30 Cal. 208 | Cal. | 1866
It appears from the findings, which substantially agree with the allegations of the complaint, that the defendant Bunch, wishing to exchange fifty shares of mining stock which he held in the Humboldt Tunnelling Company for certain real estate which was the separate property of the plaintiff, deposited the stock with Norton, one of the defendants, and the plaintiff and her husband, William Fitch, executed to Bunch a deed of the real estate, and deposited it with Norton, and the parties then agreed that Fitch and Bunch should visit the works of the company in the then Territory of Nevada, and that if William Fitch should then desire to exchange the lands for the stock, he should give Bunch an order on Norton for the deed, and Bunch should give him an order on Norton
Bunch alone answered the complaint, and judgment having been rendered ordering the deed to be cancelled, and the motion of Bunch for a new trial having been denied, he appeals from the judgment and the order.
A denial in an answer.
The defendant insists that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the finding that the lands were the separate property of the plaintiff. There are two sufficient answers to this point. First—The defendant has not denied the allegation of the complaint, that the plaintiff “ is seized and possessed and is the owner, in her right, as her separate property,” of the lands, for the denial in the conjunctive form adopted by the defendant, “ that said plaintiff is seized and possessed, and is the owner in her own right, as her separate property, of the land,” etc., has so frequently been held not to amount to a denial of the allegation to which it professes to respond, that it would be a waste of time to cite authorities. Second—The defendant has failed to state, as one of the grounds of his motion for a new trial, the insufficiency of the evidence to justify this finding of fact.
An escrow.
The act of the plaintiff, in placing the deed in the hands of Norton, was not a delivery of the deed as an escrow. The delivery of a deed may be absolute, that is, to the grantee himself, or to a third person for him; or it may be condi
The deed cannot be regarded as an escrow, for another rea
A still further reason is, that it cannot be properly said that\ the deed was delivered to Norton in the sense in which that I term is used in defining an escrow; for a deed which is depos- |- ited with a third person, to be held subject to the order of the !! depositor, cannot be said to be delivered, because it is deemed in law to be under the control of the depositor.
In James v. Vanderheyden, 1 Paige, 385, a deed and a bond mortgage were deposited by the makers of the instruments with a third person, to be held by him during the joint pleasure of the parties, and it was a question in the case whether the instruments, which were described as escrows in the transaction with the third person, were in fact escrows. The Chancellor held that they were not escrows, for it was evident from the written memorandum, made at the time the papers were deposited, that the parties intended that the papers should not operate as absolute deeds, without some further agreement, and that they were left with the third person as a mere depositary, without any authority to deliver them until the further consent of both parties.
Delivery of a deed essential to pass title.
In this case, Norton was the mere depositary, holding the deed of the plaintiff, until such time as she, through her agent, William Fitch, should assent to the proposed contract. He ! possessed no power in respect to the deed, except as the agent{ of the plaintiff, and as her agent, he was of course subject to - her control. She had power to revoke his authority or to ,'i direct him to make such a disposition of the deed as she might/
Such was the position she occupied at that time, and there is nothing stated in the complaint showing that her rights in the property, or control of the deed, were in danger of being impaired or injuriously affected. It is not charged that Norton intended or threatened to pass the deed over to Bunch, or that he did or would disregard or disobey her instructions.
The order, which, it is alleged in the complaint, Bunch will persuade Wm. Fitch to give him, and which the Court finds was given after the commencement of the action, is unavailing ■to Bunch, even if Norton should be guilty of delivering the deed contrary to the plaintiff’s directions, for the title will not pass unless the deed is delivered by the plaintiff, or some one duly authorized by her.
No question arises in this case as to what remedy, if any, Bunch is entitled to; but we hold that the plaintiff cannot demand a decree that the deed be given up to her to be can-celled, which is in the hands of her agent, who, for aught that appears, is willing to return it to her at her request.
Judgment reversed, with directions to the Court below to dismiss the suit. /