First Guaranty Bank v. Western Cross Arm & Manufacturing Co.

247 P. 1027, 139 Wash. 614, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 625
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1926
DocketNo. 19890. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 247 P. 1027 (First Guaranty Bank v. Western Cross Arm & Manufacturing Co.) 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
First Guaranty Bank v. Western Cross Arm & Manufacturing Co., 247 P. 1027, 139 Wash. 614, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 625 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Bridges, J.

In its brief the appellant says that this is an action to foreclose an equitable lien on standing timber. A somewhat detailed statement of the facts, either admitted or found by us to be shown by ¿ preponderance of the evidence, will be necessary.

In February, 1909, Emil - Morsbach and wife and. Rudolph Morsbach and wife were the owners of certain lands in Thurston county, in this state, upon which was some valuable timber. On that day they entered *615 into a written contract with H. H. Martin Lumber Company for the sale of the timber, but not the land. The purchase" price was to be $20,000, $2,500 of which was paid down in cash by the purchaser; $2,500 more was to be paid in six months, $5,000 in one year, $5,000 in two years, and $5,000 in three years, with interest on the deferred payments. The lumber company was to have ten years within which to remove the timber, and it was to have the right to go upon the lands for removal purposes. If the lumber company cut any of the timber before the payment of the whole purchase price, then it was to pay at the rate of two dollars per thousand feet of the timber so removed, such sum to be applied upon the purchase price. The lumber company did not make its payments as the contract provided, and, after having made the first deferred payment, paid nothing further for a number of years, except the interest on the deferred payments, which sums were accepted by the Morsbachs. The lumber company, also during this period, paid the taxes as the contract required.

Such being the situation on the 18th day of August, 1922, a supplemental contract was executed by the parties on that day, which, after referring to the original contract, made the purchase price $21,000, as of that date. Two thousand five hundred dollars was paid down and the balance was to be paid as follows: Two thousand five hundred dollars on the 18th day of August, 1923, and four thousand on the 18th day of August in each of the years 1924, 1925, 1926 and 1927. The deferred payments were to draw interest. This supplemental contract further provided that the lumber company was to have until August 18, 1929, in which to cut and remove the timber, and that no timber should be removed until the whole of the purchase price and *616 interest had been paid. The provisions of the original contract, not inconsistent with those of the supplemental instrument, were to remain in force. "

After the lumber company had made the first deferred payment provided by the supplemental contract, it borrowed from the plaintiff, First Guaranty Bank, of Centraba, Washington, the sum of $10,000, which loan was evidenced by a promissory note. At the time of getting the loan, the lumber company “granted, bargained, sold, assigned, transferred and set over” to the plaintiff all of “its right, title and interest in, under and by virtue, of ” the contracts above mentioned. This instrument of assignment expressly stated that it was to be “cobateral security for the payment” of the loan above mentioned. This assignment was dated February 14, 1923, being the date of the note secured, and was duly acknowledged and was filed for record and recorded in the office of the auditor of Thurston county in the record of deeds. The contracts were at the same time delivered into the possession of the plaintiff.

About a year after the making of the note and the assignment of the contracts as collateral security, the lumber company was adjudged a bankrupt. The plaintiff filed with the trustee in bankruptcy its claim and made a showing of the assignment of the above mentioned contracts as security, and demanded that its claim be allowed as a secured claim. Shortly after the lumber company had gone into bankruptcy, the Mors-bachs demanded of the trustee in bankruptcy, and also the plaintiff, the interest on the contracts in question, which payments, however, were not made. In October, 1924, the Morsbachs declared a forfeiture of all the rights of the bankrupt officials, the Martin Lumber Company and the plaintiff under the contracts for the purchase of the timber.

*617 At that time there was due, and for some time prior thereto had been due, considerable sums of money under the terms of the contracts, and the taxes on the timber had not been paid as the contracts required. A few days after the Morsbachs had claimed the forfeiture, the plaintiff made a tender to them of all sums in arrears under the contracts and demanded conveyances of the timber. The Morsbachs refused this tender, apparently not only because they had previously declared a forfeiture, but also because they felt they were not in position to give the kind of title to the timber that the plaintiff demanded, because of the bankruptcy proceedings and the plaintiff’s interest under its assignment of the contracts for security purposes. The tender does not appear to have been kept good. In the following November, the trustee in bankruptcy sold all the right, title and interest of the bankrupt in and to the property involved in this suit, and a large amount of other valuable property. This sale was made to C. D. Cunningham, who transferred the property purchased by him to the defendant, Western Cross Arm and Manufacturing Company. That defendant subsequently made some payments to the Morsbachs and acquired their interest in the timber in question in this suit.

The complaint alleged most of the facts above mentioned and prayed that it be adjudged that the Martin Lumber Company owed the plaintiff the amount of the note above mentioned, with interest and attorney’s fees, and that it “has a lien upon all the timber standing, lying and being upon the lands hereinabove de--scribed as against the defendant, and that such lien be foreclosed and the timber be sold in the manner provided by law,” and that the defendant be enjoined from cutting any of the timber until the determination of *618 this suit. The trial court held that the assignment by the Martin Lumber Company to the plaintiff of the timber contracts as security was, in effect, a chattel mortgage, and, since it did not have the statutory affidavit, it was void as against creditors of the lumber company, and that the plaintiff did not have any valid assignment of the interest of the lumber company, and for that reason could not maintain the action. Subsequently, the court made a judgment dismissing the action, and the plaintiff has appealed therefrom.

The appellant seems to contend that the contracts assigned as security were choses in action and, since they were delivered into its possession, they constituted a pledge, and not a chattel mortgage, and that that pledge created an equitable lien on the timber. It also argues that the title to the timber at all times remained in the Morsbachs and did not by the contracts pass to the lumber company. On the other hand, the respondent contends, among other things, that, under the terms of the contracts, the title to the timber passed to the lumber company and that the assignment by it of those contracts had the effect of mortgaging the timber to the bank, and that, since the mortgage did not contain the statutory affidavit, it was void; that, in any event, the assignment of the contracts could not operate as a pledge of the timber, because the bank at no time took possession of it. The argument in the briefs has taken a wide range.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 P. 1027, 139 Wash. 614, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-guaranty-bank-v-western-cross-arm-manufacturing-co-wash-1926.