City of Centralia v. Miller

197 P.2d 244, 31 Wash. 2d 417, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 278
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1948
DocketNo. 30328.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 197 P.2d 244 (City of Centralia v. Miller) 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
City of Centralia v. Miller, 197 P.2d 244, 31 Wash. 2d 417, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 278 (Wash. 1948).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

— Plaintiffs instituted suit to obtain a decree quieting title to certain land alleged to haye been acquired by their predecessor in interest through tax foreclosure proceedings. The parties named as defendants herein defaulted. An additional defendant alone appeared in the action by answer, denying the material allegations of the complaint and affirmatively alleging that he was the owner of this land, and that the tax foreclosure proceedings and sale thereunder were void. The prayer of his answer asked that plaintiffs take nothing by their complaint, and that the rights of the additional defendant be declared prior, paramount, and superior to the rights of the plaintiffs and the other defendants in the action. Plaintiffs by reply denied the affirmative allegations of the answer and, further, pleaded the statute of limitations as a bar to any action or claim that the additional defendant might have with reference to the land.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury. A decree was entered quieting title to the property in the plaintiffs as against all of the defendants and the additional defendant, dismissing the answer and affirmative defenses of the additional defendant, and awarding costs against him. The additional defendant alone has appealed.

*419 It is agreed by the parties' that the correct description of the land, the title to which respondents sought and are now seeking to have quieted, is, as set forth by metes and bounds in the complaint, as follows:

“Beginning at a point which lies on the center line of Pearl Street and the north line of Center Street, thirty (30) feet north 15° 40%' east of the intersection of the center lines of said Pearl and Center Streets; thence north 73° 04%' west along the north line of Center Street two hundred six and fifty-six one-hundredths (206.56) feet; thence north 14° 23' east four hundred and sixty-four and fifty-seven hundredths (464.57) feet to the south line of Hanson Street; thence south 69° 30' east along the south line of Hanson Street three hundred thirty-eight and fifty-two hundredths (338.52) feet to the west line of the alley block 2, Hanson’s 1st Add. to the City of Centraba, Wash.; thence due south along the west line of said alley one hundred thirty-one and six tenths (131.6) feet; thence south 15° 40%' west along the west line of said alley four hundred thirty-four and eighteen hundredths (434.18) feet to the north line of Center Street; thence north 73° 04%' west along the north line of Center Street one hundred forty-five and fifty-nine hundredths (145.59) feet to the point of beginning; all in the City of Centraba, Lewis County, Wash., containing four and nineteen hundredths (4.19) acres.”

Appellant, E. F. Nudd, claims to have acquired this property in 1908 and 1909 by two deeds in which the descriptions of the real estate were somewhat different from that set out in the complaint herein. Since that time, the property has undergone considerable litigation, some of which reached this court about twenty years ago, as shown in Miller v. Nudd, 149 Wash. 419, 271 Pac. 80, and Miller v. Nudd, 154 Wash. 150, 281 Pac. 333.

From the evidence produced at the trial in the instant case, it appears that in December, 1922, appellant and his wife entered into a written contract with George Miller and W. W. Reagan, in which it was agreed that Miller and Reagan would advance a sum sufficient to pay off an outstanding mortgage on the property amounting to $23,500, and, in consideration of such advancement, the Nudds would sell and transfer an undivided one-third interest in the *420 property to Miller and a like interest to Reagan. The parties also entered into a contemporaneous oral agreement, by the terms of which the property was to be sold within a reasonable time and a proper division of the proceeds made among the parties. Pursuant to these agreements, the Nudds gave Miller a quitclaim deed to all the property involved in this action, and Miller and Reagan advanced them money to cover the mortgage, and thereafter other sums of money.

Owing to subsequently existing market conditions, the property could not readily be sold within the time prescribed. Sometime thereafter, Miller and Reagan instituted an action to foreclose their lien upon the land for the advancements made by them and to divest the Nudds of any interest they might have or claim in the property. In that action, the trial court determined that the contract between the parties constituted a joint venture and that the Nudds had no further interest in the real estate, but only an interest in any surplus that might be realized from a sale of the property, over and above the amount advanced by Miller and Reagan, which amount the court found to aggregate $38,202.52. The judgment which the trial court entered in that action was affirmed by this court in the first of the two cases cited above.

During the pendency of the appeal in that case, the property was sold under order of the court. That sale was subsequently set aside, however, because of an erroneous date fixed in the order of sale. The error was corrected, and a new order of sale was entered. From that order, appellant herein again appealed to this court, with the result that the order of the trial court was affirmed on October 16, 1929, in the second of the two cases cited above. So far as the record herein discloses, no further steps were ever taken in pursuance of that litigation.

In the meantime, general taxes, which had been levied annually against the property here involved for the period from 1925 to 1929, inclusive, became delinquent. In 1930, the city of Centraba, one of the respondents herein, foreclosed on the property for delinquent municipal assessments, and, at the subsequent sale, the city bought in the property.

*421 In 1936, Lewis county instituted tax foreclosure proceedings against the property for delinquent taxes for the years above mentioned. These proceedings form the basis of respondents’ claim of title to the land, and likewise constitute the grounds upon which appellant rests his contention that respondents’ claim of title is without legal foundation.

Throughout the tax foreclosure proceedings, in the summons, the complaint, the judgment, and the notice of sale, the property, consisting of two tracts of land lying adjacent to each other, was described as follows:

“Tax Lot 21, a parcel of land lying South of Eastern Land Company’s Addition and West of Hanson Addition, Section 5, Township 14 North, Range 2 West of W. M., containing 3.28 acres, more or less, Lewis County, Washington.”

and

“Tax Lot 75, a parcel of land known as the Nudd Tract between Hansen and Center Streets, in the Northwest corner, Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter, Section 8, Township 14 North, Range 2 West of W. M., containing 1 acre, more or less, Lewis County, Washington.”

At the foreclosure sale, there being no other bidders, the property was struck off to Lewis county. On July 15, 1937, the county executed and delivered two deeds conveying this same property to the respondent city of Centraba. For the one deed, the city paid the sum of $1,627.36, and for the other the sum of $543.12.

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Bluebook (online)
197 P.2d 244, 31 Wash. 2d 417, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-centralia-v-miller-wash-1948.