174 P. 67 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1918
This action was brought by plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of his deceased wife, to set aside a deed made by her in her lifetime to defendants. *490
The complaint is in two counts. It is alleged in the first that the deed was procured by the undue influence of defendants, that there was no consideration therefor, and that it lacked delivery. The second count alleged that the grantor at the time of the execution of the deed was of unsound mind, and that there was no consideration and no delivery. The answer denied these allegations, and set forth a cross-complaint praying that defendants' title to the land be quieted against plaintiff.
The case was tried with an advisory jury. Special issues were submitted upon the questions of undue influence, unsoundness of mind, and delivery. The jury found against the defendants on all of these issues. The trial court, however, adopted only the finding that the deed in question had never been delivered. It further found that no consideration was paid by defendants, or any of them, for the property, and that its value was in excess of the sum of twenty thousand dollars, and that the deed made by the grantor was null and void. Judgment was thereupon entered canceling said deed and quieting the title of plaintiff and the estate of decedent to the property. The appeal is from such judgment.
The question here presented is whether or not the evidence sustains the findings of the trial court.
Appellants claim on the question of delivery that the evidence is clear, uncontradicted, and unequivocal, and that, therefore, this question has resolved itself into one of law; and accordingly they contend that the conclusions of law and the judgment thereon are "against law." A discussion of the evidence, therefore, becomes necessary.
From the facts surrounding the execution of the deed in question it appears that in the latter part of November, 1912, Martha L. Heitman was living on her farm, near Byron, in Contra Costa County, the property which is the subject matter of this litigation. She was a woman advanced in life, being over eighty years of age. She had, in 1907, married a man much younger than herself, with whom she lived intermittently and who was her third husband. In November, 1912, she left her farm and went to the home of Henry Bruns, one of the defendants herein, and she thereafter lived with the Bruns family until her death, which occurred on December 30, 1913, some thirteen months after her advent into this household. During her stay Mrs. Bruns, aided by her daughters, *491 two of the defendants herein, performed some service for Mrs. Heitman, contributing to her comfort. The Bruns family were neighbors and in no manner related to Mrs. Heitman. Within a week after her arrival, according to the testimony of Mrs. Bruns, Mrs. Heitman expressed a desire to convey her property to the defendants herein. Thereupon, Henry Bruns, the father, and William Bruns, his son, went to Brentwood, a town close by, to get Robert Wallace, a justice of the peace and notary, to make a deed of Mrs. Heitman's property. Mr. Wallace did not come as soon as he was sent for, and thereafter, on December 4, 1912, William Bruns, one of the grantees named in the deed, again went after and brought him and one Shafer to the Bruns home. On that day Mr. Wallace drew two deeds, one conveying from Mrs. Heitman to the Bruns children, all of whom were adults, her real property in Contra Costa County, valued at more than twenty thousand dollars, which is the deed in controversy; and the other purporting to convey to the same persons her real property in Alameda County, consisting of 160 acres. After these deeds were executed Mrs. Heitman told Mr. Wallace to keep them until she called for them or until she died, and in that event to hand them to Bruns, Sr. Wallace at this time stated to Mrs. Heitman that whenever she wanted the deeds back she could get them. Wallace then took these deeds away with him and continued to hold them until after the death of Mrs. Heitman, when, according to her instructions, he gave them to Bruns, who thereupon requested Wallace to record them, which he did.
It is conceded, as indeed it must be, that up to the time Wallace took the deeds away there was no delivery of them, for the grantor did not then relinquish all control over them, but, on the contrary, she specifically reserved the right to recall them at any time. Appellants, however, seek to show a delivery some two or three months thereafter, based on the testimony of Henry Bruns, Sr., and his son, William, to the effect that Mrs. Heitman requested that the deeds be recorded. It is in evidence that Bruns, Sr., attempted about this time to have Wallace record them, but this he refused to do as being contrary to his instructions. No further attempt was made during Mrs. Heitman's lifetime to have the deeds recorded. This testimony of Bruns and his son was uncontradicted; and it is by reason of this fact that the claim is made that under *492 these circumstances the question of delivery is one of law and not of fact.
While it is true that a judge or jury have no right to arbitrarily reject testimony, this may be done when it does not produce conviction. By section 2061, subdivision 2, of the Code of Civil Procedure, jurors are to be instructed that they are not to decide in conformity with the declarations of any number of witnesses which do not produce conviction in their minds, as against a presumption or other evidence satisfying their minds. This rule applies alike to judge and jury.
It has been said that no weaker kind of testimony can be produced than the testimony of a person or persons as to a conversation between themselves and a deceased person. (Mattingly v. Pennie,
Here, too, the alleged oral direction of Mrs. Heitman to have the deeds recorded rests solely upon the evidence of Bruns and his son, who are interested parties.
A witness may be contradicted by the facts he states as completely as by direct adverse testimony. (Bellus v. Peters,
The circumstances connected with the transaction were certainly such as justified the court in rejecting and disregarding the testimony of Bruns and his son. After the alleged instructions Mrs. Heitman lived some nine months, and no attempt was made by her thereafter to have these instructions carried out. In addition thereto there is no evidence that any of the grantees named in the deed ever exercised any right whatever over this land, or ever claimed to own it, or had it assessed to them, or did anything whatever which would indicate any claim of title in them. On the contrary, the testimony shows that there was no intention on the part of Mrs. Heitman to vest title in the grantees until after her death. A reading of the testimony of Bruns, Sr., and especially that portion relating to the claim that he attempted to collect rents from the property, does not carry conviction.
The claim that the transfer was made in consideration of an oral agreement by the grantees to support the grantor during her life in no manner strengthens the case of appellants. It *493 is in evidence that shortly after the execution of the deeds Mrs. Heitman transferred to these same grantees all of her stock, farming implements, and other personal property in consideration for this very support.
From all the circumstances and from a consideration of the entire evidence in the case it is difficult to imagine how the jury or the court could have reached a different conclusion than they did. Within two weeks after the arrival of this aged and infirm woman in their midst — a woman found by the advisory verdict of the jury to be of unsound mind, upon evidence that would have supported a finding based thereon — the Bruns family dispossessed her of all her real and personal property amounting to a very substantial sum, and they seek to retain the same upon an alleged oral contract to provide and care for her, where the evidence shows that no such contract was ever entered into.
The findings of the trial court that the deed in question had never been delivered; that there was no consideration for the same, and that it was null and void; that Mrs. Heitman was the owner and in the possession of the lands in question at the time of her death, were all questions of fact, and the findings thereon find full and complete support in the evidence.
Judgment affirmed.
Beasly, J., pro tem., and Zook, J., pro tem., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on August 5, 1918.