251 P. 666 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
Action to quiet title to certain lots of land situate, lying, and being in the city of Los Angeles, county of Los Angeles. The action was originally begun against Howard T. James and Hortense James, his wife. Hortense James having died, the action was dismissed as to her.
The complaint is in the usual form of a pleading in an action to quiet title, alleges that the plaintiff is and ever since the month of August, 1922, has been the owner of the lots of land described in the complaint, alleges that the defendant claims some interest therein, and that the interest of the defendant is without right, etc. Judgment was prayed that the plaintiff's title to said premises be quieted. The answer of the defendant denies the ownership of the plaintiff, and, by way of affirmative defense, alleges ownership of one-half interest in and to the described premises. This portion of the defendant's answer, after alleging that the plaintiff and Thomas F. James were, during all the times mentioned in the pleadings, husband and wife and owners, as joint tenants, of property described in plaintiff's complaint, is in the following language:
"That on said 22nd day of August, 1922, the said Thomas F. James made his certain deed of conveyance to the plaintiff herein for the undivided one-half (1/2) interest of the said Thomas F. James in and to said real property; that said deed was placed in the hands of said plaintiff with the understanding and agreement and upon the statement made by the said plaintiff that she would immediately make and execute her will wherein and whereby her said husband was to be the sole beneficiary, should he survive her, and in the event the said husband did not survive the said plaintiff, all of the property belonging to the plaintiff at the time of her death was to be willed, by the will hereinbefore alleged, unto Arthur C. James, a two-fifth (2/5) interest and Howard T. James (this defendant) a three-fifth (3/5) interest; that by the said will the said plaintiff was to nominate and appoint the said Thomas F. James executor, should he be living, and in the event of his death before the death of the plaintiff the said Howard T. James, this defendant, was to be nominated and appointed executor. *188
"This defendant alleges that the said plaintiff did not make and execute a will in accordance with the agreement between her and the said Thomas F. James at the time of the making of the deed hereinbefore mentioned; that she never made and executed such a will; that the consideration for the deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James has wholly failed; that there is no consideration for the said deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James and that the deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James was never delivered to the said Alice T. James except upon the conditions and for the consideration in this special defense alleged and that it was not the intention of the said Thomas F. James that the said deed should be delivered to the said Alice T. James and that it was not intended by the said Thomas F. James that the title to an undivided one-half (1/2) interest in said real property should pass to the said Alice T. James except upon the fulfillment by her of the conditions hereinbefore alleged."
The answer then further alleges that said deed of Thomas F. James to Alice T. James was not recorded until some months after said month of August, 1922; that in the meantime the said Thomas F. James learned that said Alice T. James had not made any will, and thereupon made, executed, and delivered a good and sufficient bargain and sale deed for all of his interest in said premises to the defendant Howard T. James. This deed bears date of September 22, 1922, and was recorded on the same day.
At the conclusion of the trial the court made and filed its findings of facts, only one of which needs to be set forth herein:
"That the said plaintiff did not make and execute a will in accordance with the agreement between her and the said Thomas F. James at the time of the making of the deed hereinbefore mentioned; that she never made and executed such a will; that the consideration for the deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James has wholly failed; that there is no consideration for the said deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James, and that the deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James was never delivered to the said Alice T. James and that it was not the intention of the said Thomas F. James that the said deed should be delivered to the said Alice T. James, and that it was not intended by the said Thomas F. James that the title to an undivided one-half (1/2) interest in said real property should pass to the said Alice T. James except upon the fulfillment by her of the conditions hereinbefore found to have been imposed.
"That the said deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James was not recorded until some months after the said month of August, 1922, and that in the meantime, when the said Thomas F. James learned that the said Alice T. James had not made the will in accordance with her agreement made at the time of the making by the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James of the deed bearing date of the 22nd day of August, 1922, he made, executed and delivered unto the defendant, Howard T. James, a good and sufficient grant, bargain and sale deed for all of the interest that the said Thomas F. James owned *190 or had or possessed in the real property described in this action; that the said deed from the said Thomas F. James to the defendant Howard T. James, was duly recorded in the office of the county recorder (of the county of Los Angeles) of the state of California immediately after its execution and delivery, and that the said deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said defendant was recorded prior to the recordation of the deed from the said Thomas F. James to the said Alice T. James; that at the time of delivery of the deed to defendant and the recordation thereof, defendant did not have any knowledge of the deed to plaintiff dated August 22, 1922."
Conclusions of law based upon this finding were drawn in favor of the defendant and judgment entered accordingly.
The testimony upon which finding No. 4 is based, as set forth in the transcript, shows the following facts: That prior to the sixteenth day of August, 1922, the plaintiff and Thomas F. James acquired the property described in plaintiff's complaint by a deed conveying the same to them as joint tenants; that on the sixteenth day of August, 1922, the plaintiff and said Thomas F. James went to the office of Charles L. Evans, an attorney at law, and then and there a deed was executed by the said Thomas F. James, purporting to convey all of his interest in the described premises to his wife, the plaintiff Alice T. James. This deed contains, among other things, the following paragraph: "This conveyance is made, given and accepted by the parties hereto for the purpose of vesting the foregoing described real property in the grantee herein as her sole and separate property without any limits or restrictions whatsoever."
The testimony of the plaintiff to the transaction is as follows: "I received the deed on August 16th in the presence of Mr. Evans and my husband on the day the deed was handed to me. There was a conversation between Mr. Evans, my husband and myself. Mr. Evans remarked that Mr. James had told him about things at the house and had this transfer made up, transferring his interest to me. After this Mr. Evans asked me what would be my disposition of the property in case of my death. I told him I did not know what to say and asked, `What does Mr. James want?' And he remarked that he wanted it left to his boys and I said, `All right.' There was something said in this conversation *191 about my making a will, but there was no date set. I was to make a will in favor of Howard and his brother. After the deed was handed to me, Mr. Evans told me not to record the deed until I was told to or that the property was in danger of being involved. It was not said that I should not record the deed until after the will was made. That was at the time the deed was executed on August 16th, in the office of Mr. Evans. There was nothing said by any of us to the drawing of a will. I took the deed away on the 16th of August and had it recorded on the 11th day of October, 1922. I don't remember having any conversation with my husband regarding the will between August 16th and October 11, 1922. Before I went to Mr. Evans' office I had a conversation with my husband who came in — he had been sprinkling the lawn and came in from the garden and asked me if I could go over town with him and he said before Mrs. Parks that he was going to — that he was sprinkling the lawn for the last time, when he came back it would be all mine and I would have to arrange for the sprinkling after that. That was on August 16th, 1922. There was no mention of a will in that conversation. Mr. James came back with me from Mr. Evans' office. I heard him tell Mrs. Parks that he had deeded it to me and I was the sole owner of the property. Mr. James then went to the mine at Searchlight or Crescent as it was called after that. . . .
"On August 22nd or August 21st, I received a letter from Mr. James: (We here quote the only part thereof material to this case.) `You will now admit, won't you, Alice, that I have proven when it came to the hard test to be a true friend and that notwithstanding squabbles, I transferred to you all I had including personal financial standing in Los Angeles,'" etc.
The testimony of Mr. Evans, called as a witness on behalf of the defendant, concerning the transaction is, in substance, as follows: "About the middle of August, 1922, Mr. and Mrs. James came to my office. On the day or two before the 16th day of August, 1922, Mr. James talked with me about the possibility of having some difficulty at his mine, or in the mine in which he was interested. On the 16th day of August, they both came to my office, and the deed which has been introduced in evidence was drawn or had been drawn. *192 There was some conversation between Mrs. James, her husband and myself as to this deed and the reason for it. Mr. James said there was a likelihood of some difficulty at the mine. He wanted to protect his wife and his two boys. Before the deed was given to her, or all in the same conversation, he said: `Now, you are to make a will to the two boys, Arthur and Howard' and she said: `Yes.' There was some discussion as to the division of the property. She said that she would not — that this deed would not be recorded until after the will was made. She gave me at that time data for the will to be drawn for her and she said she would come down in few days and that the will should be drawn and that she would execute it, leaving all the property of which she died possessed to Howard James three-fifths and to Arthur James two-fifths. This witness then states that the deed which was given to her at that time was not to be recorded until after it had developed whether or not there would be any claims that the husband might be liable for. I asked her age at the time and her place of residence. If Mr. James, her husband, were living, he was to be the executor of the estate without bonds. She did not waive a bond in Howard's case. The deed was turned over and the conversation was all one transaction. The deed was the only instrument executed at that time. The only thing said as to when the deed should be recorded was that it should not be recorded until after it was determined whether there were any claims. That was all that was said about it. I never made a will for Mrs. James. I took her telephone number and did not call her up. The deed was given to Mrs. James in my office."
Howard T. James, the defendant, testified as follows: "I am one of the defendants in this action and Thomas F. James is my father; I have seen the document handed me before and that is my father's signature. My father gave it to me and I took it up and had it recorded on the day it was given to me, one the 22nd day of September, 1922." (Here was exhibited, identified, and admitted in evidence the deed to the defendant from Thomas F. James, purporting to convey to the defendant all the right, title, and interest of the party of the first part in and to the premises described in plaintiff's complaint.) "I knew nothing about the deed from my father to his wife at the time I took this deed." *193
Lillian Parks, a witness called on behalf of the plaintiff, was called to testify as to the conversation with Mr. James on the day of the execution of the deed by Mr. James to the plaintiff. After stating that she had had such conversation, the court sustained an objection thereto on the ground that it was not rebuttal, stating that it might have been admissible in chief as declarations against interest, but that as Mr. James did not testify, there was nothing in the testimony to be rebutted.
The finding of the trial court which we have set forth is to the effect that there was no delivery of the deed except as conditional upon the plaintiff executing a will devising and bequeathing the described property to Howard T. James and his brother, Arthur James, and, also, that there was a failure of consideration for the deed executed and delivered by Thomas F. James to Alice T. James. There is no testimony in the record nor finding by the court to the effect that Howard T. James ever paid any consideration, valuable or otherwise, for the execution and delivery to him of the instrument dated September 22, 1922, purporting to convey all the right, title, and interest of Thomas F. James to the defendant Howard T. James.
[1] The defendant in this case, basing his claim upon a deed executed and recorded subsequent to the execution and delivery of an unrecorded deed, takes upon himself the burden of showing that the deed accepted by him was received without actual knowledge of the prior unrecorded deed and, also, that he has, in fact, parted with a valuable consideration as the purchase price of the property. In Black Eagle Oil Co. v. Belcher,
[4] Though not exactly in chronological order, we will here consider the finding and alleged failure of consideration relative to the deed under which the plaintiff claims. Neither the allegations of the affirmative defense in the answer nor the findings of the court contain any mention of or intimation that the plaintiff Alice T. James was or had been guilty of any fraudulent representations or fraudulent act relative to the conveyance executed to her by her husband. The only fact appearing in the testimony in relation thereto is that no will has ever been executed by Alice T. James and that the plaintiff stated that she would execute such a will. It may also be mentioned herein that the testimony of the plaintiff is to the effect that she had not altered or changed her intentions in relation thereto up to the time of the attempted conveyance by Thomas F. James to the defendant herein. It seems clear that under such circumstances and the testimony contained in the transcript which we have set forth no case has been made out on the theory of a failure of consideration. In 9 California Jurisprudence, section 42, page 141, it is said: "A deed without fraud in *196
its inception conveys the title, and is not void on account of failure of consideration, either in whole or in part. And inasmuch as acts done subsequent to the execution of a deed cannot affect its integrity, a subsequent failure of consideration, or breach of a personal covenant not amounting to a condition, will not avoid the deed. Section
It may be here stated that the defense of failure of consideration subsequent to the execution of a deed presupposes delivery. Otherwise, there would be no conveyance and nothing upon which to predicate a failure of consideration, prerequisite to judgment of rescission.
In the case at bar there was nothing left to be done or performed with relation to the instrument of conveyance by the grantor. If anything was to be done or performed by the grantee it was to be done or performed subsequent to the time when the deed of conveyance was manually transmitted by the grantor to the possession of the grantee. No act was provided to be then and there performed. The allegation in the answer and the finding of the court are to the effect that the will was to be immediately executed, but the testimony and the actions of the parties do not support either the allegation or the findings in such particular. The deed of conveyance was delivered by the grantor to the grantee upon the simple oral promise, if promise it may be called, that she would execute the desired will, no time or date for the execution thereof being stated, which, of course, would mean within a reasonable time, provided such promise were of any force or effect whatever. [5] Where the contract or agreement on the part of the vendor is wholly executed, the mere promise and failure to perform on the part of the grantee thereafter is not sufficient ground for setting aside a deed. In Lawrence v.Gayetty,
[6] The cases referring to conditions which may furnish a basis for rescission are all based upon conditions set forth in the instrument of conveyance. In the case at bar, there was no condition expressed in the instrument and, in law, it was not delivered conditionally. There was at best only an oral promise on the part of the grantee of something to be done by her at a subsequent time. Under such circumstances section
[7] The respondent urges that the plaintiff must recover upon the strength of her own title and not upon the weakness of the title claimed by her adversary. This is true, and the cases set forth in respondent's brief clearly support the principle contended for, but they are not applicable here for the simple reason that what we have hereinbefore set forth, taken from the findings and the record in this case, clearly establishes that the findings and judgment of the trial court should have been in favor of the plaintiff. For this reason and because it is necessary to order a new trial *199
herein, we will consider two errors of the trial court upon the admission of testimony. [8] The plaintiff sought to establish aprima facie case by producing the deed executed to her by her husband, duly acknowledged, signed, etc. Upon objection of the defendant, admission of the deed was denied until testimony was given of the circumstances under which the deed was delivered and placed in possession of the appellant. Section
[9] The next objection which seems necessary to consider is that in relation to excluding testimony as to statements made by the grantor of the plaintiff just before and after the execution and delivery of the conveyance by him to her. It is well settled that all such statements which would indicate that the grantor named in the instrument had divested himself of title are admissible as against interest, although partaking of the nature of hearsay testimony. (Williams v. Kidd,
Thompson, J., pro tem., and Finch, P.J., concurred. *200