Bond v. Werley

28 P.2d 318, 175 Wash. 659, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 992
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1933
DocketNo. 24737. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 318 (Bond v. Werley) 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
Bond v. Werley, 28 P.2d 318, 175 Wash. 659, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 992 (Wash. 1933).

Opinion

*660 Holcomb, J.—

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of respondents in an action tried to the court in which the relief prayed for was the setting aside of an alleged fraudulent conveyance of real estate in Okanogan county.

Respondents, in their complaint, alleged that, in May, 1932, respondent Fred M. Bond, an attorney at law, obtained a judgment in the superior court of Pacific county against A. A. Werley and wife in the sum of $2,621.15 and $250 attorney’s fees; that a return nulla tona was made by the sheriff of Pacific county. The judgment was upon a promissory note, which was set up as a counterclaim to an action originally instituted by A. A. Werley against respondents for rent. It is alleged in the complaint that, subsequent to the execution of that note on which the judgment for respondents is based, A. A. Werley and Nora Werley, his wife, began a systematic plan of transferring all of their property, without consideration, to their son, Robert A. Werley.

It is further alleged that, in furtherance of this plan, and to cheat, wrong and defraud their creditors, they conveyed to their son, Robert A. Werley, sundry pieces of property and, in fact, all the property which they owned of any worth or value, all without consideration, and wholly and primarily for the purpose of defrauding their creditors, and particularly that they conveyed to the son the property therein described, which constitutes valuable orchard property. It is further averred that the above mentioned property conveyed by A. A. Werley and wife to their son, Robert, was reasonably worth sixty thousand dollars, subject to a contract of sale made to one E. A. Beaughan, upon which contract five thousand dollars had been paid and the balance was still due; that the fee-title, however, to that property had been transferred by *661 Werley and wife to Eobert Werley, wbo it is charged is now holding the property in fraud of creditors of A. A. Werley. It is prayed that a decree be entered establishing that Eobert A. Werley holds the property on behalf of A. A. Werley and Nora Werley, his wife, and that the judgment of respondents be established as a first and paramount lien against the property, and the property be sold to satisfy their judgment.

Appellants A. A. Werley and wife and Eobert Wer-ley answered the complaint separately, each answer alleging the same affirmative defenses. Their affirmative defenses are divided into three sections, all under one defense. The first affirmative defense alleges that the son assumed certain notes which the father owed, one, a note made in 1915, for $1,224.50, the other for $7,610. The second affirmative defense in both answers is that Eobert Werley agreed to supply and maintain a home for his mother, one of appellants, for the rest of her life, because of the failing health and financial condition of appellant A. A. Werley. The third affirmative defense is that appellant Eobert A. Werley is the only son of appellants A. A. Werley and wife, and they had intended, desired and promised to give him a college education, which, because their financial condition became such in 1929 that it was impossible to fulfill that promise, they had therefore deeded this land to him.

The trial court found against the second and third affirmative defenses as well as against the first, but no contention is made on this appeal as to the validity of the second and third defenses, which may be considered abandoned, probably because the second would be untenable under Rem. Rev. Stat., § 5824 (Allard v. La Plain, 152 Wash. 211, 277 Pac. 843), and the third because it could not be considered as anything but a *662 gift, without consideration. See Schaffer v. Stever, 153 Wash. 116, 279 Pac. 390. .

After making certain nncontested findings, the trial court found the following:

“That subsequent to the execution of the note on which the judgment of the plaintiffs is based, the defendants, A. A. Werley and Nora Werley, his wife, began a systematic plan of transferring all of their property, without consideration, and conveying the same away,- that the most valuable part of the property they conveyed to their son, Robert A. Werley, without consideration.
“That in furtherance of this plan, and to cheat, wrong and defraud their creditors, and particularly the plaintiffs in this action, they conveyed to their son, Robert A. Werley, all of the property which they owned of any value or worth, and, as aforesaid, without consideration, and wholly and primarily for the purpose of defrauding their creditors, and more particularly the plaintiffs in this action, and particularly they conveyed unto their son, Robert A. Werley, the following described property in Okanogan county, Washington, to-wit:
“Lots 12 and 13, Block ‘B,’ Ellis-Forde Orchard Company’s Plat No. 1, and
“Lots 11,12 and 13, Block ‘C,’ Ellis-Forde Orchard Company’s Plat No. 1.
“That the fee title to said property remained in A. A. Werley and Nora Werley, his wife, but, as before found, they, in order to cheat, wrong and defraud' their creditors, or the plaintiffs in this action, conveyed their remaining interest of $55,000 in the contract to their son, Robert A. Werley, when threatened with suit by the plaintiffs upon their note. However, as before suggested in the preamble to these findings, E. A. Beaughan and wife were innocent purchasers and purchased in good faith under their contract and took possession of said property on or about August 30, 1929, and are still in possession and their rights under their contract of purchase are entitled to be preserved. . . .
*663 “The defendants, A. A. Werley and wife, and son, Robert A. Werley, likewise contend in their answer that the defendants, Werley and wife, were owing two notes, one for $7,610 and one for $1,224.50 to certain nieces or relatives of the defendant, A. A. Werley, and that when the transfer was made by said A. A. Werley and wife to their son their son assumed these obligations as part of the consideration for the transfer. This court finds, however, that said Robert A. Werley did not assume said obligations; that there was no competent evidence introduced in this cause to cause this court to believe that said Robert A. Wer-ley assumed said obligations or that the debtors agreed to take Robert A. Werley for said debt, but if such assumption by Robert A. Werley could be considered that those creditors could not be preferred as against the plaintiffs herein.
“That the defendants, A. A. Werley and wife, and son, Robert A. Werley, likewise contend that as additional consideration for said transfer the defendant, Robert A. Werley, agreed to support and supply his mother, Nora Werley, with a home for the rest of her life, but this court finds there is no credible evidence to believe that any such arrangement was made, but if the same was made it was in violation of statute and law and wholly void as against the creditors of the defendants, A. A. Werley and wife, and particularly the plaintiffs herein. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 318, 175 Wash. 659, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-werley-wash-1933.