Berger v. Baist

6 P.2d 412, 165 Wash. 590, 89 A.L.R. 164, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1179
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1931
DocketNo. 23334. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 412 (Berger v. Baist) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berger v. Baist, 6 P.2d 412, 165 Wash. 590, 89 A.L.R. 164, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1179 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Beeler, J.

— We shall refer to the appellant Annie Baist as “Baist”, to the appellant Preston Lumber & Supply Company as “Company”, and the respondent, J. J. Berger, as “Berger.”

The case between Baist and Berger presents a contest for priority between them as assignees from a common assignor and vendor of different mortgages covering substantially the same real property. These parties are in agreement as to the facts, the questions in dispute between them being questions of law.

The case between the Company and Berger presents a contest for priority between the holder of a materialman’s lien and an assignee of a mortgage. These parties are in dispute both as to the facts and the law.

Baist appealed from that portion of the decree which adjudged her mortgage inferior and subsequent to the mortgage of Berger. The Company appealed from that portion of the decree which adjudged its lien inferior and subsequent to the mortgage of Berger.

A detailed review of the facts is necessary.

Twenty-seventh avenue extends north and south, and crosses east Pine street, which extends east and west, being public streets within the corporate limits of the city of Seattle. On December 13, 1928, one T. Gr. Stafne, a bachelor, owned a parcel of unimproved real estate situated at the northeast corner of the intersection of the above named streets, described as lots 1, 2, and 3, block 14, Tesler’s Second Addition to Seattle, King county, Washington. These lots front *592 on Twenty-seventh avenne, are sixty feet wide and one hundred and twenty feet deep, the entire tract embracing an area of 180 x 120 feet — 180 feet on Twenty-seventh avenue and 120 feet on east Pine street. On December 13, Stafne mortgaged the west 60 feet of lot 1, and the west 60 feet of the south 30 feet of lot 2, being a tract 90 x 60 feet — 90 feet on Twenty-seventh avenue and 60 feet on east Pine street — and being a portion of the hereinabove described larger tract, to the Northern Bond & Mortgage Company, to secure a loan of $2,800. This mortgage was filed for record December 17, 1928, and on the same day was assigned by the Northern Bond & Mortgage Company to Baist, but she failed to place her assignment of record until December 24, 1929.

On April 16,1929, Stafne conveyed this 90 x 60 tract, together with an additional ten-foot strip contiguous to and along the easterly boundary thereof, to the Enterprise Building Company, a corporation, owned and operated by himself and his brother, the compaxxy being exigaged in the construction of houses for sale. A few days later, the Enterprise Building Company began to excavate at about the center of this tract preparatory to the erection of a dwelling, and ordered from the Company a load of building materials for use in the contemplated structure, which materials were delivered on April 27, 1929.

Subsequent to that delivery, the Enterprise Building Company, without axxy notice to the Company, changed its plans and stopped excavation at that particular point, and concluded to erect two houses in lieu of one. To this end, the mortgaged tract (90 x 60), together with the added ten-foot strip contiguous axxd to the east thereof, were divided into two parts or lots each measuring 45 x 70 feet; and on May 11, 1929, the Enterprise Building Company mortgaged each of these *593 tracts or lots to the Northern Bond & Mortgage Company, which mortgages were filed for record May 13, 1929. The mortgage on the corner tract (45 x 70) and referred to in the record as “1600 Twenty-seventh avenue,” was assigned by the Northern Bond & Mortgage Company to Berger July 10,1929, and the assignment filed for record July 12, 1929.

Building permits were procured on May 14, 1929, for the erection of these two houses. The materials delivered on April 27, 1929, and subsequent deliveries were used in the erection of the house at 1600 Twenty-seventh avenue, and the Company, at the completion of the work, perfected its lien thereon.

On the trial in the lower court, it was stipulated that Baist and Berger purchased their respective mortgages in good faith, for value, and that Berger, at the time he procured his assignment, was assured by the Northern Bond & Mortgage Company that the mortgage transferred to him was a first and prior lien on the premises, and that Berger had no actual knowledge of the existence of the prior mortgage or of its assignment to Baist.

We shall first take up the controversy between Baist and Berger.

It must be borne in mind that the Baist mortgage covered a tract (90 x 60 feet) situated on the northeast corner of the street intersection — 90 feet on Twenty-seventh avenue and 60 feet on east Pine street, — and the Berger mortgage covered a tract (45 x 70 feet)— 45 feet on Twenty-seventh avenue and 70 feet on east Pine street, 45 x 60 feet thereof being á portion of the identical property covered by the mortgage assigned to Baist. Berger recorded his assignment July 12, 1929, while Baist recorded her assignment December 24, 1929; so the question between these parties is whether the failure of Baist to record her assignment *594 until after Berger had recorded his assignment subordinated her mortgage to the latter’s mortg’age.

It is the settled law of this state that, where the owner and record holder of a mortgage on real estate sells and assigns the same mortgage to two different purchasers, each being a purchaser for value, in good faith, and without notice, the one first recording his assignment acquires a prior right. Erickson v. Kendall, 112 Wash. 26, 191 Pac. 842; Price v. Northern Bond & Mortgage Co., 161 Wash. 690, 297 Pac. 786. These decisions are based upon the theory that a purchaser of a recorded mortgage, of which there is no assignment of record, has a right to assume that no such assignment has been made.

But in this case, although the vendor was the same, the mortgages assigned were not. Generally speaking, a mortgage, as soon as it is recorded, acquires priority which cannot be affected by any subsequent conveyance or incumbrance of the mortgaged property.

“Priority once gained can not be lost. The registry of a deed or mortgage is equivalent to a notice of it to all persons who may subsequently become interested in the property, and fully protects the grantee’s rights. A mortgage having once obtained priority by record does not lose its place by being held by anyone under an unrecorded assignment.” 1 Jones on Mortgages (8th ed.), § 645, p. 926.

Manifestly, the mortgage acquired by Berger July 10, and recorded July 12, was, while held by the Northern Bond & Mortgage Company from May 11 to July 10, subordinate to the first mortgage assigned to Baist December 17, 1928, even though her assignment was not filed for record until December 24, 1929.

' Did Berger, by reason of the assignment to him, acquire any greater rights than his vendor had? We think not. In

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 412, 165 Wash. 590, 89 A.L.R. 164, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berger-v-baist-wash-1931.