Merritt v. Newkirk

285 P. 442, 155 Wash. 517, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 835
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1930
DocketNo. 22054. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 285 P. 442 (Merritt v. Newkirk) 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
Merritt v. Newkirk, 285 P. 442, 155 Wash. 517, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 835 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

On July 22, 1927, the appellants Newldrk, in an action brought in the superior court of Grays Harbor county, recovered a judgment against the respondent Charles N. Merritt (therein impleaded as Charles H. Merritt) in the sum of $10,023. The recovery was had for property of the appellants destroyed by a fire caused by the negligent operation of an automobile driven by the respondent Charles N. Merritt. The cause was appealed to this court by the respondent and was here affirmed. Newkirk v. Workman, 149 Wash. 84, 270 Pac. 125.

After the cause was remanded by this court, the appellants caused an execution to issue on the judgment, under which three several tracts of real property were *519 levied upon and sold as the property of the judgment debtor at a judicial sale held on April 7,1928. The appellants became the purchasers at the sale, at which time a certificate of sale was issued to them by the officer conducting it.

At the time of the transaction recited out of which the judgment arose, Merritt was a married man living with his wife on one of the tracts of property sold under the writ of execution. All of the property was purchased subsequent to the marriage, and the title thereto taken in the name of the husband. The wife was not made a party to the action in which the judgment was obtained, nor did she appear therein other than to testify at the trial as a witness on behalf of her husband.

The present action was instituted by the husband and wife in February, 1929, to set aside the execution sale and to quiet the title to the property sold as against the apparent lien of the judgment on which the execution was issued. While the pleadings of the parties are somewhat complicated, the issues presented by them are simple. The plaintiffs’ contention is that the tract of land on which they reside is the separate property of the. wife, and not subject to sale on an execution issued on the judgment, whether the judgment be the separate obligation of the husband, or a community obligation of the husband and wife. As to the other two tracts, the contention is that the tracts are the community property of the husband and wife, and that the judgment is the separate obligation of the husband. The trial court, while it made no formal findings of fact, adopted the contentions of the plaintiffs, holding that the tract upon which the husband and wife resided was the separate property of the wife, and that the other tracts, while community property, were not subject to sale under an execution issued on a *520 judgment obtained against tbe husband alone, and entered a judgment and decree accordingly.

With reference to tbe first of tbe tracts, we are constrained to follow tbe conclusions of tbe trial court. Tbe evidence leaves but little doubt that tbe wife purchased tbe property with moneys given to her by an aunt shortly prior to tbe time she, with her bus-band, came to tbe state of Washington, and which she bad kept intact for tbe very purpose of purchasing a home. Tbe evidence is equally clear also that tbe cost of tbe dwelling bouse that was originally erected on tbe tract was paid out of tbe same fund. Tbe property was purchased and tbe bouse erected in tbe summer of 1904, and tbe husband and wife have ever since occupied it and now occupy it as a home.

Of tbe circumstances that are thought to militate against tbe conclusion that tbe property is tbe separate property of tbe wife, tbe first is tbe fact we have here-inbefore noted, namely, that tbe legal title to tbe property was taken in tbe name of tbe husband and has since remained in bis name. But, aside from tbe fact that it was testified that this was due to an inadvertence of tbe scrivener who prepared tbe deed, which tbe parties never took tbe trouble to correct, tbe fact in itself is not of controlling moment in determining which of tbe spouses is tbe actual owner of tbe property.

Under our somewhat perplexing statutes relating to tbe acquisition of property, title to real property taken in tbe name of one of the spouses may be tbe separate property of tbe spouse taking tbe title, tbe separate property of tbe other spouse, or tbe community property of both of tbe spouses, owing to tbe source from which tbe fund is derived which is used in paying tbe purchase price of tbe property. If tbe fund is derived from tbe separate property of one of tbe spouses, tbe property purchased is tbe separate property of that *521 spouse; if it is derived from the community property of both the spouses, it is the community property of both of them.

The instances in which we have held that property purchased from the separate funds of one of the spouses and title taken in the name of the spouse furnishing the funds is the separate property of that spouse, and the instances in which we have held that property purchased with community funds is the property of the community, notwithstanding the title may have been taken in the name of one of the spouses, are too numerous to admit of citation here. The precise situation here presented is not so common. Indeed, our attention has been called to no case where we have determined in whom the title vests where the purchase price of property has been paid from the separate funds of one of the spouses and the title thereto taken in the name of the other.

The case of In re Deschamps’ Estate, 77 Wash. 514, 137 Pac. 1009, however, presents the principle involved. In that case the purchase price of the property was paid from the separate funds of the wife and the title was taken in the names of both the husband and the wife. We held the property to be the separate property of the wife, and subject to her disposition by will. The case presented the question involved here, and is controlling unless it is to be overruled. This we have no inclination to do.

The second of the circumstances is that the value of the property has been augmented by improvements put thereon with community funds. The nature of the improvements we need not- specifically describe. For the main part, they consisted of necessary repairs to the house and additions thereto which added to its usefulness and comfort as a home, and of street improvements the cost of which was taxed against the *522 property and paid by tbe community. But expenditures of this sort upon the separate property of one of the spouses by the community do not ordinarily affect the title to the property. The title to property, whether separate or community, is determined as of the date of its acquisition, and the general rule is that, when community funds are expended in improvements on the separate property of. one of the spouses, the title to the improvements follows the title to the land. Unless, therefore, there is a specific agreement to the contrary, or the equities of the case require a different conclusion, the ownership of the property is not changed.

Here, there was nothing of this latter sort; there was no specific agreement, and the equities of the situation favor the wife rather than the community.

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Bluebook (online)
285 P. 442, 155 Wash. 517, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-v-newkirk-wash-1930.