Fritch v. Fritch

335 P.2d 43, 53 Wash. 2d 496, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 291
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1959
Docket34692
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 335 P.2d 43 (Fritch v. Fritch) 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
Fritch v. Fritch, 335 P.2d 43, 53 Wash. 2d 496, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 291 (Wash. 1959).

Opinion

Donworth, J.

This action involves the ownership of a forty-acre tract of land near Kirkland, King county, pur *498 chased by respondent (under an executory contract) while the parties hereto were husband and wife. Respondent, claiming sole and separate ownership, brought suit to quiet title in himself as against all claims of appellant, his divorced wife. Appellant, contending the land to be community property not disposed of in a prior divorce proceeding, sought to be adjudged the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property as a tenant in common. From an adverse judgment, she appeals.

Since the issues raised on this, appeal by the assignments of error relate principally to factual matters, we must have in mind the salient facts, most of which are not in conflict.

Respondent, a carpenter by trade, had worked in Alaska for several seasons prior to 1943. In December, 1942, or January, 1943, he returned to his home in Seattle. At that time, appellant was residing in the family home which the parties had purchased almost twenty years earlier. Three of their four children had grown and left the family home; only a daughter remained.

On March 1, 1943, respondent contracted to buy the land presently in dispute. Of the $2,000 total purchase price, he paid $550 down and agreed to pay the balance in installments. (Since the contract under which he purchased the property is not in evidence, we are unable to ascertain its terms. However, the record reveals that a deed, running to respondent as sole grantee, was executed by the grantors March 1, 1943, and was apparently deposited by them in escrow pending receipt of the entire purchase price.) The land was. then covered with second growth timber. Respondent entered into possession almost immediately and commenced clearing land for a home site. This was while appellant was still residing in the parties’ Seattle home. After about two acres had been cleared, respondent purchased materials and constructed a 16' x 24' “shack” or “two-room house,” as respondent called it.

In May, 1943, the parties sold their home in Seattle. They divided the down payment which they had received. Respondent desired to make his home on the land now in dispute, while appellant wished to remain in Seattle. The *499 parties were unable to reconcile their differences. Respondent moved into the home of his sister near the Kirkland property. Accompanied by her daughter, appellant moved into an apartment in the home occupied by her aging parents. About that time, the parties divided their household goods and other personal property.

Thereafter, the purchasers of the parties’ Seattle home defaulted in paying their installments. This matter was settled through their attorney, who was able to obtain $2,-000 (the entire balance which remained to be paid on the Seattle home).

In January, 1944, the parties met in the office of an attorney for the purpose of receiving the funds which had come into his possession as a result of this settlement. The evidence as to what occurred at that meeting is sharply conflicting.

It is appellant’s version that respondent had agreed earlier that she should have the entire $2,000, but that he then demanded one half of it; that respondent was abusive; that she agreed that respondent could have the Kirkland property “as long as he makes it his home”; that no property settlement or any written agreement whatever was made.

On the other hand, respondent testified that appellant had agreed earlier that respondent could have one half of the proceeds, but that she then demanded all; that the parties discussed a two-hundred-forty-acre tract of land in Benton county owned by the parties and valued by respondent at somewhere between $1,000 and $1,500; that respondent offered this land to appellant, but she refused it; that she wanted the Kirkland property, but he declined; that appellant then wanted $550 (the amount paid down on the Kirkland property), which he also refused; that appellant said, “if you feel that way about it, you can take it”; that a written agreement was prepared and signed by the parties, each of whom received a copy thereof; that the agreement “gave me what equity I had in that property over there” (referring to Kirkland); that it made no mention of the Benton county property; that appellant made no mention of di *500 vorce; that the attorney advised him that the writing would not “be legal until the judge puts his signature on it.”

An adult son of the parties, who had accompanied appellant to the conference, testified on behalf of respondent at the time of trial as follows:

“Q. Was any agreement reached in your presence as to the Kirkland property? Did your mother and father reach any agreement that you know of while you were there, in your presence, as to the Kirkland property? A. No. Mother said she did not want it, or wanted nothing to do with it. Then after the voice rose and they got to talking on other subjects and Dad said if they wouldn’t agree that he got $1,000 out of the home on the hill [Seattle], that he would get his own attorney ...”

As a result of this conference, respondent obtained a check for $1,000 and applied most of the proceeds therefrom to the Kirkland property.

On January 25, 1944, appellant verified the complaint instituting divorce proceedings against her husband. This complaint, which was filed in the King county superior court February 1, 1944, made no mention whatever as to whether the parties did, or did not, have community property at that time. Following personal service upon respondent and his subsequent default, an interlocutory order of divorce was entered March 6, 1944. A final decree was subsequently entered October 4, 1944.

Although respondent testified that a written instrument, purporting to transfer the parties’ “equity” in the Kirkland property to him, subject to court approval, was executed at the meeting in January, 1944, no such writing was produced at the time of trial. Furthermore, neither the interlocutory order nor the final decree of divorce made any reference to the existence or nonexistence of community property, much less to its disposition.

Subsequent to respondent’s purchase of the Kirkland property in March, 1943, and before the conference in January, 1944, above mentioned, respondent reduced the principal balance due on the contract to approximately $1,326. Between January 28 and April 22, 1944, respondent paid *501 that balance in full, and obtained a deed which he filed for record on April 25, 1944.

Following January, 1944, respondent continued to dwell on the Kirkland property, continually improving it. He cleared more land, fenced the whole tract temporarily, then permanently, installed a water pumping system, constructed a concrete retaining wall, garage and small barn, and remodeled and enlarged the two-room house which he had originally built on the property. These improvements were made during .the ten-year period between 1944 and 1954. Respondent, who was a carpenter, performed practically all of this work himself, but purchased materials and paid about $1,000 for “bulldozer” work in clearing the land.

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Bluebook (online)
335 P.2d 43, 53 Wash. 2d 496, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fritch-v-fritch-wash-1959.