McDaniel v. Crabtree

269 P. 1040, 148 Wash. 549, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 628
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1928
DocketNo. 21104. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 269 P. 1040 (McDaniel v. Crabtree) 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
McDaniel v. Crabtree, 269 P. 1040, 148 Wash. 549, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 628 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Beals, J.

Two different phases of the transaction resulting in the litigation now before us have already been before this court, Crabtree v. McDaniel, 143 Wash. 122, 254 Pac. 1092, and McDaniel v. Crabtree, 143 Wash. 168, 254 Pac. 1091. To avoid confusion in the statement of the issues, the parties will be referred to by their names.

In February, 1922, McDaniel, being the owner of a tract of timber land in Skagit county, agreed with *550 the Crabtrees to exchange the same for certain irrigated land in Walla Walla county, the deal was consummated, and deeds exchanged by the parties. As part of the transaction, McDaniel assumed and agreed to pay a $2,000 mortgage, then a lien on the Walla Walla county land, while the Crabtrees executed and delivered to McDaniel their note in the sum of $1800, secured by a mortgage upon the Skagit county land, and also assigned to McDaniel a note and mortgage executed by one Baun in the sum of $700, upon which certain interest had accrued, which McDaniel accepted as a pro rata payment oh the $1,800 note, and credited theréon.

In July, 1924, McDaniel brought suit against the Crabtrees in the superior court for Whatcom county for damages which he claimed to have suffered by reason of alleged false and fraudulent .representations made by the Crabtrees as to the character of the Walla Walla county land. This action was a straight action at.law in which McDaniel sought judgment for the sum of $8,000, he laying his damages in that amount.

The Crabtrees answered, denying the allegations of McDaniel’s complaint-and alleging in their turn, by way of an affirmative defense, the making of the' exchange of properties, the existence of the $2,000 mortgage upon the Walla Walla county land, the assumption of the same by plaintiff, and the execution and delivery to the plaintiff, McDaniel, of the Crabtrees’ note which they refer to as a note for $1,200, secured by á mortgage on the Skagit county timber land; they also alleged the assignment to McDaniel of the Baun note, which is referred to in their answer as for $800; and proceed to allege that McDaniel had failed to pay the $2,000 noté and mortgage, that they had been compelled to purchase the same and had taken an assignment thereof and had commenced suit thereon against *551 McDaniel in the superior court for Walla Walla county; in their affirmative defense they also alleged false representations by McDaniel concerning the value of the Skagit county land, to their (Crabtrees’) damage, in the sum of $7,500, for which amount, after praying that the prayer of McDaniel’s complaint be denied, they ask judgment against him.

To the affirmative defense contained in this answer, McDaniel replied, denying the allegations of paragraph I, in which paragraph the so-called $1,200 note given by the Crabtrees to McDaniel was referred to.

It will be noted that the Crabtrees, in their answer, sought no equitable relief, but simply asked damages against McDaniel for fraudulent representations, leaving the action an action at law wherein both parties sought damages one side against the other.

The trial of this action before a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of McDaniel for the sum of $1,000. From a judgment entered on this verdict, the Crab-trees appealed and the judgment was affirmed. McDaniel v. Crabtree, 143 Wash. 168, 254 Pac. 1091.

The trial of the action in Walla Walla county, in which the Crabtrees sought judgment against McDaniel upon the $2,000 note secured by mortgage on the Walla Walla county land, resulted in a judgment in the Crabtrees’ favor, from which judgment McDaniel appealed, contending that the judgment entered in the Whatcom county action was res judicata as to the cause of action contained in the Crabtrees’ complaint in the Walla Walla county action. McDaniel’s contention was upheld and the judgment reversed with directions to dismiss the action. Crabtree v. McDaniel, 143 Wash. 122, 254 Pac. 1092.

This court based its ruling in this case upon the fact that the Crabtrees, in their answer in the Whatcom county case, had affirmatively pleaded McDaniel’s fail- *552 tire to pay the $2,000 mortgage, and that they, the Crab-trees, had been compelled to pay the same and had taken an assignment thereof, and, based .upon these allegations, together with the other allegations of damage contained in their affirmative defense, prayed for judgment against McDaniel for the sum of $7,500. It was held that, under this affirmative defense, the Crab-trees in the Whatcom county action sought recovery against McDaniel for whatever amount was due them by reason of McDaniel’s failure to pay the mortgage on the Walla Walla county land, and were entitled to have the jury offset this element of their damage, if any, against any sum they owed McDaniel, and that, on the state of the pleadings and the judgment roll, it must be assumed that this issue was litigated and that the Crabtrees received any credit to which they were entitled.

This was the situation when this action was instituted by McDaniel against the Crabtrees in the superior court for Skagit county, McDaniel asking for judgment on the $1,800 note, together with foreclosure of the mortgage given to secure the same. McDaniel, in his complaint in this action, seeks to avoid the effect of the credit of the Baun note on the $1,800 note by alleging that the Baun note and mortgage were worthless and had been tendered back to the Crabtrees.

In their answer, the Crabtrees deny the worthlessness of the Baun note, and allege that this note was a proper credit on the $1,800 note in the sum of $755; and for an affirmative defense, plead as res judicata the judgment entered on the verdict of the jury in the Whatcom county suit. To the affirmative defense in the Crabtrees’ answer, McDaniel replied with denials, and, upon the issues so made up, the action came on for trial.

*553 The lower court held that the Whatcom county action was res judicata as to McDaniel’s claim that the Baun note was worthless, held that the Whatcom county action was not res judicata as to McDaniel’s cause of action against the Crabtrees on the $1,800 note, rendered judgment against the Crabtrees on the note for the amount due thereon, less the full credit on account of the Baun note, and decreed the foreclosure of the mortgage given on the Skagit county timber land to secure payment of the $1,800 note. From this judgment, the Crabtrees appeal.

Appellants earnestly contend that, as in the case of Crabtree v. McDaniel (the Walla Walla county case), it was held that the judgment in the case of McDaniel v. Crabtree (the Whatcom county case) was res judi-cata as to the Crabtrees’ claim against McDaniel on account of McDaniel’s failure to pay the mortgage on the Walla Walla county land, it should be held in this case that the judgment in the Whatcom county case is also res judicata as to any claim McDaniel may have had against the Crabtrees on account of the latter’s note, for $1,800, secured by mortgage on the Skagit county land.

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Bluebook (online)
269 P. 1040, 148 Wash. 549, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-crabtree-wash-1928.