107 Wash. 149 | Wash. | 1919
This action is to cancel a deed for failure of consideration.
The issue arose out of the following facts: In 1910, Albert Anderson, a resident of Lincoln county, Washington, died, leaving as his sole heir his mother, Thilda Anderson, who became the administratrix of his estate. The estate consisted of various pieces of land in Lincoln county including, among others, the so-called “Busey Place,” which is the subject-matter of the present action. Some months after Albert Anderson’s death, his mother also died, intestate, and Amanda Sandygren, one of the parties to this action in the lower court, was appointed administratrix of her mother’s estate. There were five heirs of Thilda Anderson, among them the respondents Anna Salt.and Emma Womach, and their half-brother and sister, Amanda Sandygren and Axel Anderson, the defendant below.
The complaint alleged that, during the probate of Thilda Anderson’s estate, the administratrix, Amanda Sandygren, and the defendant below, Axel Anderson, persuaded Anna Salt and Emma Womach that, if they would execute a quitclaim deed in favor of Axel Anderson to the so-called “Busey Place,” he, Anderson, would deed back to Anna Salt and Emma Womach other land of the same value, when the estate should be finally closed. Thereupon such quitclaim deed was executed by Anna Salt and Emma Womach to Axel Anderson, and, as the appellant further alleges, the estate was finally closed, but no return deed was ever
The appeal presents two principal questions for our determination; first, whether the money recovery rendered by the lower court could properly be substituted for judgment of cancellation; and, second, whether the facts, as reported, support the finding of the lower court.
Briefly, appellant’s theory, deduced from his argument, is that there is no equity in the bill and that this is a case where the court would have to find that it could not administer equitable relief. In support of this position appellant cites Robinson v. Brooks, 31 Wash. 60, 71 Pac. 721; Knibbs v. Mortensen, 89 Wash. 595, 154 Pac. 1109; Gilbert Hunt Co. v. Parry, 59 Wash. 646, 110 Pac. 541, Ann. Cas. 1912B 225; Wintermute v. Carner, 8 Wash. 585, 36 Pac. 490; Toplitz v. Bauer, 26 App. Div. 125, 49 N. Y. Supp. 840; Dakin
Against this, the respondents marshal the following cases: New York Ice Co. v. Northwestern Ins. Co., 23 N. Y. 457; Yarwood v. Johnson, 29 Wash. 643, 70 Pac. 123; Dormitzer v. German Sav. & Loan Soc., 23 Wash. 132, 62 Pac. 862; Watson v. Glover, 21 Wash. 677, 59 Pac. 516; Murkowski v. Murkowski, 61 Wash. 103, 112 Pac. 92; MacKay v. Smith, 27 Wash. 442, 67 Pac. 982; and Hewett v. Dole, 69 Wash. 163, 124 Pac. 374; 31 Cyc. 111. A digest of the argument which these cases support is: That equity will give relief upon the facts and not the prayer; where both legal and equitable relief are prayed for but the complainant fails on one side, relief may be awarded on the side established; that a prayer for general relief entitled complainant to any relief supported by the allegations of the complaint and the proofs introduced; that, where a complaint sounds in both equity and law, the plaintiff is not restricted to the relief asked for specially; where the prayer for,special relief is defective, relief will be granted under the general prayer, consistent with the equities of the case.
We regard respondents’ authorities as being consonant with the letter and spirit of the law as it applies in the instant case; indeed, in the face of the decision in the case of Hewett v. Dole, supra, we could not well do otherwise. Hewett v. Dole was a case in which the law was most comprehensively searched, analyzed and stated by Judge Ellis. The facts were more complex than in the instant case, but the general foundations are the same. The action was brought for the cancellation of an instrument upon the grounds that there was a failure of consideration. The court held that the deed could not be cancelled,
“We think the trial court correctly held that there was no such clear and convincing evidence of fraud as to warrant a rescission. The complaint, however, alleged, and the evidence established, facts sufficient to entitle the appellant to relief in damages, and the prayer was for general relief. The appellant is entitled to a judgment for the $1,000 cash payment.”
In the instant case, the averment of fraud in the complaint was stricken upon motion of the respondents, but the prayer of the complaint was for general relief.
The second question presented is as to whether the facts justified any recovery at all. The testimony is flatly contradictory on each side; appellant asserts that nothing whatever was said about conveying to the grantors of the quitclaim deed any substitute property; the respondents are equally emphatic that such an agreement was the motive and consideration of their quitclaiming.' The appellant does not go beyond a negation, he does not show affirmatively a convincing reason for respondents’ action as against the position established by them. He admits that it was the oral wish of his mother that her estate should be equally divided between the children, and we cannot presume that the grantors intended the quitclaim deed as a gift. It is also apparent from the record that Anna Salt and Emma Womach are not such experienced business women as to suggest that they were culpably careless in the transaction. In view of the record, as a whole, we cannot disturb the finding of the trial court. This conclusion must also apply to the question of the lower court’s valuation of the premises, and the question of Axel Anderson’s pre
The judgment in each cause will be affirmed.
Mount, Fullerton, and Parker, JJ., concur.