Ewing v. Ford

195 P.2d 650, 31 Wash. 2d 126, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 254
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1948
DocketNo. 30492.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 195 P.2d 650 (Ewing v. Ford) 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
Ewing v. Ford, 195 P.2d 650, 31 Wash. 2d 126, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 254 (Wash. 1948).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

— Plaintiff brought suit to recover an amount alleged to be due and owing to him by the defendants on an earnest-money receipt contract wherein defendants had agreed to purchase from the plaintiff a certain tract of real estate. Defendants answered, denying the material allegations of the complaint, and, by cross-complaint, sought rescission of the contract, because of alleged fraud on the part of the plaintiff, and recovery of all sums theretofore paid on the contract by the defendants. Plaintiff replied, denying the material allegations of the cross-complaint, and particularly those charging fraud.

The action was tried to the court without a jury. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law, upon which it entered judgment declaring that neither the plaintiff nor the defendants should recover upon their respective pleadings, and that neither party should recover costs in the action. From that judgment, both parties appealed, but only the appeal of the plaintiff has been perfected or is now before us. For convenience, we shall refer to the plaintiff as appellant, and to the defendants as respondents.

No statement of facts or bill of exceptions has been brought to this court on appeal. In that situation, the only question presented for review is whether the findings of fact made by the trial court support the conclusions of law and the judgment based thereon. We have expressed that rule in a number of cases.

In Levas v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co., 21 Wn. (2d) 562, 152 P. (2d) 320, which was a law action tried to the court, appears this statement:

“No statement of facts or bill of exceptions, however, has been brought to this court on appeal. In that situation, the only question presented for review is whether the factual findings of the trial court support the judgment; and in the consideration of that question it is to be conclusively presumed that such findings are correct. [Citing cases.]”

*128 In the case of In re Munson’s Estate, 189 Wash. 537, 66 P. (2d) 293, which was a probate proceeding, we stated:

“Inasmuch as the appellant has not served or filed a statement of facts or a bill of exceptions, the only question presented for review is whether the findings of the trial court support the decree.”

In Lager v. Berggren, 191 Wash. 437, 71 P. (2d) 377, which was an action for specific performance of an alleged oral agreement to convey real estate, this court declared:

“Upon this appeal, there has not been certified any statement of facts or bill of exceptions. The case, of necessity, turns upon the facts found by the trial court. If these do not. sustain the judgment, then a reversal must necessarily follow.”

The facts of the case as found and stated by the trial court in its formal findings are as follows: Appellant, W. W. Ewing, is a real-estate broker doing business in King county, Washington. At all times involved in this action, respondents, Paul F. Ford and Evelyne W. Ford, were husband and wife. Mr. Ford is a veteran of World War II and as such was, and is, entitled to the privileges of the servicemen’s readjustment act of 1944, sometimes referred to as the “G. I. Bill.”

On or about September 14, 1945, during the period when houses for rent or sale were scarce, respondents, who never before had bought real estate, were exceedingly anxious to purchase and acquire a home for themselves.

At that time, Arthur Blakslee and L. Alva Blakslee, his wife, were the owners of a house and lot situated in King county and designated as the east 200 feet of lot 17, block “C,” Beverly Park No. 3 Addition. That property was referred to throughout the trial, and will herein be referred to, as the “home property,” to distinguish it from the property described in the next paragraph hereof.

At the same time, Blakslee and wife were also purchasing on contract from G. H. Rogers and Gretchen H. Rogers, husband and wife, an. unimproved, vacant piece of property, approximately two hundred feet deep, situated directly in the rear of the “home property” and designated *129 as the westerly portion of lot 17, block “C,” Beverly Park Addition, No. 3, less the easterly 200 feet of that lot. This vacant portion of lot 17, which was referred to throughout the trial as the “rear lot” and will be so referred to herein, was practically inaccessible except through the “home property,” and was of far less value than the front, or improved, portion of the lot.

On or about September 14, 1945, respondents, through one of appellant’s real-estate agents, entered into an earnest-money receipt contract, prepared by appellant or his agent, by the terms of which contract respondents agreed to purchase and the Blakslees agreed to sell the home property described above for the sum of $6,450. Although this earnest-money receipt contract made no mention of the fact that the purchase of the property was to be accomplished through a “G.I. loan,” all parties concerned, at the time the contract was entered into, knew that respondents intended to finance the purchase through such a loan and that they were not otherwise able to acquire the property.

The earnest-money receipt contract also contained an agreement, between the Blakslees and appellant, under the terms of which the Blakslees were to pay appellant, as commission for the sale of the home property, the sum of $322.50 in cash, together with an assignment to appellant by the Blakslees of the latters’ interest in their contract to purchase the rear lot from Rogers and wife.

At the time the earnest-money receipt contract was executed, respondents delivered to the real-estate agent their promissory note in the sum of five hundred dollars, to. “bind the bargain,” and on September 17, 1945, they made a payment of two hundred dollars on the note.

The home property was subsequently appraised for the purpose of a combination “F.H.A.-G.I.” loan guaranty. By that appraisal, the property was valued at $6,300. In consequence of the appraisal in that amount, the appellant was notified by the proper Federal authorities that the government could not guarantee a loan to the respondents upon the home property, for the reason that the contract price of *130 the property, $6,450, was in excess of the reasonable value thereof, $6,300, as determined by the Federal appraiser.

Thereupon, on September 28, 1945, a conference between appellant and respondents was held in appellant’s office, at which time appellant informed respondents that their application for an F.H.A.-G.I. loan had been disapproved because the property had been appraised at only sixty-three hundred dollars, which was one hundred-fifty dollars less than the. prospective sale price. Respondents were unable to raise sufficient cash to complete the purchase of the home property without such a loan. Appellant, presumably acting as the agent, of the Blakslees, thereupon informed the respondents that under the terms of the earnest-money receipt contract of September 14, 1945, the: earnest money would be liable to forfeiture, and that he would take steps to effect such disposition.

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Bluebook (online)
195 P.2d 650, 31 Wash. 2d 126, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-ford-wash-1948.