Hardinger v. Fullerton

5 P.2d 987, 165 Wash. 483, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1130
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1931
DocketNo. 23352. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 987 (Hardinger v. Fullerton) 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
Hardinger v. Fullerton, 5 P.2d 987, 165 Wash. 483, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1130 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

— This action was brought in the court below by appellant Hardinger against defendants Fullerton and wife and' Sutherland and wife to recover from them installments due on a real estate purchase contract. For brevity, the parties will henceforth be designated as plaintiff, defendants Fullerton, and respondents. Defendants Fullerton, who had transferred the contract to respondents, cross-complained against respondents on the theory that they had assumed the payments due thereunder.

Upon a trial to the court, it found on the facts that respondents had not assumed the payments, and entered judgment in favor of plaintiff against defendants Fullerton for the payments then due, and dismissed the complaint and cross-complaint as against respondents. From this judgment, plaintiff and defendants Fullerton both appeal.

The main conflict in the facts is as to whether or not respondents assumed and agreed to pay the remainder due on the contract from F. B. Eckes and wife to the Fullertons and a mortgage of eighteen hundred dollars existing on the real estate so contracted to sell.

On September 1, 1928, defendants Fullerton purchased from F. B. Eckes and wife, on a contract in writing providing for monthly payments of twenty-five dollars each, lot 29, block 1, Sutherland’s Third Addition to Seattle, for the agreed price of thirty-six hundred dollars. One hundred dollars was paid in cash at the time of contracting, and defendants Fullerton assumed and agreed to pay a mortgage of eighteen hundred dollars thereon. They agreed to pay the balance of seventeen hundred dollars in installments of twenty-five dollars monthly. They entered into pos *485 session of those premises, occupied the same as their home, and made the stated monthly payments until April, 1930. On about June 21, 1929, the Eckes, by appropriate instruments in writing-, transferred all their interest in the premises to plaintiff, subject to the contract and mortgag-e.

On March 31, 1930, defendants Fullerton entered into an exchange agreement with respondents whereby the Fullertons were to exchange the Eckes property, lot 29, block 1, Sutherland’s Third Addition to Seattle, for certain other property owned by respondents known as lots 14 and 15, Sutherland’s Marine View Tracts, in King county, Washington. In this agreement, the parties put a value of $3,150 on the Sutherland property, and allowed the Fullertons a three hundred dollar credit on their equity in the Eckes contract. There was a balance due of $3,214.53 on the Eckes contract, of which eighteen hundred dollars was represented by the mortgage and $1,414.53 was due plaintiff on the Eckes contract, as assignee thereof. There was also sixty-three dollars semi-annual interest due on the eighteen hundred dollar mortgage on April 1,1930, and the taxes for 1929, estimated by the parties to be eighty-four dollars, the exact amount of which was $86.85 as subsequently disclosed, which taxes would fall due, forty-two dollars May 31, 1930, and forty-two dollars November 1, 1930, payment of which was provided for in the contract.

The Fullertons then made, according to the agreement, three notes to respondent, one for sixty-three dollars for the semi-annual interest on the eighteen hundred dollar mortgage, one for forty-two dollars for the first half of the 1929 taxes due May 31, 1930, and another for forty-two dollars for the last half of the 1929 taxes, due November 1, 1930, and twenty-five dollars needed to keep the contract in good standing *486 was adjusted by tbe Fullertons agreeing to pay that sum to respondents in cash.

The essential parts of the written exchange agreement between the parties read:

“ (2) The second party in consideration of One Dollar ($1.00) paid and also in consideration of such conveyance by first party, agrees to sell and convey to first party, at a valuation, for the purpose of this contract three hundred dollars, the following real estate situate in King county, Washington, to-wit: Lot •twenty-nine (29), block two (2), Sutherland’s Third Addition to the city of Seattle.
“(3) The premises which are to be conveyed by first party are to be conveyed subject to the following incumbrances: contract on which the unpaid balance is $2,850.00 payable at the rate of $30.00 or more per month, interest at the rate of seven’ per cent per an-num.
(4) The premises which are to be conveyed by the second party are to be conveyed subject to the following incumbrances: an unpaid balance on the contract of $3,214.53.
1414.53
1800.00”
“(6) The difference between the value of the respective premises over and above incumbrances shall be deemed, for the purpose of this contract, to be .......................................Dollars and said sum shall be due and payable by second party, as follows:
Cash ..................". $25.00
April 11, 1930............ 63.00
May 31st, 1930........... 42.00
November 1st, 1930....... 42.00
Total............•.... $172.00”
“ (13) The property of each party has been carefully inspected by the other, and no agreements or representations pertaining thereto, or to this transaction, have been made, save such as are stated herein.” •

Thereafter, the sixty-three dollar note was paid by the- Fullertons to respondents, who paid the same over *487 to plaintiff, and the twenty-five dollar installment was paid by the Fullertons to plaintiff. Plaintiff paid the taxes represented by the notes from the Fullertons to respondents, which amounted to $86.85, and none of the parties ever repaid the same to plaintiff.

Pursuant to the exchange agreement on April 1, 1930, defendants Fullerton entered into a formal real estate installment contract with respondents for the purchase of the property in Marine View Tracts at the agreed price of $3,150, receiving credit for the three hundred dollars for the equity on the Eckes contract and agreeing to pay the balance of $2,150 in monthly installments of thirty dollars each, beginning May 1, 1930, and also executed and delivered to respondents an unacknowledged quit claim deed with grantee’s name in blank for the Eckes property. Defendants Fullerton then entered into and retained possession of respondents’ property. Respondents subsequently advertised the Eckes property for sale, and later rented it, collecting about $150 in rents. On January 14, 1931, the mortgagee secured a certificate of purchase to the Eckes property, and has since been collecting the rents. '

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Bluebook (online)
5 P.2d 987, 165 Wash. 483, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 1130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardinger-v-fullerton-wash-1931.