298 P. 976 | Cal. | 1931
This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment setting aside and canceling a deed to certain real property and decreeing that plaintiff is the owner of an undivided one-half interest therein.
The plaintiff and defendant are father and daughter, respectively, and each is the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property. In a complaint containing two counts, one grounded in fraud and the other averring undue influence, the plaintiff, a man well along in years, alleges that while he was in a weak and infirm condition and suffering from shaking palsy, he was induced to transfer and convey to the defendant his undivided one-half interest in certain real property situate in the *382 county of Riverside, solely in consideration of and in reliance upon defendant's oral promises and representations that she would properly care for him in her home for the remainder of his natural life. It is then alleged that defendant entered into the oral agreement with the fraudulent intent and purpose of obtaining title to the property and without any intention of performing her promise, which she has since breached. By way of a second cause of action plaintiff avers that he executed the deed without independent advice and counsel, and while laboring under the influence of the grantee.
The trial court found the allegations of fraud and undue influence to be untrue, but that prior to the execution of the deed the parties had entered into the oral agreement alleged, the defendant's husband acting as her agent and making the representations as to caring for the plaintiff; that the agreement has been breached; that there was no consideration for plaintiff's conveyance of his interest in the property; and that there had been no valid delivery of the deed. Upon these findings the court concluded that plaintiff's deed should be canceled and a reconveyance made to him of an undivided one-half interest in the property. Judgment was entered accordingly, and defendant appeals.
At the conclusion of the trial, and prior to signing and filing its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court below permitted the plaintiff to amend his complaint to "conform to the proof", the complaint as amended alleging, among other things, nondelivery of the deed. Upon her motions in the court below to reopen the case, to strike certain testimony from the record, and for a new trial, the defendant urged, and again upon this appeal she argues, that the amendment set up a new and different cause of action, and one not within the issues made by the pleadings as originally filed, and that it was therefore error for the court below to allow the same.
There being no finding that the deed was procured either by reason of the fraud or undue influence of the defendant or her husband acting as her agent, we need not further concern ourselves with that phase of the case. Nor do we find it necessary to address ourselves at any great length to the finding that the deed running from the plaintiff to the defendant is unsupported by a consideration. [1] *383
It is settled that a deed without fraud in its inception conveys the title, and is not void for any failure of consideration, either in whole or in part. (Tillaux v. Tillaux,
Of course, the circumstances of any particular case may be such as to warrant the conclusion that what purports to be a mere personal covenant is, in fact, and was intended by the parties to be a condition subsequent upon the happening of which the grantee is to be divested of his estate. Such a case is that of Downing
v. Rademacher,
[3] The circumstances of the case at bar are not such as to take it out of the general rule. Neither the deed nor the asserted oral agreement either expressly or impliedly refers to the defendant's promise to care for the *384
plaintiff as a condition affecting the validity of the deed, and the trial court has not found that it is such a condition. True, such promise constituted the sole and only consideration for the transfer, but in this particular the situation is not unlike that where a conveyance is made solely in reliance upon the grantee's written promise to pay an agreed purchase price, or to subsequently render certain legal services, the breach of each of which promises it has been held gives rise only to an action for damages. (Lawrence v. Gayetty, supra; Hartman v. Reed,
Conditions subsequent are not favored, for they tend to destroy estates. (White v. Hendley,
This brings us to a consideration of the contention that it was error for the court below to permit the plaintiff, at the conclusion of the trial, to amend his complaint and allege nondelivery of the deed. [4] It is a fundamental principle of pleading that "a plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the cause of action set out in the complaint, and not upon some other which may be developed by the proofs". (Schirmer v. Drexler,
[5] The pleadings upon which this cause was tried raised no issue as to the delivery of the deed. On the contrary, as originally filed, the complaint contained several averments of "delivery" of the deed by plaintiff. At the commencement of the trial, counsel stipulated in open court that there had been a delivery of the deed. In this state of the record, it was only natural that both sides should refrain, as they did, from introducing any evidence having to do with the delivery of the instrument, and should confine their proof to the issues of fraud and undue influence — the issues made by the pleadings. However, while plaintiff was on the stand, and in response to a question propounded to him by the court concerning the circumstances surrounding the execution of the deed, he testified that he had signed the deed when it was presented to him by his son-in-law, and that the latter then placed it in his pocket and left. The record shows: "The Court: What was said after you signed the deed? A. Nothing at all. He just took the deed and put it in his pocket and went out to his lunch. The Court: Did you hand the deed to him? A. I signed it and he reached for it and got it and stuck it in his pocket. The Court: Did you say anything to him when he reached over and got it? A. No, and he said he would take care of me. He said `I will see that you are taken care of and have a good home.'"
This meager evidence, brought out only casually and in response to questions directed to the circumstances surrounding the execution of the instrument and not directed to any issue of delivery, which issue was not then in the case, serves as the sole and only foundation of the trial court's ruling permitting the amendment of the complaint and of its subsequent finding of nondelivery. In view of the original pleadings in the case and the stipulation at the beginning of the trial, that the deed had been delivered, it may well be said that the defendant was materially prejudiced by the very substantial amendment purporting to conform the complaint to the proofs. The record fails to disclose that defendant was given an opportunity, either upon the trial of the cause or at any subsequent time, to meet or rebut this new issue aimed at the validity of the *387
deed under which she claimed title. Defendant's motion for new trial specifying, among other things, that under the circumstances it was error to allow such an amendment after the evidence had been closed, and asserting "surprise which ordinary prudence could not have guarded against", should have been granted, in order that she might be afforded the opportunity to meet this new issue so unconsciously injected into the case by the queries of the court. As further evidencing the prejudice resulting to the defendant by the court's allowance of the amendment, the foregoing quoted evidence, which undoubtedly constituted the basis for the trial court's conclusion of nondelivery, is wholly insufficient for that purpose, for it merely shows that the grantor failed to actually hand over the deed after signing it. [6] It is well settled that actual manual tradition or change of possession of a deed is not required to give it validity (Civ. Code, sec.
While we are reluctant to reverse the judgment, it is apparent from what has already been said that we have no other alternative on the record now before us. It is *388 unnecessary that we consider any of the other contentions made by the appellant.
The judgment is reversed.
Richards, J., Shenk, J., Preston, J., and Langdon, J., concurred.