32 Cal. 493 | Cal. | 1867
Ejectment for lands in San Francisco, they being parcel of a larger tract known as the “ Harman Tract.” The appeal is from the judgment and order overruling the defendants’ motion for a new, trial. The only question raised is as to the plaintiffs’ title and right of entry.
The case shows, amongst other things, that “ Jacob Harman died actually seized and possessed of the demanded premises as community property, on the 3d day of November, 1850, leaving-him. surviving his wife Elenora -Harman, and two children, Mary Ann Harman, aged about seven years, and Jacob Harman, Jr., aged about four years.” That Harman left a will wherein he devised two thirds of his estate to his said son, and one third to his said daughter. That letters testamentary duly issued to his executors, Hayes and Corbett, on the 17th of December, 1850. That Mrs. Harman, on the 20th of November, 1850, seventeen days after her husband’s death, intermarried with one Michael Foley, and that she died intestate in the year i860, and that her said son, Jacob Harman, Jr., also died intestate during the same year, leaving neither wife nor descendants. The plaintiff, Ewald, claims the whole of the demanded premises through a
First—There is no' question that Mrs. Foley, at the time she joined with her husband in the deed to Brannan and others, was the owner of at least one half of the premises in her own right; but the plaintiff, Ewald, claims that she owned the whole in severalty by virtue of a deed executed to her by certain Commissioners as purchaser at a sale made by them in pursuance of a decree duly entered in the Court of First Instance, October 24th, 1849, divorcing Mrs. Harman from her then husband, and directing an equal division of the common property; which decree was thereafter supplemented by an order, passed March 12th, 1851, directing the decree to be executed by a sale of the property and division of the proceeds. The defendants dispute the validity of this deed, claiming that nothing passed by it to the purchaser. So far as this appeal is concerned, however, it is not necessary to determine whether Mrs. Foley, at the date of the deed of herself and husband to Brannan and others, owned the premises in severalty as against her children, as claimed by the plaintiff, or only an undivided half thereof, as claimed by the defendants; for the deed referred to was inoperative and void, inasmuch, as it was not acknowledged by Mrs. Foley in the manner prescribed by the Act defining the rights of husband and wife, passed on the 17th of April, 1850. Though the deed is void considered as a conveyance by the wife of her separate property, it is claimed that inasmuch as the deed of the Commissioners to Mrs. Foley purports to have been made upon a money consideration, the intendment must be, in the absence of all showing to the contrary, that the lot was paid for with money belonging to herself and her husband, Foley, in community; and that the lot is to be considered as the common property of Mr. and Mrs. Foley by consequence, and that the title therefore passed by the deed in
It was ordered by the supplemental decree that in case either of the parties should bid in the premises at the sale, that their receipts for the amounts due them by the decree, should be received by the Commissioners as so much money paid. It appears by the decree that Harman was adjudged to be indebted to his wife in the sum of one thousand three hundred and fifty-four dollars “ on account of his having had the benefit of the sale and use of the common property to that amount,” and the same was made a specific lien on the property. The land was bid in by Mrs. Harman at the sale at four thousand dollars. As one half of that amount belonged to her as part owner of the land sold, and as she was entitled to one thousand three hundred and fifty-four dollars more as' creditor of Harman, having a lien on the property sold, malting three thousand three hundred and fifty-four dollars in the whole, it is to be presumed that the Commissioners took “ her receipt therefor as so much money paid,” according to the direction given in the decree. To that extent, then, it is demonstrated by the record that the bid of the woman was not paid with the money belonging to herself and Foley in community, and it is therefore demonstrated that she took .at least three thousand three hundred and fifty-four four thousanths of the property in her own right. Should it be conceded, for the purposes of argument, that the balance of the purchase money (six hundred and forty-six dollars) must be intended to have been paid out of community money by Foley and wife, and that the community therefore owned six hundred and forty-six four thousanths of the land, then the deed to Brannan and others, considered as the deed of Foley, could have passed that fractional interest only to the grantees, and the residue of the title and interest held by Mrs. Foley as her separate property, being unaffected by the deed, must have passed by descent at her death to her daughter
Second—The supplemental decree in the divorce suit, under which the plaintiff claims to be the owner of the whole land sued for, was, in our judgment, null and void as against the heirs at law of Harman. By the death of Harman the suit abated for all the purposes ef further judicial action therein on the subject of partitioning the common property, and the Court had no jurisdiction to adjudge that the property should be sold and the proceeds divided without a revivor as to the heirs. No such revivor was had, and the interests of the heirs were therefore unaffected by the supplemental decree, and the transactions under it.
We have been unable to discover any evidence in the case tending to prove title in the plaintiffs or in either of them under the Van Ness Ordinance, or under the Statute of Limitations.
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered.
Mr. Justice Sanderson did not express any opinion.