Mutual Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Johnson

279 P. 108, 153 Wash. 41, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 675
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1929
DocketNo. 21719. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 279 P. 108 (Mutual Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Johnson) 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
Mutual Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Johnson, 279 P. 108, 153 Wash. 41, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 675 (Wash. 1929).

Opinions

Tolman, J.

This is a consolidation of two pending actions made before trial. After trial on the merits, a decree was entered fixing the priorities of the several parties in and to a certain fund which had been realT ized by a receiver’s sale of the property upon which originally the several mortgages and liens had been operative.

On this appeal, the question of priorities is alone presented.

■ While there is little dispute as to the facts, yet we find some difficulty in avoiding confusion and making a statement which will clearly present the situation of the contending parties. Perhaps the following will suffice.

Defendants Corwin- S. Shank and wife were, in March, 1925, the owners of Loyal View Addition to the city of Seattle, subject to a certain unrecorded contract for the sale thereof to one H. C. Peters. Peters arranged to sell twenty-two lots in this addition, covered by his contract, to the defendant Isak Johnson for a consideration of $7,700, none of-which was then paid, but all of which was to be secured by .seqond, mortgages *43 on the property. It was one of the conditions that Johnson should obtain a building loan of $25,000, to be secured by first mortgages on the property, and should proceed to build fourteen houses on the property according to certain plans and specifications agreed upon. Accordingly, the matter was presented to the respondent Mutual Savings and Loan Association, and it agreed, if the title was found satisfactory, to make a loan of $25,200 to be secured by first mortgages on the twenty-two lots.

Shank and wife, on March 20, 1925, executed a deed to Johnson as grantee, which was delivered to the loan association, to be by it delivered and recorded only if the deal went through as planned. Mr. Shank, at the same time, prepared and left with Peters or with the loan association, fourteen notes and fourteen second mortgages securing them, covering the purchase price payable to him, and which, taken together, covered all of the twenty-two lots.

In the meantime, Johnson entered into negotiations with a builder to erect the fourteen houses, and the builder began work before March 20, 1925. Appellant Jahn & Company began, on order of the builder, to deliver material to the premises on March 19, 1925, and appellant Salmon Bay Sand & Gravel Company likewise so began to deliver material to the premises on March 20, 1925. Notices were given to the owner, or reputed owner, as will appear later.

The loan association proceeded with its title search, and sent an employee to inspect the property. That employee testified:

“Q. Were you out in March? A. I was out in March, yes. Q. What time in March? A. It must have been very soon after the application was received. Q. No construction had been had at that time? A. There were quite a number of teams at work doing part *44 of the street grading and excavating some of the basement, as I recall. Q. Was that before the mortgages were signed? A. It must have been because the mortgage could not have been signed until I had passed on the application. Q. Then you made your report? A. Yes.”

Wholly disregarding the fact that work had already been commenced, the loan association prepared its fourteen first mortgages, had them executed and the Shank second mortgages executed, all on March 30,1925, and the next day filed for record simultaneously the deed from the Shanks to Johnson, the first mortgages by Johnson to the loan association and the second mortgages by Johnson to Shank, and thereafter proceeded to disburse the proceeds of the loan on the written orders of Johnson.

' Difficulties arose before the houses were completed and before the proceeds of the loan had been fully disbursed. ' It appeared that there was not énough money remaining to complete the houses, so a receiver was appointed, who, under the direction of the court, borrowed money, completed the houses, sold them and realized a net sum less in amount than the moneys advanced on the first mortgages.

The appellants contend that, having commenced the delivery of material to the premises before the execution or recording of the mortgages, their liens are prior to the liens of the mortgages. They rely in this respect upon our statute, Rem. Comp. Stat., § 1132, which reads:

“The liens created by this chapter are preferred to any lien, mortgage or other encumbrance which may attach subsequently to the time of the commencement of the performance of the labor, or the furnishing of the materials for which the right of lien is given by this chapter, and are also preferred to any lien, mortgage or other encumbrance which may have attached *45 previously to that time, and which was not filed or recorded so as to create constructive notice of the same prior to that time, and of which the lien claimant had no notice.”

Respondent does not deny that, by virtue of the statute, appellants’ liens would have been prior to the mortgages if. Johnson had been the holder of the title when appellants began to furnish materials, but it seems to argue that Johnson acquired no title until the deed was delivered by filing it for record, and that, as all of the first and second mortgages were offered for record at the same time, the effect was to pass the title to Johnson subject to the mortgages, and not otherwise.

We think that position is correct in a general sense and as to claims which might attach solely by reason of Johnson’s ownership. For instance, had there been an unsatisfied judgment against Johnson in King county, which the law makes a lien upon real estate owned by the judgment debtor, then, under the circumstances shown here, the lien of that judgment would have attached subject and subsequent to the mortgages.

Authorities are numerous to support that principle and respondent’s authorities cited here, in the main, as we read them, do not go further.

This case is not controlled by the case of Northwest Bridge Co. v. Tacoma Shipbuilding Co., 36 Wash. 333, 78 Pac. 996, and like cases cited. There, the executory contract for the purchase of the land, with all of its terms, was brought home to the materialman by its being recorded months before the contract for materials was made or the improvements undertaken. There, under the doctrine of Ashford v. Reese, 132 Wash. 649, 233 Pac. 29, no title was conveyed, while here, the intent was to pass full legal title immediately. Under the statute quoted in that case, the decision could not *46 have been other than it was. That statute now exists only in the later enacted Rem. ■ Comp. Stat., § 1130, which is hereinafter quoted.

But the lien statute, which we have quoted, when read in connection with the sections which precede it, seems to show that it was the legislative intent to protect, if possible, one who furnishes labor or material, to the exclusion of mortgage liens not actually shown of record before the inception of the lien.

Rem. Comp. Stat., § 1129, provides for a lien for labor and material

“. . .

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279 P. 108, 153 Wash. 41, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-savings-loan-assn-v-johnson-wash-1929.