Lasher v. Wheeler

87 P.2d 982, 198 Wash. 205
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1939
DocketNo. 26948. Department Two.
StatusPublished

This text of 87 P.2d 982 (Lasher v. Wheeler) 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
Lasher v. Wheeler, 87 P.2d 982, 198 Wash. 205 (Wash. 1939).

Opinions

Robinson, J.

This action was brought by J. O. Lasher against W. A. Wheeler and wife to collect a promissory note. The note, dated April 28, 1933, is set out in full in the complaint and purports to have been given by W. A. Wheeler to J. O. Lasher, promising to pay, upon demand without grace, to the order of Lasher, $1,062.18, with interest at seven per cent per annum from January 1, 1932. It contains the ordinary provision for reasonable attorney’s fee in case of suit. It was alleged that no part of the note had been paid, and judgment was asked for principal, interest, and costs, including one hundred dollars as attorney’s fee.

The defendants admitted that W. A. Wheeler executed the note, but set up affirmatively (1) that it was executed and delivered without consideration; and (2) under duress and while Wheeler was in ill health and of nervous and agitated state of mind.

A jury trial resulted in favor of the plaintiff, the verdict being returned on March 29, 1937. On March 31st, the defendants filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and, in the alternative, for a new trial. There is a minute entry in the transcript, *207 dated April 10, 1937, reading: “Motion for a new trial denied,” but saying nothing as to the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. It appears that, in April, the plaintiff presented a formal judgment, in accordance with the verdict, for the trial court’s signature, which the trial court marked: “Presented and refused.” On October 6, 1937, the court entered a formal order denying the defendants’ motion for a new trial and granting them judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

The statement of facts, although properly certified, is an extremely unsatisfactory document. It seems that there was no regular stenographer in attendance, and the appellant prepared a statement of facts from recollection. To this, respondent took numerous exceptions, many of which the court allowed. It further appears that a stenographer had voluntarily attended the trial and taken a part of the testimony for the sake of practice. Her notes, or a portion thereof, were proposed as amendments. These notes, the statement originally proposed, and a sheaf of affidavits used in the post-trial controversy, together with certain interlined comments in longhand inserted by the trial judge, plus the exhibits introduced in evidence, make up the statement.

We gather from an examination of the statement that, early in 1932, the respondents sold to the appellant Lasher a tract of land on Hood Canal for the sum of seven hundred dollars. A deed was executed and delivered which conveyed the right quantity, but, apparently, not the exact land which the appellant thought he was buying, and, we add, that the respondents thought they were selling; for, although the appellant’s brief speaks of Mr. Wheeler as a “cranially depressed, physically-ill and quondam very scared ‘constructive’ swindler,” and as well meriting criminal *208 prosecution, we think the evidence shows that he was guilty of no more than being honestly mistaken as to his boundaries. The parties visited the land together before the sale. Wheeler, when testifying as an adverse witness, was asked what he said to Dr. Lasher concerning where the boundaries were:

“A. There was a known corner to the property considerably back from the canal. I pointed this out to Mr. Lasher. I told him.that I could not find the next corner toward the canal and that there should have been also a meander corner which I also could not find. I told Mr. Lasher that in order to run a correct line we would have to go clear across Hood Canal and pick up a known corner and that this would probably cost in the neighborhood of $100 or more. Mr. Lasher was averse to spending the $100. However the logging company was logging up to the known corner and along the line which had been blazed which I believed was probably the line, and I pointed that out to Mr. Lasher. Both the logging company and myself and Mr. Lasher also accepted that as the line, but I distinctly impressed on Mr. Lasher that the only way an accurate line could be run was to go across the canal, and I had no money with which to do that. Mr. Lasher thought the fact that both the logging company and myself accepted that as the line was sufficient.”

Dr. Lasher’s testimony was substantially to the same effect. On cross-examination, he testified, in part, as follows:

“Q. When Mr. Wheeler pointed out the line which you subsequently found to be incorrect, did he tell you that was the line or that he thought it was the line? A. He said he thought it was the line. Q. Did he mention to you that there was one known comer from which the survey line, which would definitely determine the line, would have to be run? A. He did. Q. Did he tell you that one of the corners was unknown, the stick or post having been removed? A. Yes. Q. Did he explain to you what a meander corner was? A. He did. Q. What is a meander cor *209 ner? A. I understand that it is a corner which is placed when for some reason a survey has to be carried over a river or body of water. Q. What was there a meander corner in this case as far as you could determine? A. No. Q. Did Mr. Wheeler advise you that the meander corner was missing? A. Yes. Q. Did he advise you that because the meander corner was missing that it would be necessary to go clear across the Hood Canal and pick up a known corner on the other side of the canal before any survey line could be run? A. He did. Q. Did he tell you that it would cost money? A. He said it would be quite expensive. Q. Did he tell you that he had any money with which to make such a survey? A. Mr. Wheeler did not have any money. Q. Why did you not make such a proper survey line? A. I did not think it was necessary. . . . Q. Did Mr. Wheeler point out to you an old blazed line up to which a logging company was logging? A. He did. Q. Were the logging people accepting that line as the line to which the property subsequently sold to you extended? A. That is correct. Q. So that the place where Mr. Wheeler believed the line lay was also the place where the logging people believed the line lay? A. That is true.”

It turned out that both Mr. Wheeler and the “logging people” were wrong in their belief as to where the line lay. On March 24, 1932, Dr. Lasher wrote Wheeler that a man named Young had bought the property to the west; and, upon a survey, it appeared that Young’s east line took forty feet off the west side of the lot he supposed he had bought. Continuing, he said:

“I have the lot sold but naturally had to tell the party about this survey, which held up the sale until it is settled, if that is done soon enough. Could have let the deal go through and later stood a law suit but believe that would have been too expensive. ... Of course the lot is no good to me if the line is any East of where you told me. Also their line cuts off all the land I have cleared and takes most of the creek.”

*210 On April 11th, Mr. J. W. Bryan, Sr., as attorney for Dr. Lasher, addressed a letter to Mr. Wheeler in which he recited Lasher’s grievance, stated that he had been engaged to demand a settlement, and said, among other things:

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Bluebook (online)
87 P.2d 982, 198 Wash. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasher-v-wheeler-wash-1939.