Ballard v. Slyfield

Rudkin, J.

Irving Ballard and Lucinda M. Ballard intermarried on the 20th day of December, 1870, and continued to reside together as husband and wife until the death of the husband, in the city of Seattle, on December 30th, 1880. On the 15th day of April, 1875, Edward A. Thorndyke and wife conveyed the property now in controversy to Lucinda M. Ballard, the wife of Irving Ballard. The present action was instituted on the 30th day of January, 1906, by the heirs at law of Irving Ballard, deceased, against the grantees of Lucinda M. Ballard, to quiet title to an undivided one-half interest in the property, and to recover the rents and profits for the six years next preceding commencement of the action. The defendants had judgment below and the plaintiffs appeal.

The court found, among other things:

“That the consideration of said conveyance was the sum of nine hundred dollars then and there paid to the grantors therein by the said Irving and Lucinda M. Ballard. That said sum of nine hundred dollars was made up, either wholly or in large part, of money which was then and there the separate property of the said Lucinda M. Ballard, and which she had previously received as an inheritance from the estate of her maternal grandfather; and the remainder, if any, of said sum was paid out of the community funds of the said Irving and Lucinda M. Ballard. That at the time of said conveyance it was the intention of both the said Irving Ballard and the said Lucinda M. Ballard, then expressed, that the conveyance should operate to vest the title to said property in the said Lucinda M. Ballard as her sole and separate estate, and if any part of the purchase price therefor was paid out of community funds it was then and there the intention of the said Irving Ballard to make a gift thereof to his said wife, and to make a gift to her of said property so far as any part of the consideration therefor may have been contributed out of the community funds, and the deed was made to run to the said Lucinda M. Ballard by the express direction, at the time, of the said Irving Ballard, and said conveyance then and there operated to vest the title to said property in the said Lucinda M. Ballard as her sole and separate estate, and the *177title to said property remained thereafter unchanged until the conveyance thereafter to the defendant Sarah Slyfield hereinafter referred to; and thereafter, during his lifetime, the said Irving Ballard regarded, considered and declared said property to be the separate property of his said wife, and at the time of the death of said Irving Ballard he had no right, title or interest in or to, or made any claim, to said property or any part thereof; so that, upon his death, no interest therein passed to the plaintiffs or either of them, nor have the plaintiffs or either of them ever had any interest therein.”

This finding of course supports the judgment of dismissal, but the appellants earnestly insist that it is not supported by the testimony. The law governing this class of cases is well settled in all the community property states. Property acquired by purchase during the marriage is presumed to be community property, and the burden rests upon the spouse asserting its separate character to establish his or her claim by clear and satisfactory proof. The difficulties of obtaining proof under the circumstances disclosed by this record are apparent. The property was acquired thirty years before the adverse claim was asserted, one of the parties to the transaction is dead and the other is an adverse witness. The testimony of the surviving wife is of little importance, consisting largely as it does of a disclaimer of knowledge or recollection of either law or facts. But, in so far as it may tend to support the claim of the appellants, it is utterly inconsistent with the acts and conduct of the witness covering the period of twenty-five years since her husband’s death. Soon after his decease, she filed a petition for letters of administration on his estate, purporting to contain a list or statement of all his property, but no mention was made of the property in dispute. The same is true of the verified inventory filed. She twice mortgaged the property for her own benefit, and finally conveyed it by warranty deed, receiving the full consideration therefor. The conduct of the appellants was equally inconsistent. No claim against the property was asserted by any or either of *178them until six years after the property had passed into the hands of strangers. At the time of the assertion of this claim, the eldest child was thirty-two years of age, or eleven years beyond his majority, and the youngest, a daughter, twenty-four years of age, or six years beyond her maj ority. When we take into consideration the acts and conduct of the widow and children during all these years, the declarations made by the husband in his lifetime, and all the facts and circumstances in the case, we think the court was fully warranted in making the above finding, and its judgment is accordingly affirmed.

Hadley, C. J., Crow, Fullerton, and Mount, JJ., concur.