238 P. 918 | Wash. | 1925
Respondent, as plaintiff, brought this action to recover from the defendant a certain certificate of deposit for $1,000, alleged to be the community property of his decedent and Nancy J. Stevens, who had been husband and wife for some thirty years preceding the death of the decedent.
The case was tried to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, which is as follows:
"`Nine months after date, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of Naches State Bank, at the Naches State Bank, Naches, Wash., Three Thousand and No/100 Dollars in gold coin, with interest after date at the rate of 8 per cent per annum until paid. For value received each and every party signing or endorsing this note hereby waives presentment, demand, protest and notice of non-payment thereof, binds himself thereon as a principal, not as a surety, and promises in case suit is instituted to collect the same, or any portion thereof to pay such additional sum as the court may adjudge reasonable as attorney's fees in such suit. Interest payable quarterly.
John Stevens W.S. Stevens.'
"That said decedent Winfield Scott Stevens executed said note as an accommodation maker, and no compensation was received by either said Winfield Scott Stevens or said community for signing said note, and that said note remains unpaid to the date hereof in a sum in excess of the value of said certificate of deposit, with interest thereon. *140
Findings of fact following the stipulated facts were made, and from these facts the court concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to the delivery to him of the certificate of deposit described, or, in case delivery could not be had, to a judgment for $1,000, with interest at 4% from the date of the certificate; and entered judgment accordingly. From this judgment, the defendant has appealed.
The question raised is not without its perplexities.
The appellant contends that the following facts must be kept constantly in mind and are controlling, namely:
That the members of the community were the parents of the maker of the note, which was a negotiable instrument; that the certificate of deposit issued to *141 the husband for money deposited by him was made payable to him, thus creating a special sort of personal property the possession of which raises a presumption of title and of the right to transfer; and that it does not appear that the appellant knew that the certificate of deposit was community property.
From these facts the appellant contends, —
First. That the certificate of deposit, being negotiable and issued in the name of the husband, was presumably his separate property; or, if presumed to be community property, the bank had the right to assume either a sufficient consideration to the community for the use of the husband's name as an accommodation maker, or that his act in so signing was with the consent and approval of the wife.
Second. The husband being the managing agent of the community, with power to dispose of community personal property, had the right and authority to become an accommodation maker, thus binding the community, especially so as the act was on behalf of the son of the spouses.
And Third. The husband, by virtue of the statute, has power to dispose of or encumber personal property of the community, except that he cannot commit a fraud upon the community, and therefore the pledging of the community property as security for the note in question is within his power, or within the scope of his apparent authority, and does not constitute a fraud upon the community.
Upon the other hand, the respondent contends that the following agreed facts should be given special weight, namely:
That decedent and Nancy J. Stevens were husband and wife, and that all property acquired by them or either of them during coverture, including the certificate *142 of deposit here involved, was property of the community; that, though the principal maker of the note was the son of the spouses composing the community, the community was in no way liable for any of his obligations; that the giving of the note by the son and the joining therein by the husband as an accommodation maker, without the knowledge of the wife, negatives any thought of her consent thereto such as would be necessary to bind the community; that the certificate of deposit was given long after the note was made; that its delivery by the husband to the bank as security for the note was wholly without the knowledge of the wife; all of which was well known to the bank. Stress is also laid upon the lack of any evidence that the certificate of deposit was indorsed by the husband; that the rights of no third parties nor innocent purchasers intervene; and that the bank parted with nothing upon the faith of the delivery of the certificate to it; that the bank had full notice and knowledge that neither the husband nor the community received any benefit from, or any of the proceeds of, the note.
Certain elements of the controversy are easily disposed of under our previous decisions:
First. The husband's signature to the note raises a presumption of community liability which may be rebutted.Marquette v. National Bank of Ellensburg,
Second. The delivery of the certificate, unindorsed, long after the note was made, and the bank having *143 parted with nothing on the faith of that delivery, takes out of the case any questions which might otherwise be raised under the negotiable instruments law and leaves the case to be disposed of simply as involving ordinary personal property of the community.
Third. The real question, then, is whether the husband, who, under the statute, has the control and right of disposition of community personal property, and who, under our decisions, must exercise that control for and on behalf of the community only (Schramm v. Steele,
Appellant contends that the husband's power of disposition is absolute, save only that he may not perpetrate a fraud upon the community, citing in support of that proposition 31 C.J. 129; while respondent contends that in Stewart v. Bank of Endicott,
Coming now to the particular issue here presented, the whole transaction, including the signing of the note by the husband and the giving of the security, was for the benefit of a son of both members of the community, in whose welfare, presumably, each was equally interested. If the father was willing to sign the note, thus obligating himself individually, he was undoubtedly also willing to obligate the community to the extent of the property pledged; and if the father was so willing — unless all human experience is to be held for naught — the mother was equally, if not more, eager to assist her son. But if, as stipulated, the mother knew nothing of the matter, still the father, without a doubt, knew so certainly the mother's good will toward their son that it seemed to him idle to ask for her consent, which would certainly and willingly have been given if asked. In the absence of a showing to the contrary, these inferences flow naturally from the relationship of the parties, and the bank's officers undoubtedly so inferred when the note was made and when the security was given. *145
It is our view, therefore, that one of the recognized rights and privileges of a community is to assist a child of the spouses, and when the husband uses the community personal property for that purpose he will be held to be acting as the statutory agent of the community. Since the community may legitimately so assist a child of the spouses, it may well be doubted whether any protest or non-consent on the part of the wife can defeat the power of the husband, as the statutory agent of the community, so to do. But that question we do not now decide. At any rate, in the absence of a showing of a specific objection made known to the person to be affected thereby, or clear proof of a general course of conduct persisted in sufficiently to give notice, showing an attitude of non-consent, both of which are lacking in this case, it will be presumed that the husband was acting for and on behalf of the community.
The judgment appealed from is reversed, with directions to dismiss the action.
HOLCOMB and MITCHELL, JJ., concur. *146