153 P. 708 | Cal. | 1915
Plaintiff sued to quiet title to the following described real property situate in the city of Sacramento: "The South fifty (50) feet of the West fifty-seven (57) feet of lot number Ten (10) in the Block bounded by C and D and Twelfth and Thirteenth streets of said City." He claimed under a deed from his mother, Margaret Doscher (defendant's testate), bearing date October 28, 1902. The answer denied plaintiff's interest under any deed or through any other instrument save the will of his mother, whereby he was devised a certain interest in remainder, subject to an estate for years. The answer also pleaded the bar of the statute of limitations (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 318). The court found that plaintiff had no interest in the land except that given to him by the will, and the plea of the bar of the statute was also sustained. From the judgment entered in accordance with said findings and from the order denying his motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
The first attack of appellant is upon the court's conclusion that there had been no delivery of the deed under which he claims. That the deed was prepared at about the time indicated by the date is not questioned. The plaintiff testified that in November, 1902, his mother sent him to Mr. Dunn's office to get some papers. He took the documents to her. They were contained in an unsealed envelope. Mrs. Doscher took the deed from the envelope and said. "Take this paper; examine it; look it over." After reading it Mr. Donahue handed it back to his mother, who thereupon placed the deed again in the envelope, sealed it and passed it to plaintiff, saying: "You take this from my hand, they are your deed to the place we are living in and the girls' deeds to the other place. You take them and place them in the box. So you can say they were delivered. You received them from me." He deposited the package in a tin box. She locked the box and put it away in a drawer of her bureau. She then said: "You will always find the key under my pillow. If anyone gets them before you do, you get the box, break it open, get the deeds, run down and place them on record right away." In response to Mr. Donahue's inquiry why she desired him to put the papers in the box she said: "You can say you were the last one to receive them from me." The mother lived on the property and for some years after he first saw the deed Mr. Donahue lived there also, but after his marriage he moved *390 to another part of the city. The ground floor of the building which was located upon the land consisted of a grocery store, a warehouse and a saloon. The second floor was occupied as a dwelling. About a year and a half after the first conversation between plaintiff and his mother she said to him: "Joe, if you ever take the deeds and place them on record before I die I will disown you. I want the residue off of the estate as long as I live." He explained that she always spoke of rent as "residue." Afterward, when he had been superintending some repairs which were being made to the roof, he reported to her that the work was satisfactory. She replied: "Well you are doing it for yourself, not for me." Plaintiff testified that he furnished the money to pay for these repairs. He also paid for some woodwork which was done in connection with the saloon. Plaintiff also testified that upon one occasion his mother had said that she could change the girls' deeds any time but that she could not change his, because she had already given the property to him. Mr. Donahue also stated that he never had possession of the box in which the deed was kept. There was other evidence, but we have sufficiently indicated the general tenor of Mr. Donahue's testimony on the matter of delivery.
The evidence was sufficient to justify the court's deductions and to support the finding of nondelivery. The deed was found in the possession of the grantor. This fact supports a presumption that it was never delivered. (13 Cyc. 733; Devlin on Deeds, sec. 263a.) It is a fundamental rule that whatever method of delivery is adopted, there must be a plain showing that the grantor by acts or words, or both, intended to divest himself (or herself) of title. (Walls v. Ritter,
Appellant insists that the court erred in admitting evidence regarding certain conversations, held subsequently to November, 1902, in which Mrs. Doscher was represented as saying that she would not give her property to her children during her life. The recent case of Williams v. Kidd,
Appellant asserts that several errors were committed by the court in the trial of the question of defendant's adverse possession, but we will forego discussion of these matters because the finding, supported as it is by competent evidence, that there never was a delivery of the deed by Mrs. Doscher to her son Joseph L. Donahue, is conclusive of the whole matter. That she owned and possessed the land in controversy up to October 28, 1902, is alleged by plaintiff and admitted by defendant. If the deed to the property was never delivered, the title remained in her until her death. The findings, conclusion, and judgment on this branch of the case relieve us of the necessity of making further examination of the second ground of defense, which was based upon defendant's claim of title by adverse possession.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.