Williamson Investment Co. v. Williamson

165 P. 385, 96 Wash. 529, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 609
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1917
DocketNo. 13666
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 165 P. 385 (Williamson Investment Co. v. Williamson) 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
Williamson Investment Co. v. Williamson, 165 P. 385, 96 Wash. 529, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 609 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Ellis, C. J.

— This is an action for partition. The question is whether the land should be sold or divided in kind.

The property is described as lot 20, block 8, Havermale’s addition to Spokane Falls, now Spokane. It is located on the north side of Main avenue, between Brown and Barnard streets, in the business district of the city. It has a frontage of fifty feet on Main avenue and a depth of ninety feet to the north. It is owned in undivided moieties by the parties to this action as tenants in common. It is adjoined on the east by lot 21, of the same dimensions and in the same block. Many years ago the then owner of lot 20 and the then owner of lot 21 erected a two-story wooden building covering both lots. The building had a common entrance on the line between the two lots giving access to the second story. Sixteen years ago, Volney D. Williamson, president of the plaintiff corporation, became the owner of lot 20, and another owner acquired lot 21. The building was an old building at that time. A few years later, the common entrance was closed and a wooden partition wall cutting the original building into two was run through on the line between lots 20 and 21. Thereafter the two buildings were operated as separate buildings, the main entrance to that on lot 20 being placed in the middle of the Main avenue or front wall with a stairway leading to the second story. The ground floor consists of two storerooms. The upper floor is fit only for a cheap rooming or lodging house. The upper hallway, office, laundry and rooms are so arranged that a partition and double stairway could not be run through on the middle line of lot 20 [531]*531so as to make two separate buildings without prohibitive expense.

At the time of the trial, the west storeroom was rented for a small monthly rental. The other storeroom was vacant. The upper story was rented at a monthly rental of about $4.0. It is admitted that the income from the building is hardly sufficient to carry the taxes and insurance, and that the rent is being continually reduced in order to keep the building tenanted at all. Three of plaintiff’s witnesses somewhat indefinitely valued the building at from $1,500 to $3,000, though all of them admitted that it added little or nothing to the value of the lot, and that its only value was as an aid in carrying the property till the lot shall be used by the ei’ection thereon of modern improvements as business property. Two witnesses for defendant and the three referees in partition appointed by the court testified that the building had little or no value, and, in substance, that the property would sell as readily, and for as much, without the building as with it. From the whole evidence, it is plain that the building is an old wooden shell, badly out of repair and not worth repairing. Props have been placed in the rear, presumably to keep it from falling. On the part of the city officials, there have been threats, or at least talk, of condemning it. One of the referees, a practical contractor and builder of forty years’ experience, who said he had examined the building critically, testified as follows:

“As a matter of fact this property can be partitioned without any great prejudice to the owners. I do not consider the building of any value. I will have to answer that way. If it was a good building I would say it hurts it. But I consider the lot as though the building was not there. Independent of the question of the times it would not be any great prejudice to cut the lot in two, not particularly, but then as a rule you can sell 50 feet better than you can 25 feet, but there is no great detriment on that property because very often some one wants 25 feet, but I prefer 50 feet myself. That would be owing to the buyer. As to the con[532]*532dition of the building, can the stenographer spell ‘rotten’? It is in bad shape. It is gradually rotting down. The back timbers or studding are all rotten on the bottom. They put these braces up for fear it might fall — these braces on the back. I don’t know if it would fall, but it looks bad. The plumbing is in bad shape.- They do not use the bath room at all; they use the sink and toilet; and the plastering is all broken down, and lathing exposed, and paper and all off, and I would think the building was ready to be condemned, myself ; I think it’s worthless.”

As to the value of the lot, one of plaintiff’s witnesses, an architect, expressed the opinion that it was worth, at the time of the trial, about $20,000; that he thought thei’e was then a market for it at that price; that the real estate market was then much depressed, and that, in normal times, he would consider' $600 a front foot, or $30,000, a good price. He expressed the further opinion that to cut the lot in two would reduce the aggregate value by twenty-five per cent to thirty per cent. Another of plaintiff’s witnesses, an experienced real estate man, was of the opinion that a high or boom price for the lot would be $60,000, a low or “hard times” price $22,000, and the normal value $30,000; that to cut the lot in halves would reduce the aggregate value by ten per cent. When asked, in substance, which would result in greater loss to the owners, to divide the property in kind or sell it on the present market, he said it would be a “toss up” as to which would be advisable, and that “assuming that one could wait till normal times ... it would be more prejudicial to sell than to divide.” Still another witness, an architect not acquainted with real estate values in Spokane, expressed the view that a division in kind would depreciate the aggregate value by about twenty per cent. Another real estate dealer placed the values higher, and the loss by division at about thirty-three per cent. He also placed the market value at the time of trial more than one-third below normal value. Of defendant’s witnesses, one, a real estate dealer of long experience, was of the opinion that the prop[533]*533erty could not be sold at the time of the trial for more than thirty per cent to fifty per cent of its ordinary normal value. Another experienced real estate agent, who has had this property in his charge for about three years, while not expressing himself in terms of percentage, was of the positive opinion that the property could not be sold to advantage on the depressed market existing at the time of trial, and he said, “As far as that particular property is concerned, I would rather have half of it all my own than to have it sold and take half of the money at this time.” An experienced contractor and builder, who was also one of the referees after-wards appointed by the court to partition the property, who had had thirty years’ acquaintance with conditions and relative real estate values in Spokane, stated that he would not sell real estate at this time unless forced to do it; that it could not be done without considerable loss, which in some cases might run as high as seventy per cent.

The trial judge was of the opinion that the building was of little or no permanent valué to the property, and that the fact that it could not be advantageously divided should not be permitted to stand in the way of a partition in kind. He found that the property could be divided into equal parts without great prejudice, or any substantial prejudice, to either of the owners, and that it should be so divided and partitioned between the parties without a sale.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nordgaarden v. Kiebert
527 P.3d 486 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2023)
Overlake Farms B.l.k. Iii Llc, App. v. Bellevue-overlake Farm, Llc, Resp.
196 Wash. App. 929 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2016)
Friend v. Friend
964 P.2d 1219 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1998)
Schnell v. Schnell
346 N.W.2d 713 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1984)
Cummings v. Anderson
590 P.2d 1297 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1979)
Hegewald v. Neal
582 P.2d 529 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1978)
Haggerty v. Nobles
419 P.2d 9 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1966)
Johnson v. Hendrickson
24 N.W.2d 914 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1946)
Williams v. Wells Fargo Bank & Union Trust Co.
133 P.2d 73 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
Columbia Lumber Co. v. Bush
126 P.2d 584 (Washington Supreme Court, 1942)
Kauffman v. Eckhardt
263 N.W. 912 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1935)
Huston v. Swanstrom
13 P.2d 17 (Washington Supreme Court, 1932)
Washington Pulp & Paper Corp. v. Robinson
6 P.2d 632 (Washington Supreme Court, 1932)
Falk v. Green
282 P. 212 (Washington Supreme Court, 1929)
Canfield Rubber Co. v. Leary
121 A. 283 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1923)
Alexander v. Al G. Barnes Amusement Co.
177 P. 786 (Washington Supreme Court, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 P. 385, 96 Wash. 529, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-investment-co-v-williamson-wash-1917.