Scott v. Stanley

270 P. 110, 149 Wash. 29, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 646
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1928
DocketNo. 21175. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 270 P. 110 (Scott v. Stanley) 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
Scott v. Stanley, 270 P. 110, 149 Wash. 29, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 646 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

Prank M. Stanley and his wife claimed to own sixteen . hundred acres ofland in Okanogan county, and William Steward owned the Chalmers Apartments in Seattle. Through the efforts of their respective real estate brokers, a written non-tract was entered into for an exchange of the proper ties by the owners. Scott & Conway were brokers; for Stanley and wife, and L. C. Allison & Company were brokers for Steward. The contract' was signed by the owners of the properties and by both firms of brokers. It specified the amount each firm of brokers should receive for its services. Conveyances of the properties were never accepted; Steward claimed there 'was a defect in title tó a substantial portion of the Stanley property, as shown by the abstract furnished..' The Stanleys could not,- or. did not, perfect title within, the time limited in the contract, and the owners abandoned the deal. . . ■ . :

*31 Scott & Conway sued to recover their commission, and upon alleging an agreement between them and the other brokers for an equal division of the commissions provided by the contract for both firms, made all the other parties to the contract parties defendant in the action. All of them appeared, and upon issues joined, the case was tried to the court without a jury. Findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a judgment were entered in favor of both firms of brokers, against Stanley and wife only. The action was dismissed as to Steward. Stanley and wife have appealed.

The written contract was prepared with Stanley and wife as first parties, Steward as second party, and Scott & Conway and L. C. Allison & Company as third parties. Bach property owner deposited with his broker five hundred dollars, to be held subject to the conditions and stipulations of the contract. By the terms of the contract, Stanley and wife agreed to convey their property by warranty deed, with certain unimportant exceptions. The contract further provided:

“It is agreed that title insurance or abstract of title, continued to date to each of the above properties, shall be furnished by the respective parties, hereto, within ten days from the date hereof and said parties allowed five days for examination thereof, and should there be any defect or defects in the title of either, the party whose title is defective hereby agrees that said defect or defects shall be made good and the title perfected within 30 days from the date of notice thereof, at his own cost and expense, and in the event title cannot be perfected within said time, then the parties whose title is defective shall forfeit the amount deposited by him hereunder, as liquidated damages. . . .
“When said abstract or title insurance policy shall have been furnished as above, and time allowed for the examination thereof shall have elapsed, first and second parties agree to immediately execute and deliver the necessary and proper papers that effect the trans *32 fer of the above described properties, and carry out the terms of this agreement, and if either party refuses and neglects to do so within five days after the time elapses for the examination of said abstract or title insurance, then the earnest money deposited by said defaulting party and hereby receipted for shall be forfeited at the election of the non-defaulting party, and accepted as liquidated damages.
“The defaulting party shall further pay to the third parties the full amount of commission hereinafter agreed to be paid by the first and second parties hereto.
“If the nondefaulting party elects to accept the forfeiture of the earnest money deposited by the defaulting party as liquidated damage, the said earnest money together with that deposited by the nondefaulting party shall nevertheless be first used to pay the actual expenses incurred either by the nondefaulting party or the parties of the third part, and the balance of said earnest moneys so deposited shall be divided equally between the nondefaulting parties and the third parties herein.
“The third parties herein have fully performed all of the services as real estate brokers representing first and second parties in the exchange of their said properties, and are entitled to be paid as commission for said services as follows:
“First parties agree to pay to the third parties the sum of $1500, and the second party agrees to pay to the third parties the sum of $2000, said sums being payable upon the execution of the conveyances effecting the exchange or when the time has elapsed according to the provisions of this agreement for the execution of said conveyances.”

A part of the property to be conveyed by the appellants was what was known as the Thomas J. Jones homestead, and as stated by appellants, the primary question in the case is whether their title to that property is a good and marketable title of public record. Steward admitted that the title was good with one exception which, as he claims, reasonably justified him in rejecting it. The homestead was acquired in the *33 name of Thomas J. Jones by patent dated January 23, 1901. At that time and for years, he had a wife, Hannah Jones. Appellants concede that the homestead was the community property of Thomas J. Jones and wife. About 1902, she died, leaving several children and grandchildren of hers and Thomas J. Jones, as her heirs at law, and it is conceded that, upon her death, the title to one-half of the property vested immediately in her heirs, and that no probate was necessary to pass title. Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 1342, 1366; Goulette v. Goulette, 114 Wash. 689,195 Pac. 1045. Her estate was never probated.

Thomas J. Jones died in 1909, leaving a will by which he gave and devised the homestead to his son John J. Jones. The will was admitted to probate, and this property was inventoried and distributed to John J. Jones, the devisee, by order of court in 1911. In probating the will down to and including the order of distribution, there was no personal notice to the other heirs of Hannah Jones of any of the proceedings nor any appearance by them. This apparent title of record to the property continued in John J. Jones until his conveyance by warranty deed to the grantor of the appellants.

Appellants invoke the general rule, in common practice, that, upon the death of either spouse, the whole community estate, and not merely the decedent’s interest therein, is subject to administration; and they rely further and principally upon Magee v. Big Bend Land Co., 51 Wash. 406, 99 Pac. 16, a suit by heirs to quiet title, which holds that, in the administration upon the estate of a widower without there having been any previous administration upon the estate of his deceased wife, the court has jurisdiction to administer the whole of the community property.

*34 In the Magee case, the spouses died within a period of two years. The holding in that case, under the record, was that, in the administration of his estate, his former wife’s estate not having been probated, the court had jurisdiction to administer the community property.

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Bluebook (online)
270 P. 110, 149 Wash. 29, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-stanley-wash-1928.