John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance v. Gooley

83 P.2d 221, 196 Wash. 357, 118 A.L.R. 1484, 1938 Wash. LEXIS 627
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1938
DocketNo. 26996. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 83 P.2d 221 (John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance v. Gooley) 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
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance v. Gooley, 83 P.2d 221, 196 Wash. 357, 118 A.L.R. 1484, 1938 Wash. LEXIS 627 (Wash. 1938).

Opinion

Beals, J.

— During the year 1922, Edward and Pauline Gooley executed a note to Farm Mortgage Security Company, for the sum of twenty thousand dollars, secured by a mortgage on their farm in Lincoln county. The note and mortgage were thereafter assigned to the plaintiff in this action, John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company. The note fell due November 1, 1927, and August 22, 1927, payment thereof was extended to November 1, 1932.

August 5, 1922, Mr. and Mrs. Gooley executed an agreement, by the terms of which Mr. Gooley should become the owner of the land, in case of the death of his wife.

*359 Mr. and Mrs. Gooley, from about 1901, maintained their home upon the land which they mortgaged, and during the month of May, 1931, Mrs. Gooley, who had for several years been ill, was taken to a hospital in Spokane, where she remained until the following November, when she and Mr. Gooley rented a small apartment in the St. Helens apartment house, in Spokane, where they decided to remain so that Mrs. Gooley could receive necessary medical aid. February 11, 1932, they moved to the Englehorn hotel, where they occupied a single light housekeeping room. March 25th following, Mrs. Gooley was again taken to the hospital, where she remained until May 15th, when she, with her husband, returned to their Lincoln county farm. December 16, 1932, after a short stay at Hillyard, near Spokane, Mrs. Gooley again became an inmate of the hospital, where she remained until her death, December 27th following.

February 8, 1932, the interest upon the note and mortgage above referred to being several months past due, the plaintiff herein instituted an action upon its promissory note, asking also the foreclosure of its mortgage. Mr. and Mrs. Gooley were named as defendants in the action, together with their sons, Clarence A. and Edward L., and several other persons. An affidavit of service of summons was filed in the action, the affiant stating that, on the 18th day of February, 1932, he served the summons and complaint in the action upon Edward Gooley and Pauline E. Gooley, his wife,

“. . . by then and there delivering to and leaving with Mrs. August Gooley, a true copy of said summons and of the complaint herein, at the Engle-horn hotel . . . , they each being absent therefrom, and the said Mrs. August Gooley being a person of suitable age and discretion then resident therein.”

*360 March 12, 1932, an order of default against all of the defendants in the foreclosure action was entered, the order, in so far as Edward and Pauline Gooley were concerned, being based upon the return of service above referred to.

The affidavit of service was defective on its face; first, because it failed to state that the Englehorn hotel was the house of usual abode of Mr. and Mrs. Gooley, and second, because it failed to state that a copy of the summons and complaint had been left with Mrs. August Gooley for defendant Edward Gooley, and a copy for defendant Pauline Gooley.

A decree of foreclosure was signed on the same day the default was entered, and the land ordered sold. The sale was held, and no redemption having been made, a sheriff’s deed was issued April 19, 1933, conveying the land to the plaintiff in the action, the sheriff’s deed being regularly filed for record in the office of the county auditor.

July 19, 1933, the plaintiff in' the foreclosure suit caused to be filed in the action an amended affidavit of service, sworn to by the individual who had made the purported service upon Mr. and Mrs. Gooley, in which affidavit it was stated that two copies of the summons and complaint had been left with Mrs. August Gooley, one copy for Edward Gooley and the other copy for Pauline Gooley. The amended return also stated that the Englehorn hotel was then the house of usual abode of Mr. and Mrs. Gooley. The amended return was filed ex parte, without notice to anyone.

November 12, 1936, plaintiff in the action filed a petition, praying for the entry of an order directing and authorizing the amendment of the original affidavit of service, and ratifying and approving the filing of the amended affidavit above referred to. On the *361 same day, an order was entered declaring the original affidavit of service amended.

It appears that September 30, 1936, the plaintiff entered into a contract with Jacob and Marguerite Schmauder, whereby the plaintiff agreed to sell to the Schmauders the farm which had been conveyed to the plaintiff by the sheriff’s deed. By a paragraph of this contract, the purchasers agreed to make any objection which they might have to the vendor’s title, within sixty days from the date of the contract, and that, upon objection being made, the vendor should have a reasonable time to make its title to the land good. The purchaser’s counsel objected to the title, questioning the validity of the service of the summons in the action upon Edward and Pauline Gooley, whereupon the plaintiff herein (also the plaintiff in the foreclosure action) instituted this action for the purpose of quieting its title as against Edward Gooley and the heirs of Pauline Gooley, then deceased.

Edward Gooley filed his answer to the complaint, denying the material allegations therein contained, and by way of a cross-complaint, attacked the decree in the foreclosure action, upon the ground that that decree had been entered without obtaining jurisdiction over the persons of Edward and Pauline Gooley, alleging that no service of process in that action had ever been made upon them. The cross-defendants named were the plaintiff, Mr. and Mrs. Schmauder, and other persons, with whom we are not now concerned.

In his cross-complaint, Mr. Gooley alleged that he and his late wife had never had a house of usual abode in the city of Spokane, either at the Englehorn hotel or elsewhere; that while they were living in Spokane, at no time had anyone resided with them; and that no service of process had ever been made on either *362 Mr. or Mrs. Gooley. Mr. Gooley also alleged that he was ready and willing to pay the amount of the mortgage which had been foreclosed, together with interest; and that the plaintiff herein had been in possession of the farm ever since 1932, and should be required to account for the rents, issues, and profits thereof. Mr. Gooley also asked that the decree in the foreclosure case be declared void; that title to the farm be quieted in him, subject to the mortgage; and that an accounting be ordered.

The plaintiff and Mr. and Mrs. Schmauder denied the allegations of the cross-complaint, and pleaded, by way of an affirmative defense thereto, that Edward and Pauline Gooley had offered to deed the premises to the plaintiff; that they had actual notice of the foreclosure proceedings and had voluntarily delivered up possession of the land to the plaintiff, as purchaser at the sheriff’s sale; that the land had been sold to Jacob Schmauder, who had been let into possession thereof, and had planted a large number of acres to crop and had made valuable repairs on the premises. It was also pleaded that Mr. Gooley had been guilty of laches.

To this affirmative defense, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
83 P.2d 221, 196 Wash. 357, 118 A.L.R. 1484, 1938 Wash. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-hancock-mutual-life-insurance-v-gooley-wash-1938.