Farrow v. Ostrom

133 P.2d 974, 16 Wash. 2d 547
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1943
DocketNo. 28733.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 133 P.2d 974 (Farrow v. Ostrom) 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
Farrow v. Ostrom, 133 P.2d 974, 16 Wash. 2d 547 (Wash. 1943).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

— Cameron W. Ostrom and May Clara Logan were married in August, 1937. In November, 1938, they contracted to purchase lot 9, block 46, Pike’s second addition to Union City, Seattle, King county, Washington. The contract price was six thousand dollars, including the payment of a mortgage on the property. They obligated themselves to pay $29.92 per month to their vendor, and $30 per month to the mortgagee.

On August 3, 1940, Mrs. Farrow, the plaintiff in this action, was seriously injured by an automobile driven *549 by Cameron W. Ostrom. She brought suit against him and against the Ostrom marital community to recover damages. On March 27, 1941, a verdict was returned in her favor against Ostrom and against the community composed of himself and wife, in the sum of seventy-five hundred dollars. Judgment was entered on the verdict • on April 12, 1941. After its affirmance on appeal (Farrow v. Ostrom, 10 Wn. (2d) 666, 117 P. (2d) 963), a casualty company paid five thousand dollars on the judgment, and in November 1941, Mrs. Farrow brought this action in an attempt to collect the balance out of the real property contract interest above described.

In the meantime, the Ostrom community had been dissolved. On August 4, 1940, the next day after Mrs. Farrow was run down by the Ostrom car, Mrs. Ostrom left her husband, and, in September, began a divorce action against him. It had arrived at the interlocutory decree stage on the very day Mrs. Farrow’s personal injury suit was set for trial, March 25, 1941. On that day, an interlocutory decree was entered, which granted to Mrs. Ostrom the community contract interest in the real estate above mentioned. On that same day, Ostrom, by deed, quitclaimed to May Clara Ostrom. This deed was recorded on March 26, 1941, while the case of Farrow v. Cameron W. Ostrom and the Ostrum community was on trial. On March 25th, Ostrom also gave Mrs. Ostrom a bill of sale to their household furniture.

The complaint in this action alleges, in substance, the recovery by the plaintiff of the seventy-five hundred dollar judgment against Cameron W. Ostrom and the Ostrom community; the receipt of the five thousand dollars from the casualty company; the plaintiff’s inability to locate any separate property of Ostrom from which the balance could be satisfied; that Os *550 irom had quitclaimed his interest in the real property to May Clara Ostrom while the trial of plaintiff’s action for damages was in progress; that Mrs. Ostrom recorded the deed and claimed the property, and plaintiff could not safely levy upon it, although she had an equity in it by reason of the tort inflicted upon her by the community long prior to the conveyance to May Clara Ostrom. Plaintiff prayed that the conveyance to Mrs. Ostrom be declared a nullity in so far as plaintiff’s rights were concerned. There was also a prayer for such other and further relief as might seem meet.

The Ostroms answered separately, but to the same general effect. They alleged affirmatively that Mrs. Ostrom left her husband on August 4, 1940 (which happens to have been the day after Mrs. Farrow was injured), and shortly afterwards brought suit for divorce; that an interlocutory decree was entered on March 25, 1941; that the decree awarded her the equity in the real estate contract and the household furniture, most of which she had owned before marriage; that Ostrom, pursuant to the decree, quitclaimed the real estate interest and gave her a bill of sale to the furniture on the day the decree was entered. They further alleged that Mrs. Ostrom took the conveyances in complete ignorance of the Farrow, suit against the community (which was set for trial that very day), and that she did not know, until about the time this suit was brought, that such a suit had been prosecuted, or even that the accident on which it was based had occurred. All of these allegations were supported by the evidence given at the trial.

Before proceeding with the discussion of the questions presented by the appeal, it should be noted that, a few days before this action was begun, Mrs. Ostrom contracted to sell the contract interest -in the real *551 estate for six thousand dollars. The matter was escrowed, but the transaction has not been consummated due to the lis pendens which accompanied this suit. Mrs. Ostrom had received $250 earnest money, which she still retains, and the escrow agent, after taking care of all other matters, including the mortgage, is holding for her account $1,616.14, both of which sums, the appellant claims, should be applied on her judgment against the Ostrom community.

The respondents, with considerable reason, regarded this case as the ordinary action to set aside a fraudulent conveyance. During the trial, they maintained that it could not possibly be fraudulent because Mrs. Ostrom knew nothing whatever about the Farrow judgment, or the action in which it was entered, or even that Mrs. Farrow had been injured, until long after she received the conveyance, and, also, because the conveyances were made upon the order of the court. The appellant’s attorney contended that his client was merely attempting to enforce an equity in community property which flowed from a judgment against the community, relying, in part, on Rem. Rev. Stat., § 10572 [P. C. § 1443], and various decisions of this court, but principally that in the case of Capital Nat. Bank v. Johns, 170 Wash. 250, 16 P. (2d) 452. Respondents contended that, with the element of fraud out, the action should be dismissed as a collateral attack upon the interlocutory decree of divorce. They contended that, even if that were not true, then it was merely a situation where two persons claimed equities in some property arising out of tort claims, in which contest Mrs. Ostrom had priority over Mrs. Farrow.

In this connection, it is argued that the award of the property to Mrs. Ostrom in the interlocutory decree of divorce was really to satisfy her tort claims *552 against her husband. It is also argued that, in any event, Mrs. Ostrom would be entitled to retain the $375 which she furnished to make up the five hundred dollar down payment on the contract. The trial judge’s view of the matter is shown by his oral decision made at the close of the case and after hearing argument by counsel:

“This property, by order of the court in the divorce court, was awarded to her free and clear from any claim on the part of the husband. That is a judgment, and if there is any fraud in connection with it, that must be attacked directly and not attacked collaterally, as in this action, because this is a collateral attack upon that.”

It is true, as the court stated, that the property was awarded to Mrs. Ostrom “free and clear from any claim on the part of the husband,” but what we are concerned with in this case is whether or not it was thereby awarded to her free and clear of any claim on the part of Mrs. Farrow.

An interlocutory decree of divorce is not an action to quiet title, and, even when such a decree awards a husband’s interest in community property to his wife “as her sole and separate property,” it purports to do no more than transfer such interest as he has.

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Bluebook (online)
133 P.2d 974, 16 Wash. 2d 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrow-v-ostrom-wash-1943.