Walters v. Christensen

71 P.2d 664, 191 Wash. 602, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 616
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1937
DocketNo. 26562. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 71 P.2d 664 (Walters v. Christensen) 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
Walters v. Christensen, 71 P.2d 664, 191 Wash. 602, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 616 (Wash. 1937).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

— Olive R. Gunstone died intestate May 22, 1905. She was survived by her husband, John Gunstone, and their daughter, the plaintiff, Eunice Bell Walters, born May 22, 1899.

At the time of the wife’s death, the Gunstones owned a farm in Thurston county, embracing some 529 acres. This land was community property, having been acquired after marriage. The community also owned some personal property, as well as an undivided one-half interest in twelve hundred acres of timber land. In addition to this, John Gunstone owned, as his separate property, some parcels of real estate acquired before marriage.

In 1907, Gunstone married his second wife, Flora B. Warren, now Flora B. Christensen, the defendant. She had a son, Charles, by a former marriage, who was adopted by John Gunstone. A daughter, Opal, now Opal Kelly, was born of the second marriage.

Gunstone took no steps to probate his deceased wife’s will until 1911, when he was appointed administrator and, shortly thereafter, returned an inventory of the property belonging to the community estate of himself and his deceased wife. The inventory included the land referred to in the record as the home farm, appraised at $6,822; the half interest in the twelve *604 hundred acres; notes and mortgages, appraised at $3,321.08; and stock, farming equipment, and other items of personal property, appraised at $2,019. Nothing further was done in the probate proceeding.

Shortly after his appointment as administrator, Gunstone was appointed guardian of the person and estate of his daughter Eunice. In August, 1911, he petitioned, as guardian, for authority to sell his daughter’s one-fourth interest in the twelve hundred acre tract. He assigned as the reason for selling the land the fact that it lay several miles distant from the home farm. The petition recited that it was for the best interest of the daughter that the property be sold at private sale, and that it was his purpose to invest her share of the proceeds in real estate mortgages at current rates of interest. Having been authorized by the court to do so, he sold the daughter’s interest for $3,750. This sale was duly confirmed by order of the superior court, and conveyance made to the purchaser. No further proceeding or accounting was had in the guardianship matter.

Reference is made in the record to a timber deed executed by Gunstone, .for a consideration of seventeen thousand dollars. It is not entirely clear as to the nature of this transaction or whether the named price was paid. Whatever money, if any, was received for the timber, no accounting was made of the daughter’s interest if she had any.

The daughter continued to live with her father and step-mother until her marriage. She attended school in Olympia until twenty years of age, passing through the primary and high schools and later having some training in a business college. After her marriage, May 23, 1920, to I. B. Walters, she lived for a time in Olympia in a house furnished by her father; later, she *605 removed to Hood Canal, where her husband was engaged in a logging operation.

In 1922, while living on Hood Canal, she executed a quitclaim deed conveying to her father all of her interest in the community real estate of her mother. This included the farm as well as some other land. While theré was a discrepancy in the description of one forty-acre subdivision of the farm, it is apparent, and the trial court took the view, that the deed was intended to convey the whole of the interest inherited from her mother. ■

John Gunstone died May 26, 1932. After application had been made by the receiver of the Olympia National Bank, as a creditor of the estate to the extent of ten thousand dollars, that J. C. Minshull be appointed administrator in default of an application for appointment by the wife, Mrs. Gunstone made formal application for letters of administration, and was appointed and qualified as administratrix. After her appointment, the administratrix published notice to creditors and filed an inventory in the estate, listing personal property of the value of $1,402.

Shortly before his death, John Gunstone and his wife, Flora B. Gunstone, conveyed to a corporation, the defendant Brookside Farms, Inc., all of the real estate holdings of John Gunstone, including the farm. Title to the farming equipment was also conveyed to the corporation by bill of sale. The record contains only scant information as to the organization of this corporation, but it is inferable that it was organized by the Gunstones as a family holding company.

February 4, 1933, the widow, Flora B. Gunstone, married Elhard Christensen. A few days thereafter, Eunice Bell Walters, the plaintiff, made demand upon her step-mother for an accounting and, on August 4, 1933, instituted this action.

*606 Two principal causes of action are stated in the complaint. In the first one, the theory of the plaintiff is that the funds belonging to her, and held in trust by her father as guardian, were used by him in his business transactions, extending throughout a long and active life. She did not state precisely what form of relief she sought, and, at the outset of' the trial, the court granted a motion, interposed by the defendants, requiring her to elect whether she sought an accounting and money judgment or to impress a resulting trust. However, as the trial progressed, this order was disregarded, and the court permitted the introduction of all testimony tending to establish a right to any form of equitable relief.

Plaintiff alleged in her second cause of action that the deed to her father, executed in June, 1922, was obtained through fraud and misrepresentation and without knowledge on her part of the purport of the instrument she signed.

A third cause of action stated in the complaint is not urged here or discussed in the briefs.

Admitting the plaintiff’s interest in her mother’s estate and that, in respect of this interest, the father occupied a trust relation to the daughter, the defendants set up five affirmative defenses: (1) That John Gunstone had accounted to his daughter and discharged the trust in fact, though no formal accounting was ever made in the guardianship proceedings; (2) that accord and settlement had been made between the daughter and father; (3) that plaintiff’s claims are outlawed by the statute of limitations; (4) that plaintiff’s action is barred for failure to comply with the statute of nonclaim in her father’s estate; and (5) laches.

The trial court, without making findings of fact, quieted the title of the defendants to the land and *607 dismissed the plaintiff’s action on the ground that she was barred by the statute of limitations, without prejudice, however, to her right to further action in respect of any specific property into the purchase of which she can trace trust funds. The plaintiff appeals.

The appellant first complains of the court’s dismissal of her first cause of action as having been made upon the ground that she had failed to trace any of the trust funds into the purchase of specific property. While the court may have held this view, in the brief announcement of its decision it bases its action on the statute of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
71 P.2d 664, 191 Wash. 602, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-christensen-wash-1937.