Brace v. Superior Land Co.

118 P. 910, 65 Wash. 681, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 996
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1911
DocketNo. 9790
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 118 P. 910 (Brace v. Superior Land Co.) 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
Brace v. Superior Land Co., 118 P. 910, 65 Wash. 681, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 996 (Wash. 1911).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

— This is an action to foreclose a mortgage for $3,800, given by Superior Land Company to the respondent,. Kate F. Brace, for the purchase price of the east half of lots 3 and 4, of block 18, Mercer’s addition to Seattle. The original mortgage was executed on August 15, 1906, and was recorded before the passage of the act approved March 19, 1907, commonly called the Torrens Land Act, found in Rem. & Bal. Code, §§ 8806 to 8905, inclusive. After the passage of that act, the Superior Land Company, which owned the whole of these lots, applied to the superior court of King county to have them registered under the act. Kate F. Brace was made a party, and accepted service of summons in that proceeding, but made no appearance. The application for registration admitted the lien of the Brace mortgage, as follows:

“Kate F. Brace, Seattle, Washington, mortgage,; $3,-800.00, Volume 321 of mortgages, page 414.”

From the report of the official examiner of titles, it appeared that there was a lien upon the property in favor of one Hans Peterson for $1,417.55, a mortgage in favor of Scandinavian American Bank for $6,000, upon the west half of the lots, and a mortgage held by Kate F. Brace for $3,800, upon the east half of the lots. The decree of registration, which was entered on December 5, 1907, found that the mortgage of the Scandinavian American Bank had been fully paid; that Hans Peterson had a lien upon the property for $1,417.55, and adjudged that all other parties defendant and persons unknown claiming the same had no right, title, lien or interest in the property, and enjoined and restrained them from so asserting. There was no direct reference to [683]*683the Brace mortgage in the decree. It is claimed by the respondent, and the claim is not seriously disputed by the appellant, that this was a clerical mistake, overlooked by the official examiner, who approved the form of decree, and by the court when the decree was signed. The court did, however, adopt as its - findings the examiner’s report, as shown by the following recital in the decree:

“And the court, having duly considered the said application and the report of the examiner of titles herein, doth adjudge and decree that the said report be and the same is hereby approved and confirmed, and the findings of said examiner of titles are hereby adopted as and made the findings of this court.”

Moreover, it is not claimed that the debt was ever paid or the mortgage released, or that Kate F. Brace ever consented that it be not recognized as a lien in the decree. These things place it beyond cavil that the failure to establish the mortgage as a lien in the decree and enter it as a memorial upon the certificate issued in pursuance of the decree was a mistake. A court will never be presumed to have done an intentional wrong. Pursuant to this erroneous decree, the registrar of titles issued a certificate of registration, as provided by the act. The only memorial thereon was the memorial of the lien in favor of Hans Peterson. A duplicate certificate was delivered to the land company as owner.

On July 30, 1909, the Superior Land Company executed a deed to the appellant, American Savings Bank & Trust Company, covering all of lots 3 and 4, in block 18, Mercer’s addition. As to whether the appellant at this time had actual notice that Mrs. Brace claimed to have a mortgage for the purchase price upon the east half of the lots, the evidence is conflicting. The conclusion which we have reached as to the purpose and effect of the Torrens act makes this matter immaterial. This deed was intended as a mortgage to secure antecedent indebtedness due the appellant from the land company, and it is also claimed to secure [684]*684future advances which might be made by the appellant to the land company. As to this, however, the evidence is also conflicting. With the deed there was delivered to the appellant the owner’s duplicate certificate of registration. At that time the only memorials upon this duplicate, in addition to the memorial of the lien of Hans Peterson, was a memorial of the satisfaction of that lien and a memorial of a mortgage to the Guardian Life Insurance Company upon the west half of-the lots. The east half appeared clear of any incumbrance. The appellant presented the duplicate certificate and deed to the registrar of titles and requested that the title be registered in its name. The registrar refused to change the registration, because the taxes on the lots were not paid, as required by the registration law. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 8860. Thereafter the appellant held its unregistered deed and the owner’s duplicate certificate as evidence of its claim. Mr. James P. Gleason, manager of the appellant bank, testified that he then knew the possession of the duplicate certificate by the bank was its only security so long as its deed was unregistered, and that he knew that a surrender of the certificate to any one else would jeopardize the bank’s security.

In May, 1910, John T. Stimmel, the president of Superior Land Company, applied to the appellant for the duplicate certificate of registration for the purpose of submitting it to the Scandinavian American Bank, which contemplated making a loan to the land company to take up its indebtedness. Mr. Gleason, the manager of appellant bank, declining to part with the certificate except upon the receipt of the Scandinavian American Bank, called Mr. J. F. Lane, cashier of that institution, by telephone, and explained to him that he would not let Mr. Stimmel take the certificate unless Mr. Lane would give a receipt for it and agree to return it. Mr. Lane acceded to this, and Mr. Stimmel went to the Scandinavian American Bank and brought back a receipt for the certificate. Thereupon Mr. Gleason delivered [685]*685the certificate to Mr. Stimmel. Mr. Stimmel delivered it to Mr. Battle, one of the attorneys for the Scandinavian American Bank, for examination, and Mr. John W. Roberts, a partner of Mr, Battle, who knew of the Brace mortgage, and who lived neighbor to the Brace’s, noticing that there was no memorial of the Brace mortgage upon the certificate, called up Mr. Brace, husband of respondent, who attended to her business affairs, and told him of that fact. Mr. Brace took the matter up with Mr. Stimmel, who agreed to make a new mortgage and file it.

Thereafter, on May 26, 1910, the Superior Land Company executed to Mrs. Brace another mortgage, bearing the same date as the original mortgage, upon the two half lots, and for the same debt secured by the first Brace mortgage, and on the same day the mortgage, with the owner’s duplicate certificate of registration, was presented to the registrar of titles, who entered thereon a memorial of this mortgage. The evidence shows that Mrs. Brace paid the taxes upon the property covered by this mortgage as mortgagee, and in order to procure its registration. On December 6, 1910, she commenced this action to foreclose her mortgage, setting up each of the mortgages as securing the same debt, and the taxes paid thereunder, and caused a lis pendens to be filed with the registrar, and a memorial thereof to be entered upon the register and upon the duplicate certificate, as required by the registration law (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 8866).

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Bluebook (online)
118 P. 910, 65 Wash. 681, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brace-v-superior-land-co-wash-1911.