121 Wash. 134 | Wash. | 1922
Appellant is the record owner of a mortgage for twelve hundred dollars, made by respondents in favor of Joseph E. Thomas & Company on March 30, 1918, and assigned by the mortgagee to appellant on May 24, 1918, the assignment being recorded on May 25; but respondents never had any actual notice of any other creditor than Thomas & Company. The mortgage in question -was given to take up in part a previous mortgage for fifteen hundred dollars, the position of all three parties with reference to the former mortgage being the same as to the present one.
Joseph E. Thomas & Company were a real estate and mortgage firm, operating in Seattle, and became bankrupt in July, 1920. It is the same firm which was under discussion in our recent case of Kraus v. Dowell,
The question at issue in this case is the status of four payments of two hundred dollars each, made by respondents to Thomas & Company on the principal of this loan, which payments were never remitted to appellant. This case differs from the Kraus case, supra, in that the assignment in the former case was not recorded, but the agency of Thomas & Company is more abundantly established than it was in the former case.
We think appellant is clearly chargeable with the acts of Thomas & Company so far as respondents are concerned. The judgment is affirmed.
Parker, C. J., Mackintosh, Holcomb, and Main, JJ., concur.