Davis v. Jones

131 P.2d 430, 15 Wash. 2d 572
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1942
DocketNo. 28833.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 P.2d 430 (Davis v. Jones) 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
Davis v. Jones, 131 P.2d 430, 15 Wash. 2d 572 (Wash. 1942).

Opinion

Millard, J.

This is an action in unlawful detainer. Trial of the cause to the court, sitting without a jury, resulted in findings that, as she refused to comply with the terms of the notice to pay rental or vacate, defendant tenant was unlawfully in possession of the premises in question, and that plaintiff was entitled to recover double the amount of accrued rental of $448 for twenty-eight months at sixteen dollars monthly. Judgment was entered accordingly for $896 in favor of plaintiff and against defendant. Defendant appealed, but prior to the notice of appeal plaintiff Blanche A. Shuman died, whereupon the executrix of her estate was substituted as plaintiff.

Appellant’s first contention that the relationship of landlord and tenant never existed between decedent and appellant, is without substantial merit.

William B. King and Blanche A. Shuman, brother and sister, jointly owned, as their separate property, lot six, block twenty-five, Lincoln Pontius’ supplemental addition to the city of Seattle, which is improved by apartment buildings numbered 1002 to 1008 east Mercer street. By quitclaim deed, executed October 4, 1937, and placed of record February 7, 1939, the brother conveyed his interest in the property to his sister. There *574 after, Mr. King, until his death October 13, 1939, continued, as he had done prior to the time of his sister’s acquisition of complete title to the property, to manage the property for his sister, Blanche A. Shuman. Commencing in December, 1930, Mr. King, for reasons deemed sufficient by him, permitted appellant and her family to occupy the upstairs apartment (1002 east Mercer street) of a duplex apartment building on lot six. Appellant and her daughter later moved to the downstairs apartment, which is numbered 1004 east Mercer street. During the' period of his management of this property, Mr. King did not collect rental from appellant for the premises she occupied.

While Mrs. Shuman was bound by the acts of her agent, William B. King, prior to the death of that agent October 13, 1939, the subsequent occupancy by appellant of the property, to which Mrs. Shuman had absolute title, constituted tenancy by sufferance. The judgment is for recovery of rental of sixteen dollars monthly for period subsequent to death of William B. King, from October 13, 1939, on which date the common-law obligation to pay rent arose. There is no contention that a rental of sixteen dollars monthly for twenty-eight ■months, or an aggregate of $448, is not reasonable.

Appellant next challenges the validity of the service upon her of notice to pay rent or vacate the premises.

December 14, 1939, Mrs. Shuman’s then attorney served at 1004 east Mercer street on Betty Jones, a daughter of appellant who was residing with her mother at 1004 east Mercer street, a notice to pay rent or vacate. The notice, which is made a part of the complaint, reads as follows:

“Notice To Pay Rent Or Vacate
“To: Edna Jones, 1004 E. Mercer Street, Seattle, Washington.
*575 “You are hereby notified that you are in default in the payment of the rent for the following described premises, now occupied by you in King County, State of Washington, to-wit:
“Lot 6, Block 25 of Lincoln Pontius Supplemental Addition to the City of Seattle, Washington, in the sum of $339.50 Dollars and you are hereby required to pay said rent or surrender said premises to the undersigned or her agents, A. A. Seijas, Attorney at Law, within three days.
“You are further notified that by the laws of the State of Washington if you do not comply with this notice by paying said rent or surrendering said premises within three days after the service of this notice upon you, you will be guilty of unlawful detainer.
“Blanche Shuman (signed)”

The night of December 14, 1939, Mrs. Shuman’s attorney sent a duplicate of the notice by mail to Edna E. Jones, 1004 “or something like that, east Mercer street, Seattle.”

The actual service of the notice was made at 1004 east Mercer street, where appellant resided. Numbers 1002 and 1004 east Mercer street are portions of a duplex house, all of which were under the possession and control of appellant. The addresses 1002 to 1008 all are within the legal description of the property which is given in the notice. The daughter, who is an adult, upon whom the notice was served, delivered the notice to her mother, who continued to remain in possession of the premises in defiance of the notice, which she gave to her then attorney, who is not her representative in this action. Appellant and her daughter testified that they never received the copy of the notice which Mrs. Shuman’s attorney testified he mailed to her.

The statute (Rem. Rev. Stat., § 814 [P. C. § 7972]) provides that a copy of the notice shall be delivered personally to the person entitled thereto, or, if that person is absent from the premises unlawfully held, a *576 copy of the notice shall be left there with some person of suitable age and discretion, and that a copy of the notice shall be sent through the mail addressed to the person entitled thereto at his place of residence.

We note the suggestion of counsel for appellant that some one changed, before this action was commenced, the address of “1008” to “1004” east Mercer street on the notice to pay rent or vacate the premises. The evidence is that a copy of the notice was left, as required by the statute, with a person of suitable age and discretion at 1004 east Mercer street, the premises unlawfully held by the tenant, and that a copy of the notice was sent through the mail properly addressed to appellant. It was not incumbent upon respondent to prove that the mailed notice was received by appellant. There is evidence, also, that the notice served upon appellant’s daughter was properly addressed to appellant.

It would serve no useful purpose to discuss the question whether other claimed defects invalidate the notice. It is true that the notice is not to be commended, but there is a sufficient description of the premises, and appellant does not contend that she was misled or deceived by the language of the notice as to the premises occupied by her. The amount of rent due is recited, and the notice also apprises appellant tenant of the time within which to surrender the premises in case of continued failure to pay rent. See Provident Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Thrower, 155 Wash. 613, 285 Pac. 654; Erz v. Reese, 157 Wash. 32, 288 Pac. 255; and Congdon v. Brown, 7 R. I. 19.

Likewise without substantial merit is appellant’s next contention that the summons and complaint are fatally defective.

Mrs. Shuman filed her complaint January 16, 1940, against Edna Jones, Jane Doe Jones, and John Doe *577

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 P.2d 430, 15 Wash. 2d 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-jones-wash-1942.