Milroy v. Movic

63 P.2d 496, 189 Wash. 17, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 698
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1936
DocketNo. 26388. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 63 P.2d 496 (Milroy v. Movic) 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
Milroy v. Movic, 63 P.2d 496, 189 Wash. 17, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 698 (Wash. 1936).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

On December 11, 1920, the defend-

ants, Anna Movie and James Movie, husband and wife, executed and delivered to the plaintiff, Larry Milroy, their promissory note for one thousand dollars, payable on or before two years after date, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum. Payment of the note was secured by a mortgage executed by the defendants on two parcels of property in or near the city of Montesano, in Grays Harbor county. The defendants, married in 1908, lived for many years upon one of the parcels, referred to in the record as the home property.

On November 13, 1935, the present action was instituted by the plaintiff to recover upon the note and foreclose the mortgage. After setting up the instruments sued on, the complaint alleged:

“Defendants duly paid interest upon said mortgage debt, up to July 14, 1926, since which date the defendants paid, in December, 1926, the sum of $40; in December, 1929, the sum of $80; which paid the interest thereon up to J anuary 14,1928, leaving due, owing and unpaid, the principal sum of $1,000., together with interest thereon from said date, to-wit: January 14, 1928, at the rate of eight per cent per annum.”

It will be seen that the statute of limitations had run against the note when the suit was brought, unless the payment alleged to have been made in December, 1929, was in fact made by the defendants.

*19 The defendants filed separate answers. In his answer, James Movie admitted the execution of the note and mortgage but denied the payment of eighty dollars in December, 1929, or the payment of any sum subsequent to December, 1926. Anna Movie, in her answer, made a general denial, and affirmatively alleged that the property covered by the mortgage was at all times her separate property; that she had executed the note and mortgage to secure a debt incurred by her husband and not otherwise; that she had made no payments on the note and mortgage since their execution and had received no consideration for them. The affirmative matter contained in the answers was denied by the plaintiff.

The trial court made a general finding that,

“December 23rd, 1929, defendants paid $80 upon the note and mortgage sued on in the first cause of action herein, leaving due, owing and unpaid, the principal sum of $1,000 together with interest thereon from January 14, 1928, at the rate of 8% per annum, to secure which sums, the plaintiff has a valid first mortgage upon the lands described in the first cause of action herein. ’ ’

A decree was accordingly entered awarding the plaintiff judgment as prayed for, and directing foreclosure of the mortgaged property.

The first inquiry is whether the alleged payment of eighty dollars in December, 1929, was in fact made. We are of the opinion that the evidence preponderates in favor of the court’s finding. The respondent testified that the sum was paid to him in currency through the manager of the Safeway store at Montesano, after repeated demands and a promise by James Movie to leave some money with the manager of the Safeway store for him. The manager himself testified:

*20 . “A. When I first met Mr. Milroy he was working up on the Canal, he was out of the county a good deal, but he would come down here to be with his mother, and he used to buy some things at the store. I didn’t know him very well, but through his coming in there I knew him. In the early winter Mr. Milroy — still I didn’t know him very well — came in there one Saturday night and demanded that Mr. Movie had left some money there for him; and I didn’t have it. The following Saturday night he came in again and was very insistent that the money was there, and I was kind of indignant and I was going to sit down on him. . . . he said Mr. Movie was going to leave for him; he said that he asked him to leave it there; and I told him I didn’t have it' there. Finally, he came in and had the money with him. Q. Who? A. Mr. Movie. . . . Q. How much money was it? A. I do not remember the exact amount. Q. But it was a considerable sum of money? A. Yes, sir. He handed me the money in a package and said he wanted to leave it for Mr. Milroy. Q. Was it in bills? A. Yes, sir. Q. You say that was in the early winter of 1929? A. Yes, sir. Q. Are there any other circumstances about it other than what you have just told? A. No, I do not know that there are. I remember that it was near Christmas.”

The payment was denied by Movie, who testified that he knew he did not make the payment in currency because he always paid by check. Mrs. Movie corroborated her husband by detailing the method in which they did business and paid their bills by check, her testimony implying that the husband could not have paid, because he had withdrawn no money from his bank.

In announcing its decision, the court stressed the character and credibility of the store manager, whose disinterested testimony he felt constrained to believe.

Accepting the court’s finding that the payment tolling the statute was made, the next question calling for solution is: What was its effect on the wife’s *21 liability? There can be no question that the note was a community obligation; and, being so, the payment made by the husband, manager of the community property, tolled the statute of limitations as to the community, under the rule annuonced in Catlin v. Mills, 140 Wash. 1, 247 Pac. 1013, 47 A. L. R. 545, where we said:

“Under our law (Rem. Comp. Stat., §§6892, 6893) [P. C. §§ 1433,1434], the husband has the management and control of the community personal property and of the community real property, except that he cannot sell, convey or encumber real property without the wife joining him. He is the community agent. Schramm v. Steele, 97 Wash. 309, 166 Pac. 634; Stevens v. Naches State Bank, 136 Wash. 137, 238 Pac. 918; DePhillips v. Neslin, 139 Wash. 51, 245 Pac. 749; Blouen v. Quimpere Canning Co., 139 Wash. 436, 247 Pac. 940. A husband’s acts done for the benefit of the community are binding upon the community, and it would seem that, when James L. Mills made payments upon a community obligation, he was acting for its benefit and in its behalf, and that therefore those payments started the statute of limitations running anew against the community and that the community was bound thereby. ’ ’

But, in her affirmative answer, the appellant Anna Movie alleged and, at the trial, sought to sustain the contention that the property covered by the mortgage was her separate estate; and that, as to such estate, a payment by the husband would not suspend the operation of the statute, under the general rule that payment by one joint debtor does not suspend the statute in the ease of another not authorizing or consenting to the payment.

The court made no specific finding as to tfie status of the property, possibly because the broad finding that the payment was made by both parties obviated the necessity for a particular finding. Assuming the prop *22

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.2d 496, 189 Wash. 17, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milroy-v-movic-wash-1936.