Security Savings & Loan Society v. Dudley

28 P.2d 276, 175 Wash. 50, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 889
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1933
DocketNo. 24274. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 276 (Security Savings & Loan Society v. Dudley) 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
Security Savings & Loan Society v. Dudley, 28 P.2d 276, 175 Wash. 50, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 889 (Wash. 1933).

Opinions

Steinert, J.

In this action, the plaintiff seeks to recover the rentals accruing during the period of redemption following a mortgage foreclosure and sale of certain premises. The principal defendants herein claim the same rentals by virtue of an assignment, by operation of law, prior to the mortgage foreclosure and sale of the property. A trial was had before the court without a jury, resulting in findings, conclusions and judgment in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff has appealed.

*51 In 1909, Lonise M. Demeree was the owner of the east half, and L. P. Dudley and wife and J. A. Mapes and wife were the owners of the west half of lot 4 in block 47 of Benn’s Original Plat of Aberdeen. In that year, the owners, under a joint arrangement, erected a building known as the “Bijou Theatre Building,” covering practically the entire lot. The building consists principally of a theatre extending from the front to the back of the lot, with two small shops located on either side of the theatre entrance and extending back forty or fifty feet from the front. The line dividing the east and west halves of the lot extends along and through the center of the theatre. By agreement of the parties, each, according to ownership, paid one-half of the total cost of construction, and each was to have the full rentals from the shop located on her, or their, respective half of the lot, but the theatre, which was the principal feature of the enterprise, was to be let by the owners jointly and the rents divided equally.

For seventeen years, the parties rented the building pursuant to their agreement, apportioning the rents accordingly. On May 17, 1926, while the theatre was being rented under a joint lease which was to expire on October 1st of that year, Mrs. Demeree, without the knowledge or consent of Dudley or Mapes, entered into a separate lease of the east half of the building, located on her portion of the lot, to the defendant D. & R. Theatres Company, Inc., for a period beginning October 1, 1926, and ending October 1, 1932. This lease was not recorded, although occupancy was taken thereunder.

During the period of the leases and up to December 1, 1928, Dudley and Mapes received their portion of the rents from the theatre, but after that date, and after Mrs. Demeree’s death, the executors of the De-meree estate collected and retained the rentals in their *52 entirety, np to January 1, 1931, in the sum of $162.50 per month.

On December 4, 1928, two years and seven months after the giving of the separate lease by Mrs. Demeree, and prior to its expiration, and while the lessee was in possession and paying rent to the executors, the latter mortgaged the east half of lot 4, the part formerly owned by Mrs. Demeree, to the appellant to secure their note as such executors, in the sum of seven thousand dollars, maturing in monthly installments of $82.04. No specific mention of the rents was made in the mortgage.

Sometime prior to February 6, 1931, Dudley and Mapes began an action, cause No. 27737 in the superior court for Grays Harbor county, against the executors for an accounting of the rents collected by the latter. Security Savings & Loan Society, appellant herein and holder of the mortgage, was not made a party to that suit. Upon a tidal of that action before the court, judgment was entered on February 6, 1931, in favor of Dudley and Mapes for $2,112.50, which represented one-half of the rentals theretofore collected by the Demeree interests. The judgment provided that all of the rentals from the theatre should thereafter, to the end of the lease, be paid into court, one-half thereof to be turned over to Dudley and Mapes as their portion of the accruing rents, and the other half to be applied in payment of their judgment.

On or about September 12,1931, the appellant herein began a suit to foreclose its mortgage covering the east half of lot 4, owned by the Demeree estate. The D. & E. Theatres Company, Inc.', and also Dudley and Mapes, with their wives, were made parties to the action, as claiming some interest in the property. Upon a trial had before the court, findings, conclusions and decree were entered awarding appellant recovery *53 upon the note and a foreclosure of its mortgage. The matter of possession of the premises and the right to the rents thereon from and after the date of the prospective execution sale was left undetermined, the court being of the opinion that it had no jurisdiction to adjudicate that matter in advance of the sale. The property was ultimately bought in by the appellant at the foreclosure sale for the amount of its judgment.

The present action was then begun for the specific purpose of having awarded to appellant the rents accruing on the separate lease during the period of redemption, that question having been left undetermined in the prior mortgage foreclosure action. From an adverse judgment, this appeal was taken.

The foregoing statement of the case presents the following outstanding facts and factors, expressed according to their legal effect and in their chronological order: (1) separate ownership of contiguous real estate; (2) joint construction of a building on the premises; (3) a joint lease of the building thus constructed, followed at its expiration by (4) a separate, unrecorded lease of the separate one-half of the building; (5) a mortgage covering-the separate property; (6) a judgment against the owners of the separate property but affecting the rentals on the entire property; (7) foreclosure of the mortgage on the separate property; (8) a contest between the judgment creditor and the mortgagee purchaser at the foreclosure sale, regarding a proportionate part of the rentals accruing on the separate property. To be exact, the rentals here in dispute cover the time during which the unexpired portion of the lease overlaps the redemption period following the execution sale, that is, from April 9,1932, to October 1,1932.

The redemption statute, Eem. Eev. Stat., § 602, so far as it is applicable here, reads as follows:

*54 “The purchaser from the day of sale until a resale or redemption, and the redemptioner from the day of his redemption until another redemption, shall he entitled to the possession of the property purchased or redeemed, unless the same be in the possession of a tenant holding under an unexpired lease, and in such case shall be entitled to receive from such tenant the rents or the value of the use.and occupation thereof during the period of redemption.”

The portion of the statute above quoted is followed by certain provisions concerning stipulations in mortgages with reference to possession by the mortgagor during the period of redemption, concerning also possession of land used for farming purposes and homestead rights, none of which provisions are we concerned with here.

The language of the statute seems plain enough, and there is nothing in its expression suggestive of any limitation upon its obvious meaning. It provides that the purchaser shall be entitled to possession of the property, from the day of sale unless a tenant holding under an unexpired lease be in possession, in which latter event the purchaser shall be entitled to the rents.

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136 P.2d 165 (Washington Supreme Court, 1943)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 276, 175 Wash. 50, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-savings-loan-society-v-dudley-wash-1933.