197 P. 60 | Cal. | 1921
This is an action to quiet title to certain real property. The plaintiff is admittedly the owner of an undivided one-half interest. The controversy is over the remaining *437 one-half. The plaintiff had judgment and the defendant appeals.
The property was originally conveyed to and held by the plaintiff and the defendant's grandfather as joint tenants. While so held the defendant's grandfather signed and acknowledged a deed purporting to convey to the defendant a one-half interest in the property and handed it to his son, the defendant's father, with instructions to keep it until his, the grandfather's, death and then deliver it to the defendant. The father kept the deed in accordance with his instructions and upon the grandfather's death, a year and a half later, had it recorded and gave it to the defendant. The defendant in the meantime was wholly unaware of the making of the deed by his grandfather, not learning of it until the day of his grandfather's funeral. Upon the foregoing facts the plaintiff claims the whole property by the right of survivorship incident to the joint tenancy, and the defendant claims that the deed of the grandfather operated in his lifetime to sever the joint tenancy and change it into a tenancy in common, so that no right of survivorship existed, and the defendant is entitled to an undivided one-half interest as the successor of his grandfather.
Question is made as to whether there was any effective delivery of the deed by the grandfather at all. The trial court found that there was none, but this finding is attacked as not sustained by the evidence. The question, of course, is one as to the intent of the grantor. If he intended, when he handed the deed, to his son, that it should operate as an immediately effective conveyance, then, omitting the circumstances that the grantee was unaware of the deed, there was a final delivery, and the effect of the deed was to vest immediately in the grantee a future interest in remainder subject to a life estate in the grantor. (Bury v. Young,
[1] It is the law that a joint tenancy may be severed and ended by a conveyance by one of the tenants of his share. (Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, sec. 29.) The conveyance will have this effect even though it be but a conveyance of a remainder after the death of the cotenant making the conveyance. (Clerk v. Clerk, 2 Vern. 323, [23 Eng. Reprint, 809].) [2] On the other hand, the severance or attempted severance must take place before the death of such cotenant and before the other, as a consequence, has become the owner of the whole by virtue of his right of survivorship. The question in the case stated, therefore, reduces itself into one as to when the deed to the defendant from his grandfather took effect: Was it before or after the latter's death?
The answer to this depends entirely upon the effect properly to be given to the circumstance that the defendant was wholly unaware of the deed until after his grandfather's death. [3] Before the deed could finally take effect, there had to be an acceptance of it, or of the gift made by it, by the grantee. (Civ. Code, sec.
[4] We perceive no reason why this rule does not apply to the present case. The deed to the defendant could not be finally effective until he assented to it. He did not and could not assent to it until he knew of it, which was after the grantor's death. In the meantime, and because of that death, the plaintiff's right to the whole property had accrued to her as the surviving joint tenant. If it be the rule that a subsequent assent to a deed by the grantee will not operate retroactively and by relation to give effect to the deed as of the date when the grantor parted with it, when such operation would destroy rights which have accrued to third persons in the meantime, it would seem plain that the defendant's consent in this case cannot be given effect by relation to destroy the right which had accrued to the plaintiff in the meantime. If anything, the present case is somewhat stronger for the application of this rule than a case where the intervening right is that of a judgment or attachment lien. For most purposes the holder of an attachment or judgment lien is considered as to third persons as standing in the shoes of the debtor, so that any right which is good against him is good against the holder of the lien. *440 But here the plaintiff does not for any purpose stand in the shoes of the defendant's grantor. Her right was wholly independent of him. It was, to be sure, a right which he had the power to destroy by a severance of the joint tenancy upon which they held the property, but, unless this power was exercised in his lifetime, the right became complete as an incident of their tenancy. [5] It is the old rule, in other words, that the joint tenant who survives does not take the moiety of the other from him or as his successor, but by right under the devise or conveyance by which the joint tenancy was created in the first instance. (Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, sec. 28.) It would seem that if the consent of the grantee cannot operate retroactively to destroy an intervening right of one claiming through his grantor and yet not abona fide purchaser for value, as the holder of an attachment or judgment lien is not, it assuredly cannot operate retroactively to destroy an intervening right of one who does not claim through his grantor at all. This conclusion is decisive of the case.
Judgment affirmed.
Shaw, J., Wilbur, J., Sloane, J., Lawlor, J., Lennon, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.