Sunday v. Moore

237 P. 1014, 135 Wash. 414, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 935
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1925
DocketNo. 19303. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 237 P. 1014 (Sunday v. Moore) 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
Sunday v. Moore, 237 P. 1014, 135 Wash. 414, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 935 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

— This is an action of forcible de-tainer, brought under the second subdivision of § 811 of the code (Rem. Comp. Stat.) [P. C. §7969]. The real property involved is situated in the city of Tacoma. The title to the property at the time of the transactions which gave rise to the controversy, and at the time of the trial in the court below, was in one Mary A. Lemon, a widow. On September 1, 1920, the appellant Amanda Truelove contracted to purchase the property for a consideration of $14,000, payable in part in installments,. The purchaser made the installment payments somewhat intermittently, hut made substantial payments, so that on January 15, 1923, the balance remaining due was $3,000. At this time a new contract was entered into by which the owner contracted to sell the property for that sum to one Eliza Truelove, the mother of the appellant; the evidence showing, however, that the actual purchaser was the *416 appellant, the mother acting only as trustee for her. This contract also called for installment payments, and the appellant became delinquent thereon. Under the terms of the contracts, the appellant was entitled to the possession of the property, but it appears that, subsequent to the date of the last contract, she did not maintain an actual possession of the residence on the property, either in person or by tenant, and that she suffered the property to deteriorate, and that for a time her whereabouts were unknown.

On May 17,1924, after the appellant had become delinquent on the installment payments, and during the time her whereabouts were unknown, the owner contracted to sell the property to the respondents, Sunday, at an agreed price of $2,700, payable in installments. The contract provided that the purchasers should make certain repairs to the property. It also recited the outstanding contract of purchase held by the appellant and provided that the owner should commence an action to quiet her title against the contract; further providing that, in the case she failed in the action, she would repay to the respondents the amount of the installment then paid, and pay them for the value of the improvements they should make on the premises. The contract gave the respondents the right of possession. The respondents immediately began the work of improvement, and by May 29th following had so far completed it as to make the house on the land habitable, and moved in on that day.

The appellant Truelove returned to Tacoma sometime in May. The action to quiet the title to the property had at that time been commenced and she immediately busied herself in an attempt to raise the money necessary to complete the payments on her contract. On May 31, she succeeded in borrowing the money from the appellants Moore. As security for the money bor *417 rowed, she gave them a warranty deed to the property; entering, however, into a collateral contract with them which expressed the purpose of, and the consideration for, the deed. No notice of forfeiture of her contract had been given to the appellant Truelove, and after procuring the money she answered in the suit to quiet title, tendering and paying into court the balance due on the contract. This suit had not been determined at the time of the trial of the cause now before us, and the record does not show its result, but it is stated in the brief of one of the counsel that the appellant Truelove prevailed in the suit; that the court adjudged that she was entitled to a conveyance of the property, that such a conveyance was directed and was afterwards made.

The record shows, also, that the appellant Truelove had never entirely abandoned her possession. While she had suffered the house to become so far out of repair as to be uninhabitable, there was a garage on the premises which she had let to certain Japanese,' and that these were in possession of the garage at the time the respondents Sunday began their improvements and were in possession at the time they moved into, the house.

In the nighttime of June 4, 1923, while the respondents Sunday were temporarily absent from the premises, the appellant Truelove entered the premises, caused the personal belongings of the respondents to be removed therefrom, and refused to allow them to reenter on their return. The charge against the appellants Moore is that they aided and abetted the appellant Truelove in removing the respondentsJ effects from the house, and aided and abetted her in maintaining possession of the premises subsequent to that time.

The respondents served notice upon the appellants *418 to quit and surrender the property within three days, and upon their refusal so to do, began the present action to recover the possession. The trial was by the court without a jury. The court found that the respondents had been unlawfully evicted from the premises, that they had suffered damages thereby in the sum of $465, and it entered a judgment restoring the respondents to the possession of the property and allowed them a recovery for the damages suffered. The appellants Moore and the appellant- Truelove prosecute, separate appeals, the Moores giving bond to supersede the money judgment and Truelove giving an appeal bond only.

. The defense of the Moores was that they were not parties to the eviction, and to this question their arguments are mainly directed. But we think we need not discuss the facts at length. While their own testimony would warrant a conclusion different from that reached by the trial judge, the evidence on the other side tended to show that they had more than a mere passive part in .the transaction; it shows that they not only employed the persons who removed the effects of the respondents from the house, but that they furnished their co-appellant with such supplies and assistance as enabled her to maintain possession a.gainst the return of the respondents. The trial judge held that the preponderance of the evidence sustained this latter view, and our examination of the evidence does not convince ús that his conclusion is against the preponderance of the evidence.

The appellants say, however, that the evidence fails to. show that they ever were in possession of the property, and fails to show that subsequent to the entry of their co-appellant they took any part in maintaining her possession, and that in consequence the court was in error in holding them responsible for the damages *419 subsequently accruing. But tbe evidence also shows that there was no further call for action on their part. The respondents at all times conducted themselves as law-abiding citizens. After their effects had been removed from the house and they had been refused entry, they made no attempt to regain possession either by force or stratagem; they gathered up and.stored their effects and resorted to the courts for a vindication of their rights. The contention, however, mistakes the rule. A person is not only responsible for his overt acts, but he is responsible for the consequences of his acts. Keeping the respondents out of possession until the court ordered their reinstatement was one of the consequences of the appellants’ act, and no reason exists in law why they should not be held responsible for the damages caused thereby.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P. 1014, 135 Wash. 414, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunday-v-moore-wash-1925.