Pitcher v. Ravven

242 P. 375, 137 Wash. 343, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 570
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
DocketNo. 19380. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 242 P. 375 (Pitcher v. Ravven) 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
Pitcher v. Ravven, 242 P. 375, 137 Wash. 343, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 570 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Main, J.

These two cases in the superior court were consolidated for trial. The purpose of the action of *344 F. B. Pitcher and wife was to qniet title to certain real property. The active defendants in that action and the plaintiff in the other action claimed liens for either labor or material furnished and sought foreclosure of the same. The trial court entered a judgment quieting the title in the plaintiffs Pitcher and wife, and disallowed all lien claims. From this judgment, the defendants Walworth Manufacturing Company, a corporation, and A. F, Marvin appeal.

The facts are these: The respondents were the owners of a certain lot or lots in the city of Seattle upon which there was a small apartment house consisting of seven apartments. This property was acquired by the respondents in October, 1919, and the deed conveying it to them was duly and regularly recorded. On October 3,1921, they entered into a contract for the sale of the property to John A. Berkland, the purchase price of which was $18,500. After the payments provided for at the time the contract was executed, there was a balance of the purchase price amounting to $6,486.14, which, together with interest, was to be paid in monthly installments of $135 on the 10th day of each and every month thereafter until both principal and interest had been fully paid. Berk-land entered into possession of the property and made the payments provided for in the contract until March 30,1923, when he sold and assigned the contract to one E. Rawen. The contract from the respondents to Berkland was duly recorded. The assignment was not recorded.

After the contract was assigned to Rawen, and about the first of May, 1923, he began making preparations for the improvement of the property by the adding of twelve additional apartments. The contract of the respondents to Berkland provided that, in the event of default of any of the payments, conditions *345 or covenants thereof, thirty days’ notice in writing should be required before it could be forfeited. Rawen did not make the payments due on any of the subsequent dates promptly, and repeated notices of forfeiture were given, the last of which was on September 3, 1923, and in response to this the payment due on July 10 was paid. There were no subsequent payments.

One of the materialmen began to furnish material which went into the improvement undertaken by Rawen on or about August 26, 1923. The exact date when the other materialmen began to furnish supplies and when the labor began to be performed does not clearly appear. On or about November 1, Rawen abandoned the property, left the city, and thereafter had not been heard from prior to the trial. At the time he departed, the frame work of the improvement was up and roughed in. Subsequently, the respondents gave notice in writing that the contract was forfeited, and on or about the first of January, 1924, resumed possession of the property.

There is no provision in the contract from the respondents to Berkland authorizing any improvement to be made upon the property by the purchaser. During the time the improvements were being made by Rawen, the respondent F. B. Pitcher passed the property a number of times and knew what was going on. On one or two occasions he had some talk with Rawen. He neither approved nor disapproved of the improvements. The reason he gave was that he did not believe that he had any right to, though in his opinion the improvement undertaken was not such as the property was adapted to.

The question is whether the respondents are estopped from resisting the lien claims. It is probably accurate to say that there is no decision in this state which holds that the owner who has sold property *346 under a contract similar to the one in this case is so estopped, when he has neither, in his contract, authorized the improvement nor said or done things which operate as an estoppel. In Northwest Bridge Co. v. Tacoma Shipbuilding Co., 36 Wash. 333, 78 Pac. 996, it was decided that, where premises were held under a contract of sale duly recorded, a mechanic’s lien for improvements contracted for by the vendee is confined to the interest of the vendee in the land, notwithstanding the fact that the vendor in the contract of sale requires the construction of the improvement, since the contractor deals with the vendee at his peril and the lien is lost in case of forfeiture of the vendee’s interest. In Adams v. Dose, 87 Wash. 575, 152 Pac. 9, it was held that the general rule is that the interest of the person who caused the work to be done or the material furnished is subject to a lien for labor and materials, but that such a relation may exist between the owner of the fee and the holder of the lesser interest that the fee will be subjected to the lien. In that case the owner of the fee interest was around the work a great deal of the time, making suggestions and directing its progress.

In the present case, these facts do not appear. In Dahlman v. Thomas, 88 Wash. 653, 153 Pac. 1065, the earlier decisions were reviewed and the conclusion reached that the fee interest may be subject to the lien created by the owner of the lesser interest, when the owner of thg fee had authorized the improvements and had an interest in the profits that would arise therefrom. It was there said:

“Summing up these cases, they have relieved the landlord when he had profits but had not authorized improvements, and have relieved a vendor when he had authorized the improvements but had no interest in the profits. In the present case the owner has both features against him. ’ ’

*347 It is contended, however, that, since the respondent permitted Bawen to become in default in the payments, by reason of this fact he should be estopped from asserting that the liens do not attach. If effect should be given to this contention, it would mean that the vendor, at his peril, must immediately forfeit a contract in the case of default where the vendee has undertaken the improvement of the property, or make the fee interest in the property subject to the lien in the event that the contract should be subsequently forfeited. In the case of Bell v. Swalwell Land, L. & T. Co., 20 Wash. 602, 56 Pac. 401, there is some language which, if read independently of the facts in that case, would lend support to this position. It was not, however, in that case, as we view it, intended to state as a general proposition that the vendor must forfeit immediately upon default or subsequently be denied his right to resist lien claims against the fee. That case, in its facts, differs from the one now before us in two material respects. In the first place the sale contract was not recorded, and in the second place there was only an attempt to foreclose liens upon the building which had been erected. It would be a harsh rule which would require the vendor to forfeit immediately upon the default in payments upon the contract or other covenants, or lose his right to resist lien claims which had been created by the purchaser in the event of a subsequent forfeiture in the absence of anything that would work an estoppel.

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Bluebook (online)
242 P. 375, 137 Wash. 343, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitcher-v-ravven-wash-1926.