279 P. 679 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
Plaintiff sued to quiet title to real property situated in Alameda County and to require the defendant Bettencourt to execute a deed of conveyance in accordance with an oral agreement so to do. The trial court found for the plaintiff and entered judgment as prayed in the amended complaint. The defendants appeal on typewritten transcripts.
In the month of May, 1911, the plaintiff became engaged to Adeline Bettencourt, the daughter of the defendant Manuel. In consideration for the promise to marry the daughter, to build a home upon the lands described, and to live upon and improve the same, the defendant Manuel promised to convey said lands to the plaintiff. A tract of land, .266 acres in extent, and of about $250 in value, was measured off and marked by this defendant by a substantial fence and the plaintiff erected on the premises a home at a cost of $3,000 and expended $125 in other improvements. Thereafter the plaintiff and Adeline were married (January 31, 1912) and continued in such relation until November 30, 1927, when a final decree of divorce was entered. The other defendants, Harold and Philip Faria, are the issue of this marriage. The plaintiff and his wife moved into the home constructed by him and they continued to occupy the premises for about four years. The place was then rented by the plaintiff, who received the rents and paid all taxes and charges thereon. *51
The trial court found that since the month of May, 1911, and until the trial of the action, the plaintiff had been in the continuous, visible, notorious and exclusive possession of the premises, that the rental value of the land, exclusive of the improvements made by the plaintiff, did not exceed $10 a year, and that the improvements made by the plaintiff far exceeded the value of the bare land. The evidence is without substantial conflict, except that, on the part of the defendants, testimony was received to show that the promise of the defendant Manuel was to convey the land to the plaintiff's family rather than to the plaintiff alone, and the defendant Adeline testified that she received the rents from the premises after the family had moved, and that she paid the taxes. Evidence was also tendered of a deed executed by the defendant Manuel in 1915 conveying a life estate to Adeline with remainder to the heirs of the plaintiff and Adeline.
On this appeal the appellants have not attacked the findings as not supported by the evidence, but they attack the evidence as not being sufficiently clear and convincing to establish a trust. If this were an action for that purpose the cases cited by appellants would be in point, but this is an action to quiet title to one in possession and the deed of conveyance is demanded merely as incidental relief in order that the legal title may rest with the equitable title.
[1, 2] The appellants argue that respondent is barred by his laches. This defense was not raised in the trial court but it is presented for the first time on this appeal. Laches is a defense which must be pleaded and proved unless it appears on the face of the complaint (Victor Oil Co. v. Drum,
[3] It is argued that respondent is barred by various statutes of limitation. But the respondent was found to have been in possession during the entire period under a claim of title and, as to him, no statute of limitation would *52
run to divest him of title or possession. [4] As to the wife, she could not obtain title by adverse possession during coverture (Madden v. Hall,
Respondent's case is planted upon the rule of Peixouto v.Peixouto,
The judgment is affirmed.
Koford, P.J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on August 16, 1929, and a petition 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 September 12, 1929.
All the Justices present concurred. *53