Clark v. Eltinge

75 P. 866, 34 Wash. 323, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 353
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1904
DocketNo. 4826
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 P. 866 (Clark v. Eltinge) 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
Clark v. Eltinge, 75 P. 866, 34 Wash. 323, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 353 (Wash. 1904).

Opinion

Hadley, J.

This cause was once before appealed to this court. For the decision upon that appeal, see Clark v. Eltinge, 29 Wash. 215, 69 Pac. 736. Reference is hereby made to that opinion for a statement of the case without the necessity of repetition here. The judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.

Upon the return of the cause to the superior court, the defendants filed amended answers in which they pleaded certain laws of Montana, which it is claimed provide that an action shall not be brought in that state upon a promissory note, when the same is secured by mortgage, until the mortgage has been'foreclosed and the value of the security applied upon the note. Certain other Montana statutes were also pleaded as defining the property relations of hus[325]*325band and wife in that state, and which it is claimed deters mine that the wife sued in this action is not liable. The amended answers also allege that the note sued upon is secured by mortgage upon real estate in Silver Bow county, Montana, and that the mortgage has never been foreclosed. The reply admits the allegations as to the Montana laws, and also the allegation as to the execution of the mortgage, but denies the averment that the mortgage has not been foreclosed.

Under the issues, amended as aforesaid, the cause again came on for trial before the court and a jury. The plaintiffs made proof as to the ownership of the note, the balance claimed to be due, and as to the marriage relation of the defendants. The note Was then introduced in evidence, and the plaintiffs rested. The defendant Josephine D. Eltinge then moved for an instructed verdict in her favor, on the ground that her liability must be measured by the laws of Montana, and that under those laws, as pleaded in her answer and admitted by the reply, she is not liable. The court sustained the motion. The defendant Charles S. Eltinge thereupon moved for a directed verdict in his favor, on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to justify a verdict against him. This motion was also granted, the cause was taken from the jury, and judgment entered in favor of each defendant that plaintiffs shall take nothing by the action, and that defendants shall recover costs. The plaintiffs have appealed.

It is first assigned that the court erred in sustaining the motion to take the case from the jury as to respondent Josephine D. Eltinge. It is urged by said respondent that, as she did not sign the note, she is not liable under the laws of Montana, the place where the contract was made. In the former opinion in this case we said that Mrs. Eltinge is a proper party for the purpose of having it determined [326]*326whether the judgment, should one be obtained, can be executed as a judgment for a community debt, or whether it can be executed only as a judgment for the separate debt of the husband. Under the doctrine established in this state, if the debt is a community obligation, it may be enforced against both the real and personal property of the community, and, if it is the separate debt of the husband, it may be enforced against the community personal property. Tjhe wife is, therefore, a proper party, in order that the relations of her property interests to the debt may be determined in the action. She now admits that she is a proper party for that purpose, but urges that,* under the Montana law, her property interests can in no event become liable in this action.

It must, however, be presumed from the start that certain of her property interests are liable, for such is the presumption under our community property law. If she would remove that presumption, she must plead and prove a Montana law, or other necessary facts, which show that she is not liable. She has pleaded a Montana statute, and it is admitted as pleaded. In order, however, to remove the presumption of any liability against her, the Montana law mtust, upon its face and of itself, show want of any liability in the premises, or she must prove the necessary facts which bring her within nonliability. The statute pleaded, being admitted, stands of course as proved. Does it, of itself and without further proof, show that Mrs. Eltinge’s property ■interests are free from liability in this cause ? It does disclose that in Montana the system of community ownership of property does not exist, but it, at the same time, shows certain liabilities arising from the existence of the marriage relation, A section of what is alleged to be a part of the Montana Civil Code is pleaded as follows:

[327]*327“See. 227. The separate property of the wife shall he exempt from all debts and liabilities of the husband, unless for necessary articles procured for the use and benefit of herself and her children under the age of 18 years, but such exemption shall extend only to such property of such wife as shall be mentioned in an inventory thereof, as provided in Secs. 221 and 222. And in no case shall any of the separate property of the wife be liable for the debts of the husband, unless such properly is in the sole and exclusive possession of the husband and then only to such persons as deal with the husband in good faith on the credit of such property, without knowledge or notice that the property belongs to the wife. But the separate property of the wife is liable for her own debts, contracted before or after marriage.”

Sections 221 and 222, referred to in the above quoted section, are also set out in the pleading as follows:

“See. 221. A full and complete inventory of the separate personal property of the wife may be made out and signed by her, acknowledged or proved in the same manner required by law for the acknowledgment or proof of a grant of real property by an unmarried woman, and recorded in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the parties reside.”
“Sec. 222. The filing of an inventory in the clerk’s office is notice and prima facie evidence of the title of the wife.”

An inspection of the above sections shows that said respondents’ pleading sets up laws which recognize her liability for the husband’s debt under certain conditions. The evidence shows that the money borrowed upon the note in suit was used to buy a lot and build a house thereon, and that respondents occupied it as their home. Whether that fact brings this debt within the classification of the husband’s liabilities for which the wife’s separate properly is not'exempt, we apprehend must depend'upon the construction placed upon the statute by the courts of Montana, [328]*328and resort must be had to snch construction, as a fact, to determine the force of the statute when applied to the facts here.

It will be observed that section 227, supra,, provides that the wife’s separate property shall not be exempt for the husband’s liabilities for necessary articles, procured for the use and benefit of herself and her children. "Whether a home shall be classified as such a necessary thing, not being clear by the statute itself, may possibly be made clear by evidence of statutory construction in a similar case in Montana. It will also be observed that, under the statute, the failure of the wife to file an inventory renders her personal property liable for the husband’s debts. The presumption with which we started — that a liability of the wife exists in this case — is therefore not removed by the mere pleading and admission of the statute. Proof of the necessary conditions which exempt her from liability under that statute must be made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P. 866, 34 Wash. 323, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-eltinge-wash-1904.