DocketNumber: No. 17350
Judges: Bridges, Holcomb, MacKintosh, Mitchell, Parker
Filed Date: 1/25/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In October, 1920, one Colman was the owner of certain lots in the town of Edwall, in this state, on which there was a hotel building. On the day above mentioned, he sold to the defendants certain of
He attacks the so-called lease, contending that it' is not a lease at all, hut is a conditional contract of salé, and that if it he construed as a lease, he had no constructive notice of its terms, because it was filed with' the county auditor as a conditional sales contract-; and that, in any event, it is had as a lease because the property involved belonged to the community of Col-man and wife, and the latter did not execute the instrument. The instrument was sufficient to create a valid lease and the -relationship of landlord and tenant, and. if it had been recorded as a lease it would have given appellant constructive notice of its conditions. But
“The actual possession of the property by the appellants at the time respondent acquired the title was notice to him of whatsoever rights a prudent and reasonable inquiry would have revealed.- The actual possession of real property is notice to intending purchasers of the rights of those in possession, and the purchaser in such cases takes title subject to every right in the occupant that a reasonable inquiry would have disclosed.”
See, also, Kalinowski v. Jacobowski, 52 Wash. 359, 100 Pac. 852; Kuhl v. Lightle, 29 Wash. 137, 69 Pac. 630; Dennis v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 20 Wash. 320, 55 Pac. 210.
Nor is the appellant in position to question the legality of the lease because the conditional sales contract in which it was embodied was not executed by Mrs. Colman. There was testimony tending to show that she had adopted as her own the action of her husband in making the instrument, consequently she would be bound by it. But, in any event, by the giving of his notice and by the commencement of this action, the appellant has recognized the respondent as a ten
The conclusion to which we have come makes it unnecessary for us to dispose of respondent’s motion, to dismiss the appeal.
The judgment is affirmed.