Puget Sound Mutual Savings Bank v. Lillions

314 P.2d 935, 50 Wash. 2d 799, 1957 Wash. LEXIS 414
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1957
Docket33740, 34151
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 314 P.2d 935 (Puget Sound Mutual Savings Bank v. Lillions) 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
Puget Sound Mutual Savings Bank v. Lillions, 314 P.2d 935, 50 Wash. 2d 799, 1957 Wash. LEXIS 414 (Wash. 1957).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

Defendants, husband and wife, appeal from a decree that grants a money judgment against them and forecloses a mortgage given to secure the promissory note upon which the judgment is based.

The promissory note, dated February 4, 1952, provides:

“If default be made in the payment of any installment when due, such installment shall bear interest until paid at the rate of ten per cent per annum, but, at the option of the holder of this note, without prior notice, the entire indebtedness hereby represented shall immediately become due, and shall thereafter bear interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum until paid.”

The mortgage upon the real property contains a similar provision for acceleration of the indebtedness in the event certain conditions are breached.

*802 Defendants did not pay the monthly installments due October 15 and Noverhber 15, 1954'. They were also in default for nonpayment of certain taxes against the mortgaged property. November 26, 1954, plaintiff elected to declare the entire indebtedness due, pursuant to the provisions- for acceleration which appeared in the note and mortgage. Plaintiff manifested its election by filing this action in the superior court.

November 29,1954, defendant husband tendered his check for one of the delinquent monthly installments. It was returned to him by registered letter received December 3rd. The letter advised him that plaintiff had elected to declare the entire debt due and had already instituted suit to foreclose the mortgage. Defendant husband retendered' his first check, certified, and also a bank cashier’s check for the other delinquent installment. These, too, were returned to him by plaintiff. Defendants were served with summons and complaint December 10,1954. They paid the delinquent real property taxes on Decembér 13, 1954.

A stipulation in a mortgage, providing that the whole debt secured thereby shall become due and payable upon failure of the mortgagor to pay the interest or any installment of principal as it falls due, or to comply with any other condition of the mortgage, is a legal, valid, and enforceable stipulation. It is not in the nature of a penalty or forfeiture which a court of equity would refuse to enforce.

“It is only when the default is attributable to the unconscionable or inequitable conduct of the mortgagee that he cannot avail himself of the benefits of the acceleration clause.” Jacobson v. McClanahan, 43 Wn. (2d) 751, 755, 264 P. (2d) 253, 5 A. L. R. (2d) 968 (1953).

Déféndants argue: (1) That plaintiff did not complete its election to accelerate payment of the note until December 10, 1954, the date defendants were served with summons and complaint; that defendants were not in default on that date, because they had previously tendered the two delinquent installments upon which acceleration of the debt and foreclosure of the mortgage are based. (2) That *803 it is inequitable to permit acceleration, because defendants paid the delinquent taxes immediately after service of the summons and complaint, and, prior to trial, deposited the accrued monthly payments into the registry of the court.

We cannot agree with either contention.

In Weinberg v. Naher, 51 Wash. 591, 594, 99 Pac. 736, 22 L. R. A. (N.S.) 956 (1909), this court said:

“The debt does not become due on the mere default in the interest payment. Some affirmative action is required, some action by which the holder - of the note- makes known to the payors that he intends to declare the whole debt due. This exercise of the option may of course take different forms. It may be exercised by giving the payors formal notice to the effect that the whole debt is declared'do be due, or by the commencement of an action to recover the debt, or perhaps by any means by which it is clearly brought home to the payors of the note that the option, has -been exercised before the interest is paid or tendered.”:

Plaintiff took affirmative action by declaring' the entire debt due when it filed its complaint on November 26, 1954. This action was “clearly brought home” to defendant husband (a lawyer) on December 3, 1954, at which time at least one monthly installment and the taxes were delinquent. Further, the taxes' were not paid until after' service of the summons and complaint on both parties defendant. See, also, Gunby v. Ingram, 57 Wash. 97, 106 Pac. 495 (1910). The entire debt having matured, no further right existed to make monthly payments, and plaintiff was not required to accept them.

The record supports the findings of the trial court that plaintiff did not act “inequitably in commencing foreclosure action.” Since the issue was presented, it was not error for the trial court to admit evidence of the history of this mortgage loan and the record of defendants’ payments in order to rebut the argument that plaintiff acted in an unconscionable manner when it declared the entire debt due.

For the sake of brevity, we refer to the property described in the mortgage as “Parcel A.”

*804 On February 4, 1952, and prior thereto, “Parcel A” was entirely surrounded by other real property owned by defendants. Ingress and egress to “Parcel A” from the county road is over an established driveway.- Poles, placed along the driveway, carry utilities to the residence on “Parcel A.” We designate the legal description of the driveway (appearing in the decree) as “Parcel B.” Water for “Parcel A” is obtained from a spring located on property owned by defendants and conveyed to “Parcel A” across land, also owned by defendants, which we designate as “Parcel C.” There is no reference in plaintiff’s mortgage to any easements of ingress or egress or water rights of any kind appurtenant to “Parcel A.” The trial court found, and the record supports the finding, that

“ . . . by reason of their apparent and continuous use of said easements and by reason of the fact that said easements were necessary to the proper and reasonable enjoyment of- Parcel “A”, said defendants had imposed upon Parcels “B” and “C” obvious and reasonably necessary permanent servitudes in favor of Parcel “A” ...”

The trial court concluded, and the decree provides, that upon sale of “Parcel A,” by foreclosure of the mortgage, the obvious and necessary permanent servitudes in favor of “Parcel A,” imposed by the defendants on “Parcels B and C,” will pass with the grant of “Parcel A.”

Prior to the execution of the mortgage, the situation was one which frequently arises when one portion of a parcel of land has certain rights in another portion of the same tract. Were the two portions separated and owned by different persons, the right enjoyed by the owner of one portion (the dominant estate) in the other portion (the servient estate) would be a legal easement. Absent this separation of ownership, many authorities refer to this situation as a “quasi easement.” Adams v. Cullen, 44 Wn. (2d) 502, 504, 268 P. (2d) 451 (1954), and cases cited.

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Bluebook (online)
314 P.2d 935, 50 Wash. 2d 799, 1957 Wash. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puget-sound-mutual-savings-bank-v-lillions-wash-1957.