompson.
On August 1, 1908, Louise A. Tompson, claiming title to the land, instituted in the superior court of King county a second action, cause number 62,411, to quiet her title. In this action she was plaintiff, while Charles G. Phillips, the unknown heirs of Annie M. Phillips, deceased, and all other persons unknown claiming any right, title, claim or interest in or to the real estate, were named as defendants. She al
On November 4, 1908, after entry of default, findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and entered in cause number 62,411, upon which final decree was entered quieting the title of Louise A. Tompson in and to all of the real estate as prayed in her complaint, and further decreeing that the defendants Charles G. Phillips, the unknown heirs of Annie M. Phillips, deceased, and all other persons unknown had no right, title, interest, claim, lien or estate in or to the land, or any part thereof. The appellants herein had no knowledge of the pendency of the action to quiet the title, commenced by Louise A. Tompson, until after entry of the decree in her favor. The complaint in the instant case further shows that the respondents herein, Roscoe C. Nisonger, Minnie Olive Barton, James C. Barton, her husband, Maggie Hiltman, Charles J. Hiltman, her husband, and Hewitt-Lea Lumber
It may be conceded without any citation of authority that the foreclosure and sale did not divest the title of Charles G.
Prom necessity, statutes of the character of the sections cited have been enacted in many states, in order that titles may be quieted when clouded by adverse claims of unknown heirs and unknown parties who may be without the jurisdiction of the state in which the real estate is located. The essential purpose of such statutes is to provide that unknown heirs and claimants may be served by publication without alleging their names, in order that they may receive the most effective notice possible, that they may appear and plead their claims, and that the court having jurisdiction of the real estate may determine and quiet the title. The state has power to thus provide for an adjudication of adverse rights or claims of persons in or to real estate situate within its borders, even though such claimants may be unknown and are without the jurisdiction of the court. Titles to real estate should not be subjected to continuous clouds. A state is under no compulsion to suffer titles to real estate situated within its borders to remain clouded for an indefinite period for the want of a proper method of serving process upon unknown claimants, or a proper procedure to quiet the same.
“It is conceded that constructive or substituted service may be authorized by the state, and resorted to in all actions or proceedings touching real property which are properly denominated actions or proceedings in rem. Such are actions to partition real estate, proceedings to enforce the collection of taxes against lands, and for the condemnation of land: Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714, 727. Actions quia timet in respect to land, to remove a cloud, or to determine adverse claims, are equitable in their nature, and, strictly speaking, equity acts upon the person, and not upon the property; and in these actions the judgment affects the claim or title to the land, and they are not strictly actions in rem. But they concern real estate lying within the jurisdiction of the court, and the state may clothe the court with full power to inquire and adjudicate as to its status, title, and ownership; and it is now well settled, that, as respects the procedure provided, and the constructive service of notice, by publication, upon non-resident defendants at least, actions of this kind are to be classed with actions in rem: Arndt v. Griggs, 134 U. S. 316, 322-326 (10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 557) ; Lane v. Innes, 43 Minn. 137 (45 N. W. Rep. 4). The question is, not what a court of equity, under its general powers as such, may do, but what the state may authorize in actions to adjudicate the title to real estate. Thus it is said in Boswell v. Otis, 9 How. 336, 348, 350: ‘It is immaterial whether the proceeding against the property be by attachment or by bill in chancery. It must be substantially a proceeding in rem. A bill for the*84 specific execution of a contract to convey real estate is not strictly a proceeding m rem, in ordinary cases; but when such a proceeding is authorized by statute, on publication, without personal service of process, it is substantially of that character.’ And ‘the inquiry should' be, have the requisites of the statute been complied with, so as to subject the property in controversy to the judgment of the court? and is such judgment limited to the property named in the bill?’ The judgment can affect the property only, and the defendant is not personally bound beyond it. And such, in substance is the character of this action. Its object is an adjudication of the state of the title, and the judgment goes no further. And by the procedure under consideration, the proceedings are instituted by filing the complaint, and recording the Us pendens against the property, and followed by the publication provided for.”
See, also, Arndt v. Griggs, 134 U. S. 316; State ex rel. Douglas v. Westfall, 85 Minn. 437, 89 N. W. 175, 89 Am. St. 571, 57 L. R. A. 297; Title and Document Restoration Co. v. Kerrigan, 150 Cal. 289, 88 Pac. 356, 119 Am. St. 199, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 682.
In Arndt v. Griggs, supra, the supreme court of the United States, in discussing the question whether a state has the power to provide by statute that the title to real estate within its limits shall be settled and determined by a suit in which the defendant, being a nonresident, is brought into court only by publication, said:
“A cloud cast upon such title by a claim of a non-resident will remain for all time a cloud, unless such non-resident shall voluntarily come into its courts for the purpose of having it adjudicated. But no such imperfections attend the sovereignty of the state. It has control over property within its limits; and the condition of ownership of real estate therein, whether the owner be stranger or citizen, is subjection to its rules concerning the holding, the transfer, liability to obligations, private or public, and the modes of establishing titles thereto. It cannot bring the person of a non-resident within its limits — its process goes not out beyond its borders — but it may determine the extent of his title to real estate within its limits; and for the purpose of such determination may pro*85 vide any reasonable methods of imparting notice. The well-being of every community requires that the title of real estate therein shall be secure, and that there be convenient and certain methods of determining any unsettled questions respecting it. The duty of accomplishing this is local in its nature; it is not a matter of national concern or vested in the general government; it remains with the state; and as this duty is one of the state, the manner of discharging it must be determined by the state, and no proceeding which it provides can be declared invalid, unless in conflict with some special inhibitions of the constitution, or against natural justice. So it has been held repeatedly that the procedure established by the state, in this respect, is binding upon the federal courts.”
A valuable discussion of the purpose and validity of such statutes may be found in McClymond v. Noble (84 Minn. 329, 87 N. W. 838), reported in 87 Am. St. 354, and in Mr. Freeman’s note at pages 358 et seq. The' superior court,"in the action to quiet title, had jurisdiction of the real estate, which is in King county. Service was made upon the unknown defendants in compliance with the statute; the complaint stated a cause of action; the decree was regular upon its face; and the court having jurisdiction of the land, adjudicated and determined the ownership of the title.
Appellants further contend that, when Louise A. Thompson instituted the action to quiet title, she had knowledge of Charles G. Phillips, who was made a known defendant; that she attempted to serve him by publication; that she must be presumed to have also known of his heirs at law after his death; that she made no attempt to serve them, either as such heirs at law or as unknown parties claiming an interest; that they were neither unknown heirs nor unknown parties or claimants within the contemplation of the statute; and that as to them the decree quieting respondents’ title is void. Appellants’ contention seems to be that the only unknown heirs named as defendants were the unknown heirs of Annie M. Phillips, deceased, and that appellants, being the heirs of Charles G. Phillips, who died after the commencement of
“The term ‘unknown heirs,’ as used in the sections of the code providing for service by publication in cases relating to real property and where the relief demanded is to exclude defendants from any interest, title or estate in real property, means all kinds of heirs, including heirs of heirs of such defendants as well as the legatees of heirs.”
The statute of this state, Rem. & Bal. Code, § 232, provides :
“Any such unknown heirs or unknown persons or parties who have or claim any right, estate, lien, or interest in the Said real property in controversy, at the time of the commencement of the action, duly served as aforesaid, shall be bound and concluded by the judgment in such action, if the same is in favor of the plaintiff therein as effectually as if the action was brought against such defendant by his or her name and constructive service of summons obtained: Provided, however, That such judgments shall not bind such unknown heirs, or unknown persons or parties, defendant, unless the plaintiff shall file a notice of Us pendens in the office of the auditor of each county in which said real estate is located, in the manner provided by law, before commencing the publication of said summons.”
The third amended complaint in the instant case does not allege that a Us pendens notice of the action to quiet title was not filed in the office of the auditor of King county, and in the absence of such an allegation, we must assume the proceedings were regular and that it was filed. The evident purpose of the statute is to bind all unknown heirs and unknown persons or parties who had an interest in the real estate at the time of
“We are of the opinion that the proof of publication of the notice of lis pendens with the summons is sufficient; also, that the nature of the action, and the nonresidence of the named defendant, Delia W. Godding, sufficiently appeared from the affidavit for publication. We are also of opinion that the mere fact that the named defendant was dead before the action was brought did not prevent the court from acquiring jurisdiction to determine the right of ‘persons or parties unknown’ claiming an interest in the land described in the complaint. These being all the objections to the judgment that are urged by the appellants, the order appealed from must be affirmed.”
In Howell v. Garton, supra, a case to which we have already alluded as involving the meaning of the term “unknown heirs,” an action was brought on July 1, 1905, to quiet title against one Abbie A. Little if living, or if dead, against her unknown heirs. Unknown to the plaintiff, Abbie A. Little
Other questions affecting the procedure in the foreclosure action and also in the action to quiet title have been raised by appellants, but we regard such questions as immaterial, for, as heretofore stated, the vital question on this appeal is whether the decree quieting title was valid or void. Upon the allegations of the third amended complaint, we conclude that the decree quieting title was valid; that the court had jurisdiction to render the same; that the fee simple title was adjudged to be in the respondent Louise A. Tompson; and that the third amended complaint did not state a cause of action. The judgment is affirmed.
Gose, Chadwick, and Parker, JJ., concur.