Deer v. Deer

186 P.2d 619, 29 Wash. 2d 202, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 370
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1947
DocketNo. 30141.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 186 P.2d 619 (Deer v. Deer) 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
Deer v. Deer, 186 P.2d 619, 29 Wash. 2d 202, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 370 (Wash. 1947).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

Two appeals are involved in this action: (1) defendant’s appeal from that portion of an interlocutory order of divorce wherein the court ratified and confirmed a stipulation, made in open court by the parties through their counsel, purporting to effect a division of community property; and (2) defendant’s subsequent appeal from an order denying her motion for modification of the interlocutory order and for vacation of the property settlement agreement. The two appeals were combined and consolidated for hearing and disposition by this court.

Respondent, Heyward A. Deer, and appellant, Stella Web-ber Deer, are husband and wife, having intermarried December 2, 1939. There was no issue of the marriage.

*204 In February, 1946, respondent instituted in King county an action for divorce from appellant on the ground of cruelty and personal indignities inflicted upon him by appellant. With reference to the property acquired and owned by the parties, the complaint alleged:

“That the parties have acquired as community property during their married life an equity, the exact value of the same not being known to the plaintiff [respondent] at this time, in approximately 1% acres on the Seattle-Tacoma Highway, upon which real estate there is located seven tourist cabins, a service station and grocery store with living quarters attached, and a small portable machine shop. That the address is 18834 Pacific Highway South, Seattle, Washington; That the parties have also acquired a 1937 Dodge coupe and that the plaintiff has a $1000.00 insurance policy upon his life with the defendant [appellant] named as beneficiary therein, the exact cash surrender value of said policy of life insurance not being known to plaintiff at this time.”

Nowhere in the complaint was a legal description of the real estate given.

In the prayer of his pleading, respondent asked that the court make an equitable division of the community property and that the policy of life insurance be set over to him.

Appellant, appearing through her attorneys, Messrs. Mon-heimer, Schermer, and Mifflin, filed an answer admitting all of the allegations of the complaint except the charges of cruelty, and further alleging, by way of cross-complaint, that respondent had inflicted cruel treatment and personal indignities upon her, rendering her life burdensome. In her pleading, she listed and described the community property in virtually the same manner and to the same extent as was set forth in respondent’s complaint. In her prayer, she asked for no relief other than that respondent’s complaint be dismissed with prejudice.

In his reply, respondent denied the affirmative allegations of the answer and cross-complaint, except in so far as they had been specifically admitted or pleaded in his complaint.

Upon the issues thus joined, the cause came on regularly for trial before Honorable James B. Kinne, one of the judges of the superior court for King county. The statement of facts *205 filed in this court does not contain a transcript of any part of the evidence introduced at that trial, except a copy of a purported “oral stipulation as to division of property,” which apparently was dictated into the record by counsel during the progress of the trial, and upon which both parties now rely for support of their respective contentions. The stipulation, consisting of the dictation by Mr. Mifflin, representing the appellant, followed by questions asked by the court and answered by respective counsel, is too long to be set forth in its entirety, being seven typewritten pages in length. We shall quote only certain portions thereof and give a general statement concerning the remainder.

The introductory paragraphs of the stipulation as dictated by Mr. Mifflin described the community property as follows:

“These parties are the owners of a piece of property located just south of Bow Lake on the Tacoma-Seattle Highway. The exact legal description I do not have, but it is two hundred feet on the highway; it faces two hundred feet on the highway and extends back. It is an acre and a third altogether.
“It is an auto cabin camp and gas station, and a small machine shop in which Mr. Deer works during his spare time.
“There is located there some personal property, including this machine shop, an auto, stock of gas, and inventory of this gas station, together with the equipment and necessary property to operate a cabin camp.
“There is owing on the property, — it was purchased on a contract, — in the neighborhood of $11,325, approximately.”

It will be noted that no legal description, sufficient in itself to identify the real property, was given.

The stipulation then proceeded:

“The parties have now agreed that the plaintiff [respondent] will pay to the defendant [appellant], or will have a deposit and a firm offer placed in an escrow company, for the sum of $5,000 within ten days from today, and that the plaintiff will then have ninety days from date within which to complete his negotiations and turn over to the defendant the sum of $5,000 cash.
“At that time he will also execute to the defendant a note in the amount of $5,000, with interest at five percent, payable at the end of two years; said note to be secured by this prop *206 erty and subject to the now outstanding indebtedness of $11,325, and an additional $5,000, which the plaintiff will raise to pay the defendant.”

Next followed a provision that if, at the end of thirty days, it should transpire that the required amount of five thousand dollars cash had not been deposited as above arranged, the attorneys for the parties should then, as agents of their respective clients, sell the real property and so much of the personal property as had not been otherwise distributed. Such sale, or sales, were to be consummated under the'conditions and in the manner following: The real property was not to be sold for less than thirty thousand dollars; the respondent and appellant bound themselves to execute all documents, agreements, and deeds necessary to the sale, or sales; all proceeds of sale were first to be applied to the costs thereof, including real-estate commission, title insurance, and other expenses, then to the payment of any amount owing on the outstanding contract, then to the payment of attorneys’ fees in the sum of three hundred fifty dollars to each party’s attorney, and the balance, if any, to be divided equally between the parties; and any contract evidencing such sale was to be placed in escrow in some bank and the proceeds thereof, as paid, divided equally between the parties.

The stipulation next contained a provision that, if respondent should elect to deposit the five thousand dollars cash in escrow and deliver the note for an additional five thousand dollars, as first above stipulated, he should continue to pay to appellant support money in the sum of one hundred dollars a month until the five thousand dollars cash previously referred to was actually paid to appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P.2d 619, 29 Wash. 2d 202, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deer-v-deer-wash-1947.