231 P. 735 | Cal. | 1924
This appeal is from a judgment in the plaintiff's favor in an action to quiet his title to certain real estate and to enjoin a sale thereof under a certain writ of execution which the plaintiff asserted to be void. Many of the facts which exist as a background to the present litigation have been set forth by this court in its decision in the case of Montgomery v. Meyersteinet al.,
The first contention made by the appellants upon this appeal is that in six specified particulars the evidence is not sufficient to support the findings of the court. An examination of these several specifications and of the argument offered in support of each of them would seem to show that they rest in the main upon the appellants' claim that by virtue of the conveyance of the legal title to the property in question made to Alfred L. Meyerstein by Otto A. Brown on July 20, 1916, and also by the conveyance of all of its right, title, and interest in said property made by the Forest Hill Realty Company on October 13, 1918, and while said Meyerstein was the holder of the equitable title thereto as trustee under the trust deed, which was given to him to secure the indebtedness of said Brown to the said Forest Hill Realty Company, a merger of the legal and equitable title occurred whereby the equitable estate existing by reason of said trust deed was extinguished; thus leaving in Meyerstein no interest or equity which could be conveyed to the plaintiff herein through a sale of said premises under the terms of said trust deed. The appellants make the further claim that subsequent to the date when according to her contention said merger occurred the said Meyerstein conveyed his entire interest in said premises by grant deed to *53
William H. Levings and wife he thus further divested himself of all of his interest in said premises, both legal and equitable, prior to the sale thereof under said trust deed to the plaintiff herein. It will thus be seen that according to the appellants' theory of this case the primary issue before the trial court was as to whether there was a merger of the equitable title held by said Meyerstein as trustee under the said deed from Brown in the legal title conveyed to him by the conveyances from said Brown and the Forest Hill Realty Company prior to the attempted sale of said property under said trust deed to the plaintiff herein. If the appellants' theory of this case is correct it brings us immediately to her second contention upon this appeal, which is that the trial court committed prejudicial error in excluding certain evidence offered by said appellants pertaining to the issue as to such merger. If the appellants' contention in this latter regard should be held to be correct it would compel a reversal of this case since the evidence which the appellants offered and the trial court rejected went, if admissible, to the issue as to the merger of the legal and equitable interest in said property in Meyerstein prior to the sale thereof to plaintiff under said trust deed. During the trial of the cause defendant offered in evidence an affidavit made by Otto A. Brown which counsel for appellant stated had been made in lieu of taking his deposition and which it was stipulated might be admitted in evidence as the testimony of said Brown, subject to any objection as to its relevancy. The evidence thus tendered was offered for the purpose, as appellants' counsel stated, of showing that the amount secured by said trust deed of Brown to Meyerstein had been fully paid prior to the sale of the premises thereunder to the plaintiff herein. The first objection which the plaintiff offered to the testimony of said Brown was that it constituted an attempt to contradict the terms of the judgment which had theretofore been made and entered in the case ofMontgomery v. Meyerstein and which had become resadjudicata. We shall deal later with this objection. The next objection which the plaintiff presented to the admissibility of the main portions of said affidavit of Brown was that his statements therein contained to the effect that by his conveyance of all of this right, title, and interest in the *54
premises in question he had canceled his indebtedness to the Forest Hill Realty Company, which the trust deed then held by Meyerstein was given to secure, and that he had thereby been released from all prior obligations with regard to said property, and that since the making of said deed he had never been asked for payment of the promissory note which said trust deed had been given to secure, and that upon the making of his said conveyance to Meyerstein the latter assumed all of the obligation of said affiant with regard to said note and trust deed, were mere conclusions of law. We are inclined to the view that as to much of the offered evidence of said Brown as above detailed the objection of the plaintiff thereto upon the ground that it consisted of mere conclusions of law on the part of said witness was well taken; but we also think that this objection was not applicable to all of the foregoing statements of said Brown; as, for example, to his statement that subsequent to the making of his said deed to Meyerstein he had never been asked for payment of his overdue indebtedness to the Forest Hill Realty Company, which the deed of trust to Meyerstein secured and that no demand had been made upon him for the payment of said indebtedness thereafter and prior to the sale of the premises to the plaintiff. These were statements of said witness as to matters of fact, and, if true, they tended to show that his deed to Meyerstein had been taken and regarded by the parties to amount to an extinguishment of his indebtedness to the Forest Hill Realty Company. They should, therefore, as against that specific objection have been received in evidence, and we think that the refusal of the trial court to so admit them was, as against that objection, prejudicial error. The deed from Otto A. Brown to Alfred L. Meyerstein, the trustee under the aforesaid deed of trust given by Brown to secure his indebtedness to Forest Hill Realty Company, having been introduced in evidence would, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, give rise to the reasonable inference that the consideration for such deed was the release of said Brown from the indebtedness which his former trust deed to the property described therein had been given to secure; and this offered testimony of Brown would materially support and strengthen that inference. It would follow as a logical sequence to such testimony, *55
if taken to be true, that it was the intent of the parties to the conveyances of Brown to Meyerstein and of Forest Hill Realty Company to Meyerstein to invest the latter with the entire title to the premises relieved of the encumbrance of said trust deed, which, since it no longer operated to secure any indebtedness from Brown to the Forest Hill Realty Company, had become merged in the legal title acquired by Meyerstein through these two conveyances of the whole estate to the holder thereof. Its materiality to the issue of merger being thus apparent the error of the trial court in refusing to admit it was prejudicial, if the issue of merger was a material issue in the case. The appellant in this same connection contends that the trial court committed further prejudicial error in refusing to admit in evidence the grant deed of said property which Alfred L. Meyerstein made to W.H. Levings and wife on or about March 7, 1921, and which said deed was prior in point of time to the inception of the proceedings which resulted in the sale of the said property under the trust deed upon which sale the title of said plaintiff as the purchaser of said property thereat and thereunder depends. The appellants contend that said grant deed from Meyerstein to Levings was admissible as evidence tending to prove that said Meyerstein in making said grant deed was dealing with and purporting to convey the entire title to said property and hence as evidence of the prior merger of both the legal and the equitable interests in himself. In making this contention the appellant invokes the rule declared in 27 Cyc., at page 1380 et seq., and apparently supported by respectable authority, to the effect that, "The question whether or not the parties intended that a merger of estates should take place is a question of fact. It is not settled by the mere recording of the deed. But the intention that there should be no merger may be shown by a stipulation in the deed or other express declaration of the parties, or the fact that the mortgagee does not cancel or surrender the evidence of the debt or release the mortgage, but, on the contrary, retains them, or that he assigns the mortgage to a bona fide purchaser, representing it as a good and valid security. On the other hand, if he assumes to deal with the estate as absolute owner, and conveys it to another, it proves a merger." *56
(See, also, Webb v. Meloy,
The respondent herein, however, contends that the issue of merger was not an issue in the case for the reason that the judgment in the case of Montgomery v. Meyerstein, rendered and entered on the twenty-third day of August, 1921, pursuant to the order and direction of this court upon said former appeal (
There are a number of other points discussed in the elaborate briefs and arguments of counsel herein, but since these in the main grow out of and relate to the foregoing *59 fundamental error of the trial court, a further discussion of them is not necessary upon this appeal.
The judgment is reversed.
Waste, J., Lawlor, J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Lennon, J., and Myers, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices present concurred.