Locke v. Andrasko

34 P.2d 444, 178 Wash. 145, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 646
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1934
DocketNo. 24600. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 P.2d 444 (Locke v. Andrasko) 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
Locke v. Andrasko, 34 P.2d 444, 178 Wash. 145, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 646 (Wash. 1934).

Opinions

On Rehearing.

Mitchell, J.

This case was heard by Department Two, and an opinion filed, 175 Wash. 123, 26 P. (2d) 1046. A rehearing' has been granted, and the case reheard En Banc.

Prank and Barbara Chopeck were husband and wife. They had five children, as follows: Andrew, born in 1897; George, born in 1900; Anna (now Anna Brown), born in 1905; Rosie (now Rosie Locke), born in 1906; and Susie (now Susie Martin), born in 1909. The father, Prank Chopeck, prior to June 9,1910, was killed in a coal mine, on account of which damages were paid by the coal mining company, sixteen hundred dollars of which was awarded to the children. To receive the money belonging to the children, their mother, Barbara, was on June 9, 1910, appointed and qualified as guardian of their estates. She received the money, and has never settled her account with the children or either of them as guardian or otherwise.

After the death of Prank Chopeck and prior to the appointment of Barbara as guardian of the estates of her children, she married Tom Kaperak. By order of the probate court, she and her husband were allowed to use fifteen hundred dollars of her children’s money to buy the real property involved in this action, for which loan she and her husband, Tom Kaperak, gave their note in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, dated April 4, 1912, payable seven years after date, interest at six per cent per annum, to be secured, and was *147 secured, by their mortgage on the real property purchased. Both note and mortgage were made payable to Mike Buchko as trustee for the children. The mortgage was duly recorded in the county auditor’s office.

Two children were born of the marriage of Tom Kaperak and Barbara, namely: Mary Kaperak and Tom Kaperak, Jr.

A written satisfaction of the real estate mortgage, purporting to have been signed and acknowledged by Mike Buchko, trustee, was filed and recorded in the county auditor’s office on March 1,1921. Mike Buchko, the trustee, died thereafter (date not shown by the record, but prior to the commencement of this action), and no one has been appointed to succeed him as trustee.

About the years 1928 and 1929, a divorce action was pending between Tom Kaperak and Barbara, his wife, which resulted in a divorce in 1929. While the divorce action was pending, it appears that a property settlement, involving a considerable amount of real and personal property, was made between the parties by which the real property covered by the mortgage in question in this case was given to Tom Kaperak, who gave a mortgage upon it to one Marie Winjun upon which eight hundred dollars principal and ninety-six dollars interest were due at the date of the trial of this case. The property agreement between Kaperak and his wife was duly acknowledged by them before a notary public on November 13,1928.

George and Andrew Chopeck and Anna Brown assigned all their interest in and to the mortgage involved in this action to Bosie Locke and Susie Martin, and thereupon on February 5, 1930, Bosie Locke and Susie Martin commenced this action against Tom Kap-erak, Barbara Kaperak and Marie Winjun to set aside the satisfaction of the mortgage and to foreclose the *148 mortgage, alleging facts substantially as above recited, and further stating that the mortgage or any part of it had not been paid, and that plaintiffs were not aware of that fact until shortly before the commencement of the action.

After the commencement of the action, Tom Kaperak died testate, and Mike Andrasko was appointed and qualified as executor of his last will and testament, and was also appointed and qualified as the guardian of the person and estate of Tom Kaperak, Jr., and Barbara Kaperak was appointed and qualified as g-uardian of her minor child, Mary Kaperak.

Thereafter, the complaint was amended by adding Mike Andrasko as executor of the estate of Tom Kap-erak, deceased, Mary Kaperak and Tom Kaperak, Jr., minors, and Barbara Kaperak as guardian of Mary Kaperak, a minor, and Mike Andrasko as guardian of Tom Kaperak, Jr., a minor, as additional parties defendant.

Mike Andrasko, as executor of the estate of Tom Kaperak, deceased, and as guardian of Tom Kaperak, Jr., a minor, and Tom Kaperak, Jr., answered the amended complaint by appropriate general denials, and affirmatively pled (1) the statute of limitations,- (2) that no claim had been presented by the plaintiffs to the executor of the estate of Tom Kaperak, deceased, which was in the course of administration,- and (3) that the plaintiffs were guilty of laches. A reply was filed, putting the affirmative defenses in issue.

Barbara Kaperak was served with summons and amended complaint, made no appearance whatever in the cause, and was duly adjudged to be in default, and, she not appearing as guardian for Mary Kaperak, a minor, the court appointed a guardian ad litem who *149 appeared for the minor during* the trial to and including the entry of judgment.

Findings of fact and conclusions of law were entered in favor of the plaintiffs, upon which judgment was entered setting aside and cancelling* the purported satisfaction of the mortgage by the trustee, foreclosing the mortgage and providing that the property be sold in the usual manner by the sheriff, subject to the mortgage held by the defendant Marie Winjun. Mike An-drasko, executor of the estate of Tom Kaperak, deceased, and as gmardian of Tom Kaperak, Jr., a minor, and Tom Kaperak, Jr., have appealed from that portion of the judgment cancelling the discharge of the mortgage and directing a foreclosure of the mortgage.

On the appeal, the assignments are: (1) The court erred in malting findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of the respondents; (2) The court erred in setting aside the release of said mortgage; (3) The court erred in overruling appellants ’ motion for a new trial; and (4) The court erred in entering judgment in favor of respondents. These assignments are argued on behalf of the appellants by a general discussion of points that there was no evidence of non-payment of the mortgage; that the statute of limitations had run against the action at the time it was commenced; that no claim had been presented to the executor of the estate of Tom Kaperak within the period of time provided by the probate law, and that the plaintiffs were guilty of laches.

Mrs. Kaperak testified that neither she nor Tom Kaperak, the makers of the mortgage, had ever paid the mortgage or any part of it, principal or interest. A disinterested witness, who was present when Mr. and Mrs. Kaperak were dividing* their property during the pendency of the divorce action, testified that *150 Mr. and Mrs. Kaperak discussed the “mortgage the children had on the property;” that Mr. Kaperak spoke of borrowing fifteen hundred dollars on the real property; that Mrs. Kaperak reminded him that the “Mds” already had a mortgage on the property, and that Mr. Kaperak admitted it. This was a number of years after the date of the purported satisfaction of the mortgage of record.

Marie Winjun testified that, in the divorce settlement, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
34 P.2d 444, 178 Wash. 145, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/locke-v-andrasko-wash-1934.