139 Cal. App. 480 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1934
It appears that the plaintiff brought an action against each of several defendants for the condemnation of their several interests in certain real property, and that in said action Julien Josephson and Vera Josephson intervened for the asserted reason that preceding the date of the commencement thereof the defendants Henry AVest Brown and Eunice Eilene Brown had purchased from the interveners the particular property then owned by the said defendants and affected' by said proceedings, and as a part of the agreement between the defendants and the interveners had executed and delivered to them an instrument in writing, of which the following is a copy:
“This is to advise you that we herewith waive any and all claims, right, title and interest in and to the proceeds accruing from condemnation proceedings against thr Second Street property more particularly Known as Lot 2 of the Allison Barlow Tract at 6/150 of Maps that we may have had or might have in the future against the above described property which we are acquiring in the above numbered escrow at the Citizens Trust & Savings Bank, 736 S. Hill Street, Los Angeles, California.”
In substance, it was alleged by the interveners that the effect of such instrument was that the said defendants did waive in favor of the interveners “all claims, right, title ami interest in and to the proceeds accruing from condemnation proceedings” which the defendants “may have had or might have in the future against the above described
Appellants first contend that because no finding was made by the trial court either on the issue as to whether the purported assignment by appellants to the interveners actually constituted an assignment, or upon the issue of whether the interveners’ assumed right in the premises was barred by the statute of limitations, — the judgment should be reversed. In that connection, an inspection of the record discloses the fact that, following the finding of the value of the property taken, the trial court found that:
“Total compensation proper to be paid to the defendants, Julien Josephson and Vera Josephson, as per assignment to said defendants from Henry West Brown and Eunice Eilene Brown, owners of said parcel of land, $4,000.00.
“Total compensation proper to be paid to the defendants, Henry West Brown and Eunice Eilene Brown, as the owners of said parcel of land, none.”
It would seem apparent that a finding as to whether the particular instrument pleaded by the interveners, together with other pertinent instruments and evidence, constituted an assignment, would have been but a conclusion of law, and consequently, dependent upon the particular instrument alone, properly should not be included within the findings of fact; likewise, with reference to the statute of limitations. If the statute was operative against the claim of the interveners, it became so solely by reason of all the facts which dealt with the so-called assignment by defendants to the interveners. In addition thereto, it may be noted that, in so many words, the interveners did not plead an assignment, but that they merely pleaded the instrument in haec verba and in effect alleged that by reason of the provisions of such instrument the interveners became entitled “to any and all damages awarded as compensation for the taking of the property ...”
Although it may appear that by no express finding did the trial court either declare that the instruments by which the said defendants purportedly transferred their rights in and to the award constituted an assignment
But it is also urged by appellants that the purported assignment was insufficient to result in a transfer of their rights in the award. With respect to such claim on the part of appellants, it appears that it was at a time when a former condemnation proceeding that affected the property of the interveners Josephson was pending, the interveners sold said property to the defendants Brown. As a “part of the deal”, the purchasers executed the instrument which hereinbefore has been set forth. In addition thereto, it appears that the sale of the property to defendants was handled through an escrow, and that the escrow instructions on the part of the defendants contained the following provision:
“I will hand you a waiver covering the credit accruing’ from the condemnation proceedings which you will deliver to the vendor or W. W. F. Cavanaugh or his nominee. (In pencil — Josephson—out.)”
Furthermore, an additional instruction in said escrow was given by defendant W. H. Brown as follows:
“Supplementing my present instructions in the above numbered escrow I hereby waive all rights, title and interest in and to that certain credit or award that will be made to Lot 2 of the Allison Barlow Tract, as per map Book 6, page 150, Records of Los Angeles County, in connection with the widening proceedings of Second Street.”
However, as a basis for appellants’ contention, it further appears that the condemnation proceeding that was pending at the time when the interveners sold their property to the defendants was thereafter abandoned, and that the instant condemnation proceeding was not commenced until about four years following the date of the abandonment of the first condemnation proceeding. But it will be noted that by the language of the purported assignment the defendants waived “all claims, right, title and interest . . . accruing
The judgment is affirmed.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on July 26, 1934, and an application by appellants to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on August 30, 1934.