Iredell v. Iredell

305 P.2d 805, 49 Wash. 2d 627, 1957 Wash. LEXIS 429
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1957
Docket33742
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 305 P.2d 805 (Iredell v. Iredell) 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
Iredell v. Iredell, 305 P.2d 805, 49 Wash. 2d 627, 1957 Wash. LEXIS 429 (Wash. 1957).

Opinion

Hill, J.

Jonathan Iredell had a wife, Thelma, and three children, from whom he had been separated for many years. In August, 1952, he and Olive Hilliard came to Seattle and “began a meretricious relationship of husband and wife, which was known by them to be such.” A year later (August, 1953), Thelma Iredell brought an action against her husband in the King county superior court, under the uniform reciprocal enforcement of support act (Laws of 1951, chapter 196, p. 584 [cf. RCW 26.21]), and, since September of that year, he has paid her $125 a month for support of their children. On April 23, 1954, Jonathan and Thelma Iredell were divorced. In the divorce action, a judgment was entered in her favor for $14,910 as past due support.

April 27, 1954, Jonathan Iredell and Olive Hilliard were married. April 29, 1954, the former wife, seeking to enforce her judgment, had a writ of execution issued under which the sheriff levied on certain real and personal property.

Olive Iredell brought the present action to restrain the sale of the property, claiming as her separate property the interest in the real property represented by the down payment of eighteen hundred dollars, and all the personal property (except two items not here in question), which consisted of furniture and furnishings.

The trial court made the following unchallenged findings concerning the property levied upon under Thelma Iredell’s writ of execution.

Relating to real property: A down payment of eighteen hundred dollars and all closing costs were paid by Olive Hilliard from her separate funds, although the deed ran *629 to “Jonathan Iredell and Olive V. Iredell, his wife.” A purchase-money mortgage was given for $6,450, the balance of the purchase price. Jonathan Iredell made the monthly payments on the mortgage from his earnings, and in consequence thereof the principal had been reduced in the amount of $209.82 prior to April 27, 1954, and an additional $350.94 subsequent to that date and prior to the trial of this matter.

Relating to personal property: All the items (furniture and furnishings) were bought during the period of the meretricious relationship between Jonathan Iredell and Olive Hilliard, in the name of or charged to the account of Jonathan C. Iredell, but the entire purchase price was paid by Olive Hilliard from her separate funds.

The trial court held that the $350.94 paid on the principal of the mortgage by Jonathan Iredell out of his earnings after his marriage on April 27, 1954, was paid with community funds, and that such payments “are not subject to execution to enforce a support judgment by a former wife” of the judgment debtor. The trial court was apparently relying upon our holding in Stafford v. Stafford (1941), 10 Wn. (2d) 649, 651, 117 P. (2d) 753, that real property owned as community property of the husband and his second wife cannot be reached to satisfy the divorce decree awards.

The trial court also held that the furniture and furnishings paid for by Olive Hilliard, now Iredell, with her separate funds, and the eighteen hundred dollar interest in the real property paid for with her separate funds, were not subject to execution to enforce the judgment of Jonathan Iredell’s former wife against him.

The judgment creditor (the former wife) and the sheriff of King county have appealed. (We will refer herein to the judgment creditor as though she were the only appellant.)

The judgment creditor, relying upon Creasman v. Boyle (1948), 31 Wn. (2d) 345, 196 P. (2d) 835, insists that, inasmuch as Jonathan Iredell and Olive Hilliard were living together in a meretricious relationship when the real and personal property levied upon by the sheriff was purchased, *630 it should be presumed as a matter of law that the parties intended to dispose of the property “exactly as they did dispose of it.” On that theory, the personal property, having been purchased in the name of Jonathan Iredell, would be presumed to be his separate property, and, as the deed to the real property named him and Olive V. Iredell as the grantees, they would be tenants in common and — or so the judgment creditor argues — Jonathan Iredell would be presumed to have a one-half interest therein. No other reason is urged why Olive Iredell should not be entitled to assert and establish her right, as against Jonathan Iredell or his judgment creditor, to the furniture and the interest in the real property paid for with her separate funds.

Our holding in Creasman v. Boyle, supra, has been misconstrued. Property rights are not determined on the basis of social relationships, moral or immoral. Poole v. Schrichte (1951), 39 Wn. (2d) 558, 236 P. (2d) 1044. For reasons heretofore set forth in Poole v. Schrichte, pp. 562-3, and Walberg v. Mattson (1951), 38 Wn. (2d) 808, 232 P. (2d) 827 (See, also, Dahlgren v. Blomeen (1956), ante p. 47, 298 P. (2d) 479), our holding in the Creasman case has no application here. In Walberg v. Mattson, supra, p. 812, it is pointed out that in the Creasman case,

“No evidence of actual intent of the parties was introduced since the woman was dead and Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1211 [cf. RCW 5.60.030] . . . prohibited the man from giving such testimony.”

In the Creasman case, supra, p. 356, we said,

“. . . we think that, under these circumstances and in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, it should be presumed as a matter of law that the parties intended to dispose of the property exactly as they did dispose of it.” (First italics ours.)

Here there is “evidence to the contrary.” For that reason, the presumption that the parties intended to dispose of the property “exactly as they did dispose of it” does not arise. Walberg v. Mattson, supra.

It is the judgment creditor’s contention that this real property is not community property, that Jonathan Iredell *631 and Olive Hilliard were tenants in common, and that neither their marriage nor their use of $350.94 of community funds to reduce the mortgage makes it community property. With this we agree, but we cannot accept the judgment creditor’s thesis that, as tenants in common, they had equal interest in the property and the judgment creditor is therefore entitled to reach one half of their total interest in it.

The presumption that tenants in common hold equal shares when the instrument under which they claim is silent in that regard, is subject to rebuttal. Williams v. Monzingo (1944), 235 Iowa 434, 16 N. W. (2d) 619, 156 A. L. R. 508, and cases there cited. (See, also, annotation, 156 A. L. R. 515.) That presumption was rebutted in the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
305 P.2d 805, 49 Wash. 2d 627, 1957 Wash. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iredell-v-iredell-wash-1957.