Fidelity Securities Co. v. Dickinson

201 P. 301, 117 Wash. 323, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 1058
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1921
DocketNo. 16466
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 201 P. 301 (Fidelity Securities Co. v. Dickinson) 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
Fidelity Securities Co. v. Dickinson, 201 P. 301, 117 Wash. 323, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 1058 (Wash. 1921).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

On November 18,1911, Orison Dickinson and wife owned certain real property situated in the city of Seattle. On that day they mortgaged the property to the First Mortgage & Savings Bank to secure a loan in the sum of $1,200 then made by the bank to them. Subsequent thereto the mortgage by assignments, duly and regularly executed, passed into the possession and ownership of the Fidelity Securities Company, the respondent on this appeal. No part of the principal of the loan was ever paid. Interest was paid thereon according to the terms of the loan down to the year 1916, but nothing more.

In the year 1914, Dickinson and wife conveyed-the property to one William D. Ingalls, and subsequent thereto the title to the property passed by mesne conveyances through sundry holders to one Elizabeth M. Davis and one John Carrigan, in whom it was vested in the year 1919. In 1910, the city of Seattle authorized the construction of sewers in the streets and avenues abutting upon and adjacent to the property, providing in the ordinances that the cost of the sewers should be paid by assessment upon property benefited.

Pursuant to the ordinance, the city of Seattle caused an assessment to be levied upon the property in question, payable in installments. One such installment was not paid, and subsequently the city caused the property to be sold under the lien of assessment. No other purchaser appearing at the sale, the city pur[325]*325chased the property for the amount of its lieu thereon, and issued to itself a certificate of sale. On February 13,1919, more than two years after the sale of the property to the city, C. V. Martin, acting pursuant to a contract entered into between himself and Theodore Zilinsky, purchased the certificate of sale in the name of Zilinsky. Immediately after the purchase of the certificate, notice was given in the name of Zilinsky to the owners of the property, under § 33, ch. 98, p. 461, Laws of 1911, that Zilinsky was the holder of the certificate of sale, and that he would demand a deed to the property from the city.

After service of the notice, and prior to the expiration of the sixty-day period in which the owners are permitted under the statute to redeem from the sale, Martin, in the name of Zilinsky, took quitclaim deeds to the property from the owners. Between the time of the service of the notice and the delivery of the deeds Zilinsky died, a fact unknown to Martin. Zilinsky left a will in which Budolph Beck was named as executor, and in due course he was appointed and confirmed as such by the superior court of Bang county. Acting in the name of the executor, Martin applied to the city for a deed to the property. At that time the sixty-day period in which Elizabeth M. Davis had the right to redeem by the terms of the statute had expired; Carrigan’s time, however, had as yet some days to run. The city officers treated his quitclaim deed as a waiver of his right, and on May 12, 1919, one day prior to the time Carrigan’s right to redeem expired, issued to the executor a deed to the property. Subsequently, and on May 29, 1919, the city issued to the executor another deed to the same property. This deed differed in no respects from the earlier deed, save that it had written on its margin the words, “Correction Deed.”

By the terms of the contract between Zilinsky and [326]*326Martin, Zilinsky agreed, in the case he should obtain title to the property, to deed the same to Martin “or his daughter,” for the consideration of three hundred dollars in cash and a note for fifteen hundred dollars, payable three years after its date, with interest at seven per centum, payable semi-annually, secured by a mortgage on the property. On the execution of the deed to him from the city, the executor, pursuant to the terms of this contract, and with the leave and approval of the court in which the probate proceedings were pending, conveyed the property to Marie M. Martin, a daughter of C. V. Martin, who, in turn, paid to the executor the sum of three hundred dollars in cash, and executed and delivered to him a note and mortgage in accordance with the terms of the agreement between Zilinsky and her father.

After the occurrence of these transactions, the respondent, as the owner and holder of the Dickinson mortgage, began the present action to foreclose the same. It made parties defendant to the action, among others, the executor, Beck, C. V. Martin, and Marie M. Martin. The complaint was in the usual form, and contained allegations appropriate under our form of procedure to show a lien by mortgage on the property, and a right to its foreclosure. With reference to the defendants named, it was alleged that they had, or claimed to have, some interest in or title to the mortgaged property, but that such interests or liens, if any, were subject and inferior to the plaintiff’s mortgage. The defendants named answered separately. C. V. Martin’s answer was a disclaimer of interest. Marie M. Martin answered, setting up title herself, claiming title superior to the lien of the plaintiff’s mortgage, in virtue of the deed from the city to the executor and the deed from the executor to her. The executor’s answer was to the same effect.

[327]*327The cause was tried on the issues as thus framed, at the conclusion of which the court made, among others, the following findings of fact:

“(I) All of the allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint are true and correct.
“(IV) The mortgage described in the plaintiff’s complaint is a valid lien upon the property described in the plaintiff’s complaint to secure said sums and each of them, and said sums and all of them are due, owing and unpaid.
“ (V) Theodore Zilinsky at the instigation of C. V. Martin purchased the record title of certain delinquent tax certificates, the record title of which, after the death of Theodore Zilinsky, descended to Rudolph Beck, as executor of the last will and testament of Theodore Zilinsky, deceased, subject to an agreement whereby the title to said property was to become vested in said C. V. Martin, the said C. V. Martin to pay said Theodore Zilinsky three hundred dollars ($300) in cash and to execute a mortgage to him on said property for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars ($1,500) as compensation to said Theodore Zilinsky for the use of his name and money.
“(VI) Subsequent to the death of Theodore Zilinsky, C. V. Martin, acting for himself and as .attorney for said Rudolph Beck, as executor of the last will and testament of Theodore Zilinsky, deceased, for the purpose of obtaining a tax deed to said premises prior to the expiration of the period of redemption, and for the purpose of securing the entire title of said property in order to convey the entire title to Marie M. Martin, C. V. Martin’s daughter, purchased for a valuable consideration the fee of said premises from the owners thereof prior to the expiration of the right of redemption from said delinquent tax certificates and with the knowledge both of himself and said Rudolph Beck, executor of the last wdll and testament of Theodore Zilinsky, deceased, of the death of said Theodore Zilinsky, erroneously filled in the name of Theodore Zilinsky as grantee on May 11, 1919, the deeds having been delivered to said C. V. Martin with the names of the grantees [328]*328in blank and authority having been given to him to fill in the blanks.
‘ ‘ (VII) Rudolph Beck, as executor of the last will and testament of Theodore Zilinsky, deceased, acting through C. V.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 P. 301, 117 Wash. 323, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-securities-co-v-dickinson-wash-1921.