7 Wash. 475 | Wash. | 1893
Appellants furnished material for the erection of a building for one Hamilton, and not being paid therefor, filed their lien under the statute, and brought their action against said Hamilton to foreclose the same. In their complaint in said action it was alleged that one F. W. Carlton had some interest in the premises against which the lien was sought to be enforced. A decree of foreclosure was had, whereupon this action was prosecuted by the respondent as assignee of the estate of said Hamilton to enjoin the appellants from enforcing said foreclosure judgment. Said Hamilton made an assignment before the commencement of the action for foreclosure of the lien, and said F. W. Carlton was, at the time the said action was commenced, the assignee by election of the creditors, and one of the questions pi’esented is as to whether the allegation in the complaint in the foreclosure proceeding that said Carlton claimed some interest in the property was sufficient to make the estate of said Hamilton a party to the action. In our opinion it was not. Such allegation must be interpreted to have been directed against the said Carlton’s interest in his personal capacity, and not as assignee of the said Hamilton.
The appellants claim that, this being so, the judgment was absolutely void as against the estate, and for that reason the proceedings thereunder could in no manner affect' the interests thereof. We cannot agree with this contention. The decree was in terms directed against a specific piece of property, and a sale thereunder would in some degree constitute a cloud upon the title, which would interfere with the assertion of the rights of the estate in regard thereto.
The only other question presented by the record is, as to the right of the plaintiff as a lien claimant to maintain his
Dunbar, C. J., and Stiles and Scott, JJ., concur.
Anders, J., not sitting.