Puget Sound National Bank v. More

291 P. 1081, 159 Wash. 5, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 977
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1930
DocketNo. 22480. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 291 P. 1081 (Puget Sound National Bank v. More) 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 National Bank v. More, 291 P. 1081, 159 Wash. 5, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 977 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

— On January 8, 1928, the respondent, The Puget Sound National Bank, instituted the present action against the appellant, Bessie D. More, stating its cause of action as follows:

“II. That heretofore in that certain action instituted in this court wherein the plaintiff was the plaintiff and .Grlen E. More and E. E. Anderson and E. M. More and Mattie More, his wife, were defendants; the same being No. 60617, records and files of this court, 'the plaintiff recovering judgment against the said defendants.
“III. That thereafter plaintiff caused execution to issue upon the said judgment and the said execution was, by the sheriff of this county, duly levied upon the following described real property situated in Pierce county, Washington, to wit:
“Lots eleven (11) and twelve (12) in Block 528, ‘ Central Addition to Tacoma, W. T., ’ and the said real property was thereafter duly sold by the sheriff of Pierce county, Washington, to the plaintiff, which said sale was by the court duly confirmed. That prior thereto and in contemplation of the judgment to be rendered in the action hereinabove set forth the defendants therein, E. M. More and Mattie More, his wife, in order to defraud the plaintiff and to place their property beyond the reach of the plaintiff herein deeded the real property hereinabove described to their daughter, the defendant herein; *7 Bessie D. More; that such deed was issued without consideration and was and is void as to the plaintiff herein.
“V. That siich deed constituted a cloud upon the title to the real property above described and in equity should be removed. That the said E. M. More and Mattie M. More, his wife, have no property other than the property conveyed as above set forth out of which the judgment of the plaintiff in the action above mentioned, could be satisfied.”

The prayer of the complaint was for a decree quieting title in the respondent to the property described.

The appellant, in her answer to the complaint, admitted paragraph II thereof, and denied by a general denial paragraphs III and Y. For an affirmative answer, she alleged that she purchased the property prior to the commencement of the action set out in the complaint, and is the owner thereof. In the prayer, she asked that her title to the property be quieted as against the judgment of the respondent. A trial was had on the issues as thus framed, resulting in a decree in favor of the respondent in accordance with the prayer of its complaint.

The evidence developed that the judgment under which the property in question was sold to the respondent was founded on a note due the respondent by a partnership composed of Grlen E. More and E. E. Anderson, on which E. M. More and Mattie More were sureties. The indebtedness had existed for a considerable length of time, and there had been a number of notes given to represent the obligation, the last of which was dated January 5, 1925, and was for the sum of $10,915. Between its date and the time the respondent began its action thereon, the larger part of the note had been paid, principally by the surety E. M. More.

*8 The complaint, it will be observed, does not state the amount for which the judgment was recovered, and the evidence, as it is transcribed in the record sent to this court, is equally barren. The only evidence bearing on the question is that of the president of the respondent. The note sued upon was not filed in the cause at the time the judgment was taken, but seems to have been retained by the respondent. Testifying from the note, the president said that there was due thereon at the time of the trial of the present action the sum of $3,254.18. In enumerating the payments made on the note, however, he did not include the sum bid for the property at its sale under the judgment entered on the note. Assuming that the witness meant the sum remaining due on the judgment, it would appear from his testimony that nothing was realized on the sale of the property over and above the costs expended in obtaining the judgment and making the sale; at least, nothing to apply on the original debt.

The evidence also disclosed that the partnership of More & Anderson was engaged in the business of highway construction; that, subsequent to the execution of the note mentioned, they became involved and were forced to discontinue their work; that they then had property on hand, consisting of a truck, traction engine, grader, rock crusher, dump cars, wheel scrapers, and the like, which cost them, according to their statement, twenty-six thousand seven hundred dollars, and which then had a value of fifteen thousand dollars. This property, at the time in question, they transferred to the respondent by bills of sale as security for the indebtedness they owed it, and as security for another preferred creditor whose claim seems to have amounted to five thousand dollars. This property the respondent assembled at a place in Seattle at a cost exceeding fourteen hundred dollars. A considerable *9 part of the debt due the other creditor mentioned was paid out of other securities the partnership had, the precise amount not appearing in the record. It further appears that the respondent had not disposed of any considerable part of the personal property transferred to it down to the trial of the present action, but was still holding it as security for the unpaid part of the note at the time of such trial.

The evidence thought to show that the sale of the property from E. M. More and Mattie More to the appellant was fraudulent consisted principally of their own testimony. The respondent put them on the witness stand and quizzed them concerning the transaction. Their testimony was to the effect that the appellant was the daughter of E. M. More and Mattie More; that she was a graduate nurse in the employ of the government, and had been so employed for a number of years; that, for a period covering a series of years preceding the date of the deed in question, she had, from time to time, sent sums of money to her father for investment, which he did invest, in part at least, in mortgages and perhaps other securities. Her father, when she began to make the advances, was in affluent circumstances. Later on he became involved, and possibly at the time of the execution of the deed he had nothing left of his considerable fortune but the property conveyed. At that time, he was owing the appellant, according to their testimony, upwards of three thousand dollars, and conveyed the property to her in satisfaction of the debt.

The evidence disclosed, also, that E. M. More, at the time he became surety on the note, owned three tracts of real property, the first the property here in question, the second a similar tract, and the third a farm. What disposition was made of the farm, the record does not show. The second tract was deeded to the *10 respondent, and it was subsequently sold by it, the sale netting five thousand dollars, which was credited on the note. It is the testimony of More that it was his understanding, when he made the deed, that he was to be relieved from further liability on the note; that the amount remaining due could, and would, be met by the securities the original debtors had transferred to the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
291 P. 1081, 159 Wash. 5, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puget-sound-national-bank-v-more-wash-1930.