This action was brought for specific performance of a contract for the purchase and sale of real estate. The contract was made between Joseph Matzger and Etta Matzger, his wife, owners of the property, and Willis H. White, the purchaser. White subsequently assigned the contract to his coplaintiff, H. P. Craig. Subsequent to the making and execution of the above contract, Matzger and wife executed a deed of the same to defendant Jennie McCalmont, for reasons which we o shall hereafter notice, who in turn conveyed to the defendant Benson, and the latter executed a deed to Dexter Horton & Company, Bankers, which deed was in fact a mortgage to secure an indebtedness due by Benson to Dexter Horton & Company, Bankers. The intervener, the First National Bank of Seattle, also claims under this mortgage. The right of White and Craig, plaintiffs, to a specific performance is not questioned in this action, the contention being that Dexter Horton & Company, Bankers, and the intervener, First National Bank, are entitled to have their claims paid first out of the purchase price. The trial court entered a decree awarding specific performance of the con*349tract to the plaintiffs, and directing that the entire purchase price he paid to the defendants Matzger; and denied any relief to either the defendant Dexter Horton & Company, Bankers, or the intervener, First National Bank of Seattle. The plaintiffs paid into court the full amount called for by the contract and remaining unpaid. That part of the judgment refusing to decree the satisfaction of the liens of the respective banks has been appealed from.
The plaintiffs, after the commencement of the action, amended their complaint and brought in Dexter Horton & Company, Bankers, by reason of the claim that it made as holder of the deed to the property from Benson. The answer of the bank is to the effect that, on the 22d day of May, it loaned to the defendant Benson and wife the sum of $3,000, for which sum the said Benson and wife, together with one C. W. Prouty, executed and delivered to it their joint and several promissory note, whereby they promised and agreed to pay in ninety days the said sum of $3,000 with interest, etc., and that at the same time, as a part of the same transaction and in order to secure the payment of the said sum of $3,000, so loaned, the defendant Benson and wife executed and delivered to it a good and sufficient deed of conveyance to lot 9, in block 49, of A. A. Denny’s addition to the city of Seattle, which is the property in controversy; that the said Benson exhibited to it a deed to the said lot from Mrs. Mc-Calmont, and that Benson represented himself to be the owner of the same; that the defendants Matzger had entered into a fraudulent conspiracy with Benson to deed the land to Mrs. McCalmont, and that, by reason of said fraudulent acts on their part, the bank had been misled as to the legal title to said lot.
The First National Bank of Seattle intervened, setting up substantially the same state of facts, claiming that it had loaned money to Benson on the strength of this deed from Mrs. McCalmont, and alleging fraudulent action on the part *350of the Matzgers as the cause of their loaning the said money to Benson. These actions were denied by the Matzgers, they claiming that they had acted under the advice of Benson as an attorney, employing him to defend their legal rights, he having represented to them that they were under no legal obligation to deed the land to the plaintiffs under the contract which they had made with the plaintiff White. This action was commenced on April 26, 1906, by the filing of a complaint and lis pendens. The deed from the Matzgers to Mrs. McCalmont was executed March 30, 1906; the deed from McCalmont to Benson, on April 5, 1906. The deed to Dexter Horton & Company, Bankers, was made on May 22, 1906, and the loan was made on that day. The loan by the First National Bank was made on the 18th day of April, 1906. Benson, prior to the 22d of May, 1906, owed Dexter Horton •& Company’s bank $2,850.95, for the most of which they had his note endorsed by one Prouty on that date. They advanced Benson $149.05, and took the deed to the land in question from Benson as part security for the whole amount.
The earnest contention of the respective counsel for the two different banks is that, by reason of the alleged fraudulent conspiracy entered into between the Matzgers and Benson to prevent the plaintiff White from enforcing his contract, they were misled to their injury in extending credit to Benson. The contract entered into between Benson and the Matzgers was as follows:
“Seattle, March 30, 1906.
“For value received I hereby agree to procure from Jennie McCalmont all the right, title and interest which she this day takes from Joseph Matzger and wife; and I further agree to convey the same to Joseph Matzger and wife, on demand, in the following manner, to wit: Said conveyance to Matzger and wife shall be subject to payment in cash of my charge of •one half of all said land shall be worth over and above ten thousand dollars. If I can sell same for more than the Matzgers are willing to allow as the market price, I am to have the right to pay in cash, instead of making said conveyance. This *351agreement to be returned to me at the time of settlement, and to be void if made public in any manner in the meantime, by the Matzgcrs, or either of them. E. D. Benson.”
Thereafter, as we have before indicated, Benson procured a deed to the premises from Jennie McCalmont.
The testimony in this case is not voluminous, and the whole question is whether, by reason of the fraudulent action of the Matzgers, they placed Benson in such a position that he eould impose upon the bankers to their injury. Upon testifying that he had not received any consideration for the deed to Jennie McCalmont, the question was asked Matzger on cross-examination: “You executed that deed under the instructions of Benson, as a means of avoiding this contract?” The answer was: ■
“I went up to Benson, and Mr. — the agent who sold the property to Mr. White, came up to me and told me that he has the right to sell the property, and I says to the agent, says: ‘If I can buy back the property I will pay White the $5,000,’ and I went up to Mr. Benson in explaining that I want to pay to Mr. White the $5,000 as Mr. Knight has the right to sell the property. Mr. Benson told me that if Mr. White would not take the $5,000 back from me, as he had agreed to take from Mr. Craig, and Mr. Knight has got a right to sell it, he says, I would not have a right to deliver the property. I do not know what he mean. He is a good lawyer. He says: ‘I know the law, that you get that property back, if you do just as I tell you. You have to have all confidence in me, and I will do what is right. I was a judge and I have the best reference.5 55
He also testified that he did not know the reason why Benson wanted the deed, saying, “In truth, I did not know then what the deed means;” but that Benson assured him that he was under no legal obligation to convey the property to White; that he could tender White the $5,000 which he was willing to advance to get the property back, and that if White would not take it, they could beat him by law, and that he could not be compelled to deliver the property; that he relied *352implicitly upon Benson’s advice in the matter, and was simply seeking to obtain his legal rights. The cross-examination, it seems to us, did not place any different phase upon the testimony of the witness Matzger.
But even if there had been a fraudulent attempt on the part of Matzger to avoid fulfilling the contract which he had entered into with White, it seems to us that the testimony absolutely fails to show that the money loaned to Benson was loaned by either of the banks on the security of the deed to this lot. In the case of Dexter Horton & Co., it will be observed that all of the money, excepting $149.05, had already been loaned to Benson; and Mr. Latimer, who was the manager of the bank and the only witness testifying in its behalf, stated that he did not examine the title to the land. When asked if he had asked for an abstract of title at the time he took the deed, he said:
“I did not, Judge, for the reason that Judge Benson came in to see me in reference to these two notes which were then already due, and expressed a desire to get a little more money, and told me that he had just gone through with a careful examination of this property, and showed me this conveyance which had not yet been recorded, and, knowing the judge as I had for so long, I accepted the title. I was advancing without requiring an abstract.”
He testified that Judge Benson had. been a patron of the bank fox ten or twelve years, and that he had confidence in him not only with relation to the title to the land, but of its value and future; that the increased amount was small, and that he was getting the additional names of the wife and Mr. Prouty, whom he said he considered fairly good, as an indorser on the value of this property, and for that reason, said the witness, he accepted Mr. Benson’s statements. He testified that he would not have loaned him $3,000 as a primary loan on that day without having the title examined and an abstract furnished; “but,” said the witness, “he offered me Mr. Prouty’s and his wife’s signature, in addition; and at that same time he *353explained to me a sale which he had pending of his residence, with which he expected to pay all of his indebtedness at an early date.”
Question: “Would you have loaned .that amount of money as a new loan taking that security without an examination of the title?” Answer: “To Judge Benson alone?” Q. “Yes.” A. “Oh, I don’t think I would have made a new loan to Judge Benson alone without taking an abstract and examining the title, but the circumstances under which this came up, I did feel justified in accepting his statement of the title.” Q. “Because he owed you the money—he already owed $2,800, and you had Prouty’s endorsement already for $2,500?” A. “$2,500. But I did not have Mrs. Benson’s name on either of those former notes.”
And mgch more to the same effect.
So that it plainly appears from the testimony of the witness Latimer that this small advance of $149.05 was not made on the strength of the deed which Benson exhibited, but- by reason of the fact that better security was obtained for the principal amount of the indebtedness which already .existed. The same thing is true of the claim of the First National Bank. In fact, the loan was made by the First National Bank prior to any knowledge it had that the deed had been given to Dexter Horton & Company, Bankers, the latter bank having notified the First National Bank, on the day after it received this deed, that it had been informed by Benson that he wished the deed to act as security for the $3,000 which he owed to the First National Bank, as well as for security for the amount he owed to Dexter Horton & Company.
In addition to this, it seems that the loan was made or increased by the First National Bank by reason of representations that Benson had made to it that he was going to sell his residence property and some other property that he had, and that he would pay it when the sale was made, offering at the same time to sell to the president of the First National Bank his residence property. Before the banks could claim against *354Matzger, it must be shown not only that Matzger had attempted to defraud, but that the action of the bank in loaning the money was caused by the fraudulent action of Matzger in the execution of this, deed to McCalmont. The fact that Mr. Latimer never inquired into the value of this property, or its legal status, so far as the title was concerned, and that if he had made an examination of the record in the slightest degree, the true state of the facts would have been developed, shows that he was relying upon his faith in the statements, of Benson and upon the improved position in which the bank’s original claim was placed by reason of the additional security. Certainly, if sharp, shrewd business men, as bankers must of necessity be, conducting a business where security is the very life of the business, could rely, as they stated they did, upon the statements and standing of Judge Benson, this old, illiterate foreign tailor—and the testimony shows that he could neither read nor write English—unaccustomed to intricate business transactions, might reasonably be excused for relying upon statements made to him by an attorney to whom he had been recommended and who had been honored in the community by an elevation to the position of judge. The testimony of Matzger to the effect that the explanation which .Benson made to him for the necessity of the-deed to Mrs. Mc-Calmont was that the deed was .for Benson’s protection so that he might be secure in his fee, seems to us to be reasonable.
Under all the circumstances of the case and the testimony introduced, we are satisfied that the findings of the court were correct, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Hadlet, C. J., Fullerton, Budkin, Mount, and Crow, JJ., concur.