Walker v. Wagner

77 P.2d 370, 194 Wash. 119
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1938
DocketNo. 26808. Department Two.
StatusPublished

This text of 77 P.2d 370 (Walker v. Wagner) 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
Walker v. Wagner, 77 P.2d 370, 194 Wash. 119 (Wash. 1938).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

We adopt the appellants’ statement of the case as contained in their opening brief:

“Appellants, Walker, by amended complaint against respondent Wagner, alleged in substance:

“On and prior to September 23, 1935, appellants owned a farm in Lincoln county, Washington, and were in possession through a tenant. The lands were subject to a mortgage to The Prudential Life Insurance Company of America hereinafter referred to as ‘The Prudential,’ and which mortgage was in process of foreclosure in the Lincoln county court.

*120 “On September 23, 1935, a decree of foreclosure of such mortgage was duly entered and the land ordered sold in satisfaction thereof. The sheriff’s sale was set for October 26, 1935, and the amount on the execution was $4613.67.

“During the progress of the foreclosure, the appellants, who were wholly without funds, were trying to negotiate a loan to pay off the Prudential and were also trying to interest bidders in the sale, so that the land would bring the best price possible, if the appellants could not get a loan. Appellants had been wholly unsuccessful in such efforts when on October 3, 1935, some three weeks before the sale, respondent Wagner approached the appellants and offered to bid at the sale up to $5800, all for the benefit of the appellants, providing appellants would cease their efforts to interest others in the sale or obtain aid elsewhere and would not, pending the sale, talk to anyone about the sale. To this appellants agreed.

“Appellants, relying on respondent’s promise, ceased their efforts to interest others and spoke not of the sale, though they believed they could have found aid elsewhere.

“Appellants allege that respondent’s promise was made as a means of deceit, to discourage bidding, and without intention on respondent’s part to perform.

“Respondent Wagner failed in his promise. True, he attended the sale, but bid only one cent more than the Prudential bid of $4613.67. On his bid of $4613.68, respondent, as successful bidder, received a sheriff’s certificate. On November 12th following, the sale was confirmed.

“On November 23rd following, respondent Wagner repudiated his agreement and violated his trust when he told appellants that he owned the sheriff’s certificate without obligation to the appellants, but that he would give them $100 for a deed, and if they did not do that, they would get nothing.

“Appellants, being inexperienced in such matters and believing respondent knew whereof he spoke, gave respondent such a deed and received the $100. Not until shortly before this action was commenced did appellants discover that their rights were other *121 than as stated by respondents. Thereupon, and in October, 1936, they brought this action as an equitable redemption.

“In the meantime, respondents had received and appropriated from crops, summerfallow, and rentals from said land $1656.65. Considering these items, interest and other proper charges, the appellants tendered $3305, the approximate amount necessary to redeem, and deposited the same in court.

“Appellants prayed for a declaration of trust and for suitable equitable relief.

“The court sustained a demurrer to that complaint and after refusal to plead further, entered a judgment of dismissal, from which this appeal is prosecuted.”

In opening their argument, the appellants say:

“The sole question to be determined is whether the amended complaint states a cause of action. . . .

“We have asked the court to declare that when the respondent bid at such sale, he became charged as a constructive trustee of the property in question for the benefit of the appellants.”

The next step in the argument is concisely expressed by the following excerpt therefrom:

“If such trust be established, it cannot be gainsaid that a true fiduciary relation existed between respondent and appellants from the time of the sheriff’s sale, and that all subsequent actions of the respondent are to be tested by the requirements applying to such fiduciaries. ...”

It is then contended that, in taking the deed, Wagner violated the fiduciary relation which, it is said, came into being at the time he made the bid, and that equity should, therefore, require him to turn back the property to the appellants upon receiving from them the amount he bid at the foreclosure sale, with interest, less the value of what he received from the land, while in possession, in the way of crops, summerfallow, and rentals.

*122 It is evident that the first and most important question for examination is: Did Wagner become a trustee of the land for the appellants when he bid it in at the foreclosure sale and received the certificate of purchase?

In considering this matter, it must be kept in mind that it is not alleged or claimed that Wagner agreed to buy in the property for the appellants. It was not contemplated that they should get the land, or, more accurately speaking, that Wagner should save the land for them. He was merely to buy in the land for $5,800, and the benefit which they were to receive was the overplus, which, since the judgment was for $4,613.67, would have been $1,186.33. Had he done so, the contract would have been performed according to its terms. He, however, bid $4,613.68, so that the over-plus was but one cent.

It follows, if we forget the statute of frauds and for the sake of argument regard the contract as valid, that, by reason of the breach, the appellants sustained a monetary loss of $1,186.32, but by no possibility were they wrongfully deprived of any title or interest in the land, for it was agreed that Wagner was to acquire the certificate of purchase for himself, not for them. The only breach was in not bidding the required amount. The only loss which flowed from it was a monetary loss.

Appellants, however in an attempt to raise a constructive trust, pleaded fraud in the following allegation:

“Plaintiffs now allege that said promise was made by defendant merely as a means of deceiving these plaintiffs and for the purpose of discouraging bidding at said sale, and so that defendant might thereby take advantage of plaintiffs and with no intention on the part of said defendant of performing the same.”

*123 Assuming, and the assumption is a large one, that this is a sufficient pleading of fraud to take an oral contract out of the statute of frauds, do these allegations, which, for our present purpose, must be regarded as true, add anything to appellants’ case? Of what were they defrauded? Not of any interest in land, but merely of the possibility that, if Wagner had not led them to believe that he would bid $5,800, they might have found someone else who would have done so, or, at least, who would have made a bid which would have given them a substantial overplus. That is to say, whether Wagner’s act be regarded as a mere breach of contract or a wilful and deliberate fraud, its result was not to deprive the appellants of title or interest in land, but merely to cause them a monetary loss.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P.2d 370, 194 Wash. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-wagner-wash-1938.