137 P. 911 | Cal. | 1913
The defendant appeals from the judgment. The appeal was taken within sixty days after the judgment was entered. The evidence taken at the trial is presented in a bill of exceptions.
The complaint sets forth a cause of action to quiet plaintiff's title to forty-six blocks of land in Bates's Addition to the city of San Diego. Lyons answered averring that he was the owner in fee of an undivided one-half of the land described in the complaint. The finding was that the plaintiff was the owner in fee of the land and that Lyons had no right, title, or interest therein. It is claimed that this finding is contrary to the law and the evidence.
Bates's Addition was a subdivision of a tract of one hundred and sixty acres of land known as pueblo lot numbered 1786 on the map of the pueblo lands of the city of San Diego. On the first day of December, 1875, Henry B. Bates and the defendant Lyons were the owners in fee of pueblo lot 1786, each having an undivided one-half thereof. On December 9, 1875, Lyons signed, acknowledged, and delivered to Bates a deed purporting to convey to Bates an undivided one-half of said pueblo lot. This deed was duly recorded on the same day. The consideration expressed therein was one dollar. Thereafter Bates subdivided the pueblo lot into blocks, among which are those here in controversy. By a series of mesne conveyances the plaintiff has succeeded to all the title and interest of Bates in said blocks.
Lyons, at the time he made the deed to Bates of his undivided half interest in the pueblo lot, was a minor only a little over fourteen years of age. He then resided in San Diego and has ever since resided there. After his majority he went into the grocery business and has ever since been engaged in that business. On July 25, 1889, he filed in the *559
superior court of San Diego County his petition and schedules asking to be adjudged an insolvent debtor, under the insolvent act of 1880 (Stats. 1880, p. 82). He declared therein that he had no real property of any character. He never, at any time, disaffirmed or offered or attempted to disaffirm or repudiate the conveyance to Bates, except so far as he may be deemed to have done so by the filing of his answer herein on September 15, 1910. It thus appears that the title of the plaintiff as the successor of Bates, depends upon the question, whether or not, under the law, Lyons was required to disaffirm his deed within a reasonable time after becoming of age, in order to render it ineffectual and avoid the title of the plaintiff. It is, of course, conceded that twenty-eight years after minority would not be a reasonable time. This question depends upon the meaning and effect of sections
"33. A minor cannot give a delegation of power, nor, under the age of eighteen, make a contract relating to real property, or any interest therein, or relating to any personal property not in his immediate possession or control.
"34. A minor may make any other contract than as above specified, in the same manner as an adult, subject only to his power of disaffirmance under the provisions of this title, and subject to the provisions of the titles on marriage, and on master and servant.
"35. In all cases other than those specified in sections thirty-six and thirty-seven, the contract of a minor, if made whilst he is under the age of eighteen, may be disaffirmed by the minor himself, either before his majority or within a reasonable time afterwards; or, in case of his death within that period, by his heirs or personal representatives; and if the contract be made by the minor whilst he is over the age of eighteen, it may be disaffirmed in like manner upon restoring the consideration to the party from whom it was received, or paying its equivalent."
These sections, as above stated, are the sections as amended in 1874. Section
The plaintiff made no attempt to show title by adverse possession, but claimed solely by virtue of the deed to Bates in 1875.
It does not appear what was the result of the petition in insolvency filed by Lyons in 1889. No part of the record was introduced other than the petition and accompanying schedules. Whether it is still pending, or ended in the discharge of Lyons from his debts, or was dismissed without any adjudication, we cannot determine. For this reason we cannot apply the doctrine ofRued v. Cooper,
As this deed was absolutely void, the doctrine of ratification has no application. The effect of a ratification is to prevent the party from afterward disaffirming the contract This, of course, necessarily implies that but for the disaffirmance the contract would be binding. Where the contract is not binding in any event, but is utterly void from the beginning, no ratification can make it valid. There must be some act which is the equivalent of the execution of a new contract, or something which operates as an estoppel. (See *562
the discussion of Mr. Freeman on this subject in the monographic note above mentioned, 18 Am. St. Rep. at page 699; Martin v.Zellerbach,
The deed being wholly void, it cannot of its own force operate as an estoppel. Nor can the fact that it was duly recorded create an estoppel. An estoppel would not validate the void deed. (Colby
v. Title etc. Co.,
The judgment is reversed for a new trial.
Angellotti, J., and Sloss, J., concurred. *563