Court Opinion

ID: 4001701
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:58:16.087674+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:18:58.142398
License: Public Domain

1 Reported in 110 P.2d 172.
Plaintiff, trustee in bankruptcy of the marital community consisting of defendants John Moe and Borghild J. Moe, instituted an action, March, 1938, to cancel, as a fraudulent conveyance, a quitclaim deed, executed by John Moe, covering certain realty which was his separate property; also, to establish in favor of the trustee an equitable lien upon the realty in an amount to be determined by the court, and to foreclose such lien. The cause was tried to the court, which filed its memorandum decision February 20, 1939, and entered decree May 12, 1939, granting plaintiff the relief sought and fixing the amount of the lien at two thousand dollars. The defendants appealed.
The cause is before us on an agreed statement of facts, which was filed in this court September 22, 1939. The brief of appellants was filed in this court September 26, 1939. By stipulation of the parties, time for filing respondent's brief was extended to December 1, 1939, and later extended to December 26, 1939. On the latter date, the cause was set for hearing January 11, 1940, before department two of this court. The death, April 29, 1940, of the judge to whom the cause was assigned for opinion in the January, 1940, term of this court necessitated reassignment. On July 9, 1940, the cause was set for rehearingEn Banc at the September, *Page 357 
1940, term of this court. On request of the parties, the cause was heard En Banc November 7, 1940. The cause was then assigned to another judge for opinion. With that opinion, a majority of the court did not agree. December 11, 1940, the cause was assigned to the present writer for opinion, which was written December 20, 1940, and placed in circulation among the members of the court.
The agreed statement of facts is as follows: John Moe and Borghild J. Moe were married in 1927. Prior to their marriage, Moe acquired title to an unimproved lot, fronting on 36th Ave. S.W., in Seattle, and Borghild J. Moe had acquired title to two lots, which apparently were improved with a dwelling house, located on 44th Ave. S.W., in the same city. This action has to do solely with the 36th Ave. S.W. property, the title to which stood in the name of John Moe.
In 1929 or 1930, a house was erected upon the lot owned by John Moe, at a cost of approximately thirty-five hundred dollars. The improvement was financed by means of eleven hundred dollars which Mr. Moe saved prior to his marriage; also, by the proceeds of a loan in the amount of fifteen hundred dollars obtained from a savings and loan association, secured by a mortgage on the property involved in this action, and by means of a loan of one thousand dollars obtained from Axel Neilsen, father of Borghild J. Moe. Whether Mrs. Moe was a party to the transaction under which the loan was obtained from the savings and loan association, is not disclosed by the agreed statement of facts. The loan obtained from Axel Neilsen is evidenced by a promissory note executed by John Moe alone.
As soon as the house was completed, sometime in 1929 or 1930, the Moes moved into it and occupied the property as their family home. They continued to reside *Page 358 
there until May, 1937, when they moved into the 44th Ave. S.W. property owned by Mrs. Moe, where they lived until August, 1938. They then moved back into their former home on 36th Ave. S.W., prior to which time the present action was commenced.
During the time the spouses occupied the 36th Ave. S.W. property, the legal title was in the name of John Moe. The community did not pay any rent therefor and the husband and wife never mentioned the matter of rent. During the period of fifteen months they were absent from that property, the place was rented and the rentals were collected by John Moe. Subsequent to the marriage, Mr. Moe had no income other than the wages which he received as an employee of the city of Seattle. From his earnings as such employee, the obligation of fifteen hundred dollars to the savings and loan association, together with the accrued interest thereon, was paid at the rate of twenty-five dollars monthly. Also, out of his earnings, interest of fifty dollars annually on the Neilsen note was paid. The general taxes on the property, averaging fifty dollars per annum, special assessments, amounting to four hundred or five hundred dollars, against the property, additional improvements, costing approximately two hundred or three hundred dollars, and premiums on fire insurance policies, amounting to twenty dollars for each three-year period, were all paid from the same source — the earnings of Mr. Moe as an employee of the city of Seattle.
In March, 1936, an action for wrongful death was brought against the Moes and against Mrs. Moe's son by a former marriage, in which action a judgment was obtained about one year later against the marital community composed of John Moe and Borghild J. Moe and against Mrs. Moe's son. *Page 359 
Shortly subsequent to the commencement of the action for wrongful death, John Moe executed a quitclaim deed to his father-in-law, Axel Neilsen, covering the 36th Ave. S.W. property which is the subject matter of this controversy; at the same time, Mrs. Moe executed a quitclaim deed to her brother-in-law, Andrew Hegdahl, covering the 44th Ave. S.W. property owned by her. Both deeds were executed for the purpose of preventing liens from attaching against those two pieces of property by reason of any judgment which might be rendered in the wrongful death action against either John Moe or Borghild J. Moe; however, neither of those deeds was delivered to the grantee named therein, but both were retained and later filed for record by the attorney for the Moes. Axel Neilsen, the grantee in the quitclaim deed covering the 36th Ave. S.W. property, never made any request or demand for security for the note mentioned above in the amount of one thousand dollars, but, at the instance of the attorney for the Moes, consented to be named as grantee in such deed.
Within two months after the rendition of judgment in the wrongful death action, John Moe and Borghild J. Moe, as a marital community, filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. The community was duly adjudicated bankrupt, and respondent was elected trustee in bankruptcy thereof. Claims aggregating $15,840, arising out of the wrongful death action, were filed against the estate of the bankrupt community. Respondent, as such trustee, thereafter brought this action.
In the decree, the trial court adjudged that the title and interest of the appellants in the real estate covered by the quitclaim deed from John Moe to Axel Neilsen were subject to a lien in favor of the trustee in bankruptcy in the amount of two thousand dollars "by reason *Page 360 
of contributions which the said community made to said real estate in the improvement thereof."
The agreed facts disclose that the conveyance of the property from John Moe to his father-in-law was a fraudulent conveyance. The very purpose of that conveyance was to defeat the collection of any judgment obtained in the wrongful death action. We will treat this case (as we should) as if the quitclaim deed had never been executed, and as if the title to the property in question were still in the name of John Moe.
Whether, under the facts and circumstances present in this cause, the trustee in bankruptcy is entitled to have an equitable lien impressed upon the property, the title to which is in John Moe, is dependent upon whether an equitable lien in favor of the marital community should be impressed upon the separate property of John Moe to the extent that community funds were expended in conection with that property. Any right in favor of the trustee must be founded upon a similar right vested in, or accruing to, the marital community.
[1] It is, as contended by counsel for appellants, well settled in this jurisdiction that the status of property, whether real or personal, becomes fixed as of the date of its purchase or acquisition, and remains so fixed unless changed by deed, by due process of law, or by the working of some form of estoppel. Inre Deschamps' Estate, 77 Wn. 514, 137 P. 1009; In reWoodburn's Estate, 190 Wn. 141, 66 P.2d 1138; In reFinch's Estate, 198 Wn. 567, 89 P.2d 218; and In reBinge's Estate, 5 Wn.2d 446, 105 P.2d 689.
The foregoing specific rule, enunciated in the cases cited and followed in other cases from this court, particularly refers to the legal title to the property, and not directly to such interests or rights as are founded upon equitable considerations. In quite a number of our cases, which announce and follow the rules stated *Page 361 
above, the rule is conceded that the legal title may be subject to certain equities, according to the facts and circumstances of the particular case.
In Legg v. Legg, 34 Wn. 132, 75 P. 130, we specifically held that, in equity and fairness to the wife, who was the survivor of the community, she was entitled to reimbursement from separate real property of her husband to the value of the improvement made on that property by the community. In that case, from the time of their marriage and during a period of twenty-five years, the husband and wife lived upon a forty-acre tract of land which the husband had acquired in its unimproved state prior to the time of the marriage; that the spouses enhanced the value of the land in a substantial amount by their joint efforts in placing betterments thereon; and that, at the time of the death of the husband, the wife had no property of any kind except her community interest in the land. Upon that combination of considerations, we concluded that the equities of the case demanded allowance to the wife of a lien upon the land to the extent of the value of the betterments placed thereon during the existence of the community, together with interest on the amount thus ascertained by the court.
It cannot be gainsaid that we have consistently held that the wife, at the death of her husband, should, in equity and good conscience, be awarded the interest to which she is entitled in improvements by the community on land separately owned by the husband; however, it is the position of the minority that, if a creditor of a community seeks to impress a lien against such interest, he should be denied relief.
[2] The trial court correctly decided, under authority of our prior opinions, that, where a marital community invests substantial sums of money in construction of a dwelling house upon a vacant lot owned separately *Page 362 
by the husband, which improvement greatly enhances the value of the property, the community acquires an interest in, or an equitable lien against, the property, which passes to the trustee in bankruptcy upon adjudication of the community as a bankrupt, so that the trustee may enforce such equitable right on behalf of the bankrupt's creditors.
It may be suggested that, in the balancing of equities, the husband is entitled to a reasonable rental for the use of the premises during the period of its occupancy by the community. No question respecting the charging of ground rental against the community for use of community property erected upon the lot is present in the case at bar. If, in equity and fairness to the wife, she should be reimbursed for betterments placed by the marital community upon land which was the separate property of the husband, by the same token (common honesty so demands) the interest of that community in the property should be impressed with lien of a creditor of the community. The rights of creditors of a community to impress a lien upon such community should be recognized. If the wife seeks, and is entitled to, equity, surely she should be required to do equity. It would not be equitable to require the creditor to await the death of the husband before his lien could be impressed upon the community interest in the property.
The status of the separate property of the husband would not be affected by the erection of a building thereon, and the payment for such improvement of the separate property after marriage, if the rents, issues, and profits of the separate property (or other property separately owned by the husband) were sufficient to pay the cost of the improvement and upkeep, and there was an absence of clear and convincing *Page 363 
evidence establishing any community interest or the extent thereof. However, to the extent that the property in question was produced or value increased by the efforts of the spouses, it would be community property. The increased value of the property in controversy is due solely to the efforts of the spouses.
While the natural enhancement in value, during coverture, of the separate property of the spouses, is not property acquired during marriage, within the spirit of the community property law, which provides that property acquired before marriage and in certain ways, together with the rents, issues, and profits thereof, shall be the separate property of the spouse acquiring it, and that all other property acquired after marriage shall be community property, it should be borne in mind that, if, as in the case at bar, the separate property is enhanced in value by the use of community funds in a substantial amount, to the extent of that enhancement in value it is community property. In reWoodburn's Estate, 190 Wn. 141, 66 P.2d 1138.
This is not a case of the erection of a building upon separate property of the husband, where rentals of the separate property would be sufficient to pay the cost of the improvement and upkeep. The evidence is clear and convincing that the husband had no separate income, and that the enhancement in value of the property was solely due to the use of community funds in a substantial amount.
If unimproved land were the separate property of the husband, who owned no other property and whose only income after marriage was the profits from a department store or other business owned by him and his wife, the greater part of which income was expended *Page 364 
over a term of years in construction of an apartment house on the land, such increased value (which was certainly not due to natural causes, but was solely due to community efforts of the spouses) would be community property, it must be conceded. It follows, as the night the day, that, if that enhanced value or interest is community property, the creditors of the community are entitled to the right of execution against such community interest to satisfy indebtedness of the community.
The rule which the majority insists is applicable to the facts in the case at bar is not out of harmony with the community property law of this state, and is in accord with the rationale of our following prior opinions on community property questions like or similar to the one now presented:
Jacobs v. Hoitt, 119 Wn. 283, 205 P. 414; In reCarmack's Estate, 133 Wn. 374, 233 P. 942; Rawleigh Co. v.McLeod, 151 Wn. 221, 275 P. 700, 64 A.L.R. 238; Salisburyv. Meeker, 152 Wn. 146, 277 P. 376; In re Buchanan'sEstate, 89 Wn. 172, 154 P. 129; Katterhagen v. Meister,75 Wn. 112, 134 P. 673; Yesler v. Hochstettler, 4 Wn. 349,30 P. 398; Heintz v. Brown, 46 Wn. 387, 90 P. 211, 123 Am St. 937; Main v. Scholl, 20 Wn. 201, 54 P. 1125; Rawlingsv. Heal, 111 Wn. 218, 190 P. 237; Guye v. Guye, 63 Wn. 340,115 P. 731, 37 L.R.A. (N.S.) 186; Morse v. Johnson,88 Wn. 57 152 P. 677; Mattson v. Mattson, 29 Wn. 417,69 P. 1087; In re Finn's Estate, 106 Wn. 137, 179 P. 103;In re Woodburn's Estate, 190 Wn. 141, 66 P.2d 1138; In reCurtis' Estate, 116 Wn. 237, 199 P. 309; Legg v. Legg,34 Wn. 132, 75 P. 130; and In re Deschamps' Estate, 77 Wn. 514,137 P. 1009 *Page 365 
. See, also, Lake v. Bender, 18 Nev. 361, 4 P. 711, 7 P. 74.
The decree is affirmed.
MAIN, SIMPSON, BLAKE, and DRIVER, JJ., concur.