29 Cal. 337 | Cal. | 1865
Stephen Smith, of Bodega, in Sonoma County, died in November, 1855, possessed of a large estate, real and personal, in said county. In August, 1854, he made his last will and testament by which he undertook to make disposition of his property: At the time of his death he left surviving him his wife, Manuella T. Smith, who was the mother of three of his children. He also left surviving him four other children, the offsprings of a former marriage. At the time of his death he owned the Bodega Rancho, consisting of eight leagues of land, and he and his wife owned the Blucher Rancho, consisting of six leagues, as common property. By his will, which was duly proved soon after his death, Stephen Smith devised and bequeathed to his wife Manuella his house and household furniture at Bodega, to have and to hold during her life; and also he devised and bequeathed to her one third of the Bodega Rancho, and one third of his stock of cattle, etc., except the portion thereof which might be applied to the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, to have and to hold during her life, with remainder to his children born of her, in fee, share and share alike; and to the children last mentioned, he devised in fee the other two thirds of the Bodega Rancho, share and share alike, with the proviso that if any of such children died without issue, that in such event, the share or shares of such deceased child or children, should descend to and be inherited by the brothers and sisters of such deceased child or children of the full blood, to the exclusion of those of the half blood.
Early in November, 1855, Stephen Smith was stricken down with paralysis, and died on the 16th of that month, at the house of the appellant, in San Francisco. One week previous to his death his son, Stephen Henry Smith, who, it appears, was the attorney in fact of his father, appointed by an instrument in writing, under seal, in 1849, attempted to convey to C. B. Polhemus the Blucher Rancho. The deed executed by Stephen Henry Smith was in form the deed of Stephen Smith from the beginning to the end of the testamonium clause, but it was signed “ Stephen Henry Smith, attorney in fact of Stephen Smith.” The consideration expressed in this deed was seven thousand five hundred dollars. On the 11th of January, 3 856, Polhemus undertook to convey by deed the property to Bowman, the appellant. The consideration expressed in the deed was one dollar. At the time the deed was executed by Stephen Henry Smith to Polhemus, Stephen Henry resided with Bowman, who was his brother-in-law, and the transaction of the conveyance on the one part, and the purchase on the other, was managed by Stephen Henry and the appellant. Stephen Smith was not consulted respecting the matter, though the deed was executed in the house where he lay sick; nor does it appear that any portion of the consideration price expressed in the deed was in fact paid, though Polhemus and Bowman were examined as witnesses on the subject. At this time there was a mortgage on the Blucher Rancho, dated the 2d of February, 1855, for ten thousand dollars, bearing compound interest at the rate of three per cent per month, payable in advance, and also a mortgage on the Bodega Rancho, dated the 29th of May of the same year, for twelve thousand dollars, bearing the like rate of interest. These mortgages were executed by Stephen Smith.
From the testimony in the case, upon which both parties place reliance, it appears that in May, 1855, Stephen Smith spoke of selling the Blucher Rancho, and said he would have been willing to take for it thirty or thirty-five thousand dol
The testator nominated his wife, Manuella T. Smith, executrix, and William A, Richardson and James Wilson executors of his last will and testament. Mrs. Smith became qualified as executrix. The executors named failed to do so.
In June, 1856, the executrix commenced an action in the District Court in Sonoma County against James Bowman, Stephen Henry Smith and C. B. Polhemus, for the purpose of setting aside the conveyance executed by Stephen Henry Smith to Polhemus. While that action was pending, in 1856, the owners of the mortgage on the Bodega Rancho obtained a decree in the Circuit Court of the United States foreclosing such mortgage. Before then, in March, Bowman had deposited with the holders of the demand secured by the mortgage on the Blucher Rancho the amount due thereon, leaving, however, the mortgage outstanding in the hands of the mortgagees, subject to his control and direction.
On the 7th of August, 1856, the executrix and Bowman compromised the action commenced in the District Court in Sonoma County. By this compromise Bowman executed to the executrix a bond in the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, with a condition thereunder written—first reciting the commencement of the action in Sonoma County against him and others to cancel the deed executed by Stephen Henry Smith on the 9th of November, 1855, and the deed executed by Polhemus to Bowman, and also reciting the existence of
On the 24th of October, 1856, Bowman paid twenty-one thousand five hundred and thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents in discharge of the debt secured by the mortgage on the
On the 24th of March, 1856, Bowman advanced to Pioche, Bayerque & Co., the owners and holders of the debt secured by the mortgage on the Blucher Rancho the sum due for principal and interest thereon, but received from such firm no formal assignment of the débt and mortgage. After this an action was commenced in the United States Circuit Court, in the name of Jules B. Bayerque as plaintiff, against Manuella T. Smith, executrix, etc., S. Henry Smith, Giles Smith, Samuel A. Morrison, and Ellen Morrison, his wife, and Elvira Pond as defendants, to foreclose the mortgage; and on the 25th of October, 1856, a decree of foreclosure was entered; and on the 9th of the following December the property, the Blucher Rancho, was sold under the decree to the plaintiff Bayerque. On the 20th of May, 1857, Bowman having fully settled with Bayerque, the latter assigned to him the certificate of the sale under the foreclosure. The officer who made the sale under the decree executed a deed for the premises to Bowman on the 10th of June, 1857. The sum claimed to have been paid by Bowman in discharge of the property from this mortgage amounted to twenty-one thousand and eighty-nine dollars.
Bowman answered, controverting the charges of fraud contained in the complaint, but acknowledging that he held certain individual interests in the property in trust for the plaintiffs ; but he averred that he had expended large sums of money for the benefit of their interests ; that he was ready to account, and on being reimbursed, to convey to them their interests; and asking as a counter claim, that if they should refuse or neglect to pay him within a reasonable time to be fixed by the Court, the amount ascertained to be due him upon the accounting, then their interests should be decreed to be sold as on foreclosure, and that he be paid out of the proceeds-of such sale; and he also prayed for such further or other relief in the premises as the nature and circumstances of the. case might require.
Of the defendants, Bowman was the only one who answered.. The cause was tried and an interlocutory decree pronounced by this Court, declaring the deed executed by Stephen Henry Smith to C. B. Polhemus, and the deed executed by Polhemus to Bowman, and the deed executed under the foreclosure decree to said Bowman, null and void. The Court also decreed the agreement entered into between Manuella T. Smith, executrix, etc., and the said Bowman, and her deed releasing to him her interest in the Blucher Rancho, to be null and void. The
From the several decrees in the case, and from an order refusing to grant a new trial, the defendant Bowman has appealed, and the principal ground of complaint which he makes is, that the District Court erred in holding and deciding that the appellant was not the owner of one half of the Blucher Rancho.
Right of husband to devise wife’s half of common property, and effect of her acceptance under the devise.
The Blucher Rancho was the common property of Stephen Smith and his wife Manuel la. When he died she was entitled to an undivided half of it, subject to the payment of the debts of the community. The husband had not the power to dispose of the wife’s moiety by his last will and testament; and the only question now to be determined respecting .her share and interest in the property is whether by accepting a devise and bequest under the will she elected to release and surrender her right to the half of the common property, and whether
Jarman, in his work on Wills, says: “ That he who accepts a benefit under a deed or will, must .adopt the whole contents of the instrument, conforming to all its provisions and renouncing every right inconsistent with it. If, therefore, a testator has affected to dispose of property which is not his own, and has given a benefit to the person to whom that property belongs, the devisee or legatee accepting the benefit so given to him, must make good the testator’s attempted disposition; but if on the contrary, he chooses to enforce his proprietary rights against the testator’s disposition, equity will sequester the property given to him for the purpose of making satisfaction out of it to the person whom he has disappointed by the assertion of those rights.” (1 Jar. on Wills,. 385.) Election, in the sense here used, is the obligation imposed upon a party to choose .between two inconsistent or alternative rights or claims in cases when there is a clear intention of the person from whom he derives one, that he should not enjoy both. (Story’s Eq. Jur. Sec. 1,075.) Judge Story says if a testator should devise an estate belonging to his son, or heir at law, to a third person, and should in the same will bequeath to his son or heir at law a legacy of one hundred thousand dollars, or should make him the residuary devisee of all his estate, real and personal, it would be manifest that the testator intended that the son or heir should not take both to the exclusion of the other devisee; and therefore, he says, he ought to be put to his election which he would take; that is, either relinquish his own estate or the bequest finder the will. (Story’s Eq. Jur. 1,076.) In Blake v. Bunbury, 4 Bro. C. Cas. 24, it is declared to be the settled doctrine of a Court of equity that no person shall disappoint the will under which he takes, and that if the testator gives to B. lands to which he has no title, and which are the estate and in the possession of A., to whom he gives by the same will other parts of his estate, A. must elect and convey his estate to B., or he cannot take the ben
The appellant’s counsel insists that the testator could not dispose of his wife’s interest in the common jmoperty by his last will and testament. He maintains that she could accept the donation made to her by the testator, and at the same time have and hold the half of the common property, notwithstanding the testator’s disposition. To support his position the learned counsel relies on the cases Beard v. Knox, 5 Cal. 252, and Payne v. Payne, 18 Cal. 291. In the first of these cases the testator bequeathed to his wife five hundred dollars; and the residue of his estate, except some °trifling legacies, he devised to his infant daughter. The plaintiff, widow of the testator, accepted the legacy, and at the same time claimed one half of the common property, and brought her action to
A testamentary provision in lieu of a devisee’s or legatee’s proprietary right, in order to render it such upon acceptance of it, must be declared in terms to be given in lieu of such right; or that intention must be deduced by clear and manifest implication from the will, founded upon the fact that the claim, to such proprietary right would be inconsistent with the will or so repugnant to its dispositions as to disturb and defeat them. (4 Kent’s Com. 58; Fuller v. Yates, 8 Paige, 330.) In Payne v. Payne the doctrine of election was in no sense involved, and the Court did not say anything touching the point now in controversy.
While it is the law that a testator can only dispose of his own property, he may assume to dispose of that which belongs to another, and such disposition may be ratified and confirmed by its owner, by the acceptance, under the will, of a donation, necessarily implying such ratification and confirmation. The act of the testator attempting to dispose of the property of another, and the act of the owner of such property in accepting the benefit provided for him by the testator, united, complete the disposition, which, without the act of confirmation, would be of no effect. That the testator attempted to deal with the Blucher Rancho as his own property, is evident from the language of his will in respect to it. He uses the language of a sole proprietor, as it would seem, ex industria. He speaks of it as “ my Blucher Rancho ” not less than five times in his will.
The widow having accepted the devises and bequests pror vided for her by the will, thereby made her election and confirmed the disposition made by her husband of the common property; because to hold otherwise would so far frustrate and disappoint the objects and intentions of the testator as to deprive his children by his former marriage, and their children, in a great measure, if not entirely, of the portion of the property which he evidently designed they should have.
In the tenth clause of the will the testator declared his intention to dispose of the three leagues of the Blucher Ranch, not specifically devised, or so much thereof as might be necessary for the purpose of raising means for the payment of debts and liabilities subsisting against him ; but anticipating that he might not accomplish this object during his life, he directed his executrix and executors, in that event, to carry into effect his design. He thus appointed and charged these three leagues of land for the especial purpose of paying, not only the debt secured by mortgage on the Blucher Rancho, but also that secured by mortgage on the Bodega property, as
Deed by an attorney in fact must be signed with principal’s name.
The deed executed by Stephen Henry Smith to Polhemus was not the deed of Stephen Smith. Stephen Henry Smith signed it with the description “ Attorney in fact of Stephen Smith,” appended to his name. This was not an execution of the deed in the name of his constituent and therefore was not, even if the transaction was honest and fair in its inception and attempted consummation, effectual to transfer the property therein described. So that notwithstanding this deed, the Blucher Rancho was the property of Stephen Smith and his wife on the day of his death. The added words : “ Attorney in fact of Stephen Smith,” are descriptio persones merely of him who signed the deed. The fact that Stephen Henry Smith was the attorney of the person described in the deed as the grantor, and that he intended to bind his principal thereby, does not obviate the 'objection. It may be admitted that the attorney intended to bind his principal by the deed executed —but intention alone was not enough. The use of legal means for-accomplishing the object'were essential and indispensablé to effect the transfer of the property. The rule is well established that when a person having power to sell and convey real estate for another, undertakes to exercise the power, the act performed must be in the name of the principal, or it will not bind him. (Elwell v. Shaw, 16 Mass. 42 ;
Right of one who believes himself a trustee to be reimbursed for advances made to trust estate.
The appellant supposed that he had acquired the title to the Blucher Rancho by means of the deeds executed by Stephen Henry Smith and Polhemus, and that he held the title so far as the plaintiffs were concerned, in trust for them, and he claims that whatever he did in the premises subsequent to that time, was in discharge of his duties as trustee to the extent of the interests of the plaintiffs and all others concerned in the property as beneficiaries under the will of Stephen Smith. He accordingly paid the sums due and secured by the two mortgages mentioned, and adopted means for the preservation of the property and for securing the confirmation of the title. For these advancements the decree of the Court below justly provides he shall be paid.
By the decree of foreclosure of the mortgage on the Blucher Rancho and the sale of the premises thereunder and the conveyance finally executed to the appellant, he became invested with the legal title to the property. Before then, on the 4th of December, 1856, Manuella T. Smith had by deed remised, released and forever discharged the appellant, and Polhemus, and Stephen Henry Smith, of and from all actions, causes of action, claim, interest, right or demand which she individually or as executrix could or might legally or equitably have, of, in, and to the Blucher Rancho, and every part and parcel thereof; and also of and from all actions and causes of action which she individually or as executrix or otherwise should or might have against them by reason of any deed, matter or thing whatsoever connected with the Blucher Rancho, or in any way affecting the title to the same, as then vested and existing in them, or either of them.
It is not cláimed that the relation of trustee and cestui que trust subsisted between the appellant and Mrs. Smith after the
Neither party has objected to the account as taken and stated, nor to the mode of making up any deficiency that might possibly remain to be paid to Bowman after exhausting the residue of the three appointed leagues for the purposes designated by the tenth clause of the will. By the account
The appellant objects to the rate of intérest—ten per cent per annum—allowed to him on the principal sums due him, for advancements made in discharge of debts in his capacity of trustee, and otherwise for the payment of moneys necessarily expended by him for the protection and preservation of the estate. He claims that such rate of interest will not indemnify him for his outlay, and insists that he is entitled in equity to a higher rate of interest, and that it is competent for the Court to afford him indemnity in this particular. Under the circumstances of the case we are not disposed to change the decree of the District Court in this respect. It is highly probable he will be well compensated for all advancements made by him in the performance of his voluntarily assumed trust. If the remaining portion of the three appointed leagues bring upon sale as much in proportion as did the land already sold by him, there will be a surplus remaining after he shall have been paid as provided by the decree in this case, and of that surplus he will be entitled in his own right to one third, while the children of the testator will be entitled to the other two thirds of it.
Having thus ascertained and determined the rights of the respective parties, it is now adjudged and decreed that so much of the judgment and decree of the Court below entered on the 19th day of October, 1860, as holds, adjudges and decrees that the agreement entered into on the 7th of August, 1856, between Manuella T. Smith, executrix of the last will and testament of Stephen Smith, deceased, and the defendant Bowman, and the bond executed on the same day by said Bowman to the said Manuella T. Smith, executrix, etc., to be null and void, and of no effect, be and the same is hereby reversed.
And it is further adjudged and decreed that so much of the said judgment and decree of the Court below as holds, adjudges and decrees that the release executed on the 4th of December, 1856, by Manuella T. Smith, in her own right and also as executrix, etc., to said Bowman, Polhemus, and Stephen Henry Smith, to be null and void and of no effect, be and the same is hereby reversed.
And it is further adjudged and decreed that so much of said judgment and decree of the Court below as holds, adjudges and decrees that the deed executed on the 10th day of June, 1857, to said Bowman under the decree of foreclosure of the mortgage on the Blucher Pancho, and of the sale of said rancho, to be null and void and of no effect, be and the same is hereby reversed.
And it is further adjudged and decreed that as to the parts and portions of said judgment and decree entered on the 19th day of October, 1860, not reversed as above specified, be and the same is hereby affirmed.
And it is further adjudged and decreed that the judgment and decree of the Court below, made and entered on the 26th of December, 1863, be set aside, except as to the confirmation vOf the report of the referee, and in lieu thereof, that a judgment and decree be drawn up by the attorneys for the parties and submitted to this Court, that the same may be settled as the judgment and decree to be entered in this action, at which time the judgment respecting costs will also be entered.