Nimey v. Nimey

45 P.2d 949, 182 Wash. 194, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 627
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1935
DocketNo. 25485. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 45 P.2d 949 (Nimey v. Nimey) 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
Nimey v. Nimey, 45 P.2d 949, 182 Wash. 194, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 627 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

Main, J. —

This action was brought by Catherine Nimey, as administratrix of the estate of John Nimey, her deceased husband, for the purpose of bringing into the estate certain real and personal property, a bank account, and obtaining a judgment for damages on account of deceit. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and at the conclusion thereof the court orally announced its decision.

The plaintiff caused a writ of garnishment to be issued and served upon the Spokane Dry Goods Company, a corporation. The defendant moved to quash the service or attempted service of the writ of garnishment, which motion was sustained. The plaintiff also caused a writ of attachment to be issued, which was by the sheriff levied upon certain real property. The defendant moved to quash this writ, which motion was denied. Upon the merits, the trial court made findings of fact, from which it was concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to certain relief.

*196 The plaintiff appeals from the order quashing the writ of garnishment. The defendant appeals from the order refusing to quash the writ of attachment, and also from the judgment on the merits.

The facts, as found by the trial court, may be summarized as follows: John Nimey died August 7, 1933, leaving one son, Norman, aged five years, and Catherine Nimey, his surviving spouse. As already indicated, Mrs. Nimey was appointed administratrix of the estate of her husband, and qualified as such.

In October, 1923, John Nimey purchased a home in Spokane, paying therefor about the sum of twelve hundred dollars. April 15, 1927, John Nimey and Catherine Nimey, for a consideration of one dollar, deeded the home to Zahoi Nimey, the mother of John. At the time of the trial, the value of the home was between four and seven thousand dollars.

From July 16, 1917, John Nimey was employed by the Pullman Car Company as a foreman, receiving monthly wages ranging from about $125 to $175 a month. At the time of his death, he was receiving $157.50. Zahoi Nimey had been engaged in the business of peddling merchandise from house to house before her son was married in 1924. She had accumulated about four thousand dollars, which she had on deposit with the Spokane & Eastern Trust Company. Catherine Nimey was seventeen years of age at the time she was married. Zahoi Nimey lived with her son and his wife, was the family treasurer, and controlled the household and influenced her son and daughter-in-law in all business and social matters.

John Nimey and his mother had accounts in the Spokane & Eastern Trust Company since the year 1920. On or about October 7, 1932, there was an account in that bank, payable to Zahoi Nimey or John Nimey, which became available to Zahoi Nimey by the *197 signing over of the same by John Nimey, and all this money, which amounted to about ten thousand dollars, was later withdrawn from the bank. The money was withdrawn March 3, 1933.

John Nimey had an account in the Old National Bank of Spokane since October 6, 1920. October 8, 1932, he placed this account, in the sum of $1,856, in the name of Zahoi Nimey by John Nimey. John Nimey had no separate property; it was all community property of himself and wife.

The ten thousand dollars withdrawn from the Spokane & Eastern Trust Company was taken to the home where the parties lived, put in a tin can, and buried in the basement. At the time of John Nimey’s death, Zahoi Nimey was in possession of his money and his private papers. Catherine Nimey did not know where John’s money was, except that she knew that it had been buried in the basement by him and his mother. Zahoi Nimey informed Catherine Nimey after John’s death that he had not left any money, and otherwise deceived her. Zahoi Nimey claimed that five thousand dollars of the funds that had been buried in the basement had disappeared, but, as the court found,

. . defendant [Zahoi Nimey] has the said money in her possession, or that she knows where it is; defendant practiced concealment and was unfair to plaintiff and attempted to conceal her property and its location in court while on the witness stand.”

In order to defraud Catherine, Zahoi Nimey caused her to believe that all the funds left by her husband, together with the funds belonging to herself, amounted to the sum of five thousand dollars, and, as the court found,

. . persuaded her to sign an agreement attached to defendant’s answer, and designated as Exhibit' A herein, and influenced her to do so in the belief that she was obtaining all of her deceased husband’s *198 property; that defendant misrepresented the extent of the property to plaintiff and that plaintiff was without the advice of, nor represented by, anyone at the time, and was distracted by the recent decease of her husband, and that she signed the agreement with the defendant ; that plaintiff believed that she was obtaining all of her husband’s property when she signed the agreement and believed that it was unnecessary to probate the estate of her husband and that after the signing of the said agreement the defendant appropriated'the plaintiff’s property.”

The agreement referred to was signed on Monday, August 14, 1933. On the Saturday previous, Zahoi had promised the father of Catherine that, on the following Monday, they would go to a certain lawyer in the city of Spokane for the purpose of having the estate of John Nimey probated. Instead of doing this, Zahoi Nimey took Catherine to her own attorney Monday, and the agreement was executed. By the agreement, the five thousand dollars taken from the basement by Zahoi Nimey after the death of her son was divided, two thousand dollars to herself, two thousand dollars to Catherine, and the balance, or one thousand dollars, to the minor son of John and Catherine, out of which one thousand dollars certain expenses were to be paid. Shortly after this agreement was signed, Catherine went to an attorney and the probate proceeding" was instituted, and thereafter this action was brought.

By the judgment, Catherine Nimey was given, in addition to the two thousand dollars that she had under the settlement agreement, the sum of three thousand dollars in cash out of the money John Nimey had had in the Spokane & Eastern bank and which had been withdrawn and buried in the basement, the $1,864 in the Old National Bank, "and certain personal property, or in lieu thereof the sum of $150. The court concluded that the evidence was not sufficient to establish a constructive trust in the real property.

*199 Upon the merits, it is first contended that there was no evidence which warranted the court in rendering judgment against Zahoi Nimey on any of the causes of action. After reading the record, we are of the view that the decided weight of the testimony sustains the finding of the trial court. There can he no question but that, at the time the settlement agreement was drawn and signed, Catherine was grossly overreached. She had been for years under the domination of her mother-in-law; less than two weeks before she buried her husband. She had had no business experience.

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Bluebook (online)
45 P.2d 949, 182 Wash. 194, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nimey-v-nimey-wash-1935.