190 P. 496 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
The judgment in this action decreed that plaintiff's title to certain lands situate in Inyo County be quieted upon the payment by plaintiff to defendants of the amount of a mortgage previously given by plaintiff's predecessors covering the lands in question. Defendants appeal. Plaintiff, in his own right and as executor of the last will of Martha D. Olds, deceased, avers in his complaint that he is the owner and entitled to the possession of the disputed premises, and prays that his title thereto be quieted. Defendants in their answer deny the validity of *356 plaintiff's title, and by way of cross-complaint seek to reform a certain deed which forms a part of their chain of title by correcting the description of the property intended to be conveyed, and thereupon to quiet their title, which they aver was acquired by prescription. Defendants also plead the statute of limitations. (Sec. 318, Code Civ. Proc.)
Plaintiff is the son of David and Martha D. Olds, both of whom are now deceased. Defendants are, respectively, the widow and the children of William R. Thorington, since deceased, the latter being a son of Martha D. Olds by a former marriage. The premises in question were acquired in the year 1874 by David and Martha D. Olds subsequent to their marriage, and are conceded to be community property, upon which David Olds, on August 11, 1881, filed a homestead. On June 27, 1891, said William R. Thorington loaned David Olds and wife two thousand five hundred dollars, for which they gave him a note, secured by a mortgage purporting to cover the premises in question. For the purpose of satisfying that mortgage David Olds, on February 24, 1894, executed and delivered to Thorington a deed to said premises. Martha D. Olds did not join in that deed. The mortgage was immediately afterward satisfied of record. After said deed to Thorington had been executed and delivered Olds and his wife continued to reside upon said premises, until the death of Olds, which occurred on Januuary 16, 1909, at which time Thorington, who had been living with his wife on what is called the "Horton" ranch, moved on to the Olds place, his wife remaining on the Horton place. Thorington then lived with his mother, Mrs. Olds, on the Olds place, keeping house for her, until January, 1910, when he moved back to the Horton ranch to reside with his wife. Thereafter Mrs. Olds resided alone upon the Olds place until the 1st of August, 1913, at which time Thorington, with his wife and family, moved on to the Olds place, and jointly occupied the dwelling thereon with Mrs. Olds. Thorington died on November 2d of the same year, after which Mrs. Olds and the Thorington family continued to occupy the Olds dwelling until the death of Mrs. Olds, which occurred January 17, 1914, and since then Thorington's widow and children have occupied said premises and dwelling. *357
Three main issues were presented by the pleadings, viz.: The validity of plaintiff's title, the right of defendants to reform the deed executed by David Olds to Thorington in 1894, and defendants' asserted title by prescription.
The foundation of plaintiff's title is the homestead declared by David Olds in 1881. If, as contended by appellants, the homestead is void, title to said property was vested in Thorington by the deed executed by Olds in 1894, for the reason that, in the absence of a valid homestead, Olds possessed the power, under the provisions of section 172 of the Civil Code, as that section existed at the time of this transaction, to dispose of the community property, other than by testamentary disposition, the same as he would if it were his separate estate. If, however, said homestead is valid, said deed is inoperative, and the question of whether or not plaintiff's title, acquired under said homestead, has been defeated by the asserted prescriptive title of defendants, becomes necessary for determination. The matter of the reformation of said deed becomes material only in the event that defendants' title is found to depend upon said deed.
The trial court found specifically on all of the issues of fact presented by the pleadings, from which it evidently concluded that said homestead was valid, and that defendants' title by prescription had not been established, although in its conclusions of law and in its judgment neither of those matters were specifically determined. It found that the description in the Thorington deed was intended to cover the premises in question, but it declined to grant relief toward the reformation of said deed, upon the ground that even if reformed said deed "would still be inoperative to pass or convey his title to the lands and premises" in question, and as to defendants' prescriptive title it found that the possession of said premises by Thorington was a joint possession with that of Olds and his wife, and was not an exclusive, hostile, and adverse one, and that the only exclusive possession by the Thoringtons had been since the death of Mrs. Olds, which occurred January 17, 1914. The court's conclusions of law and its judgment were, in effect, that by reason of said mortgage and deed Thorington and his successors became mortgagees in possession, and that plaintiff's title should not be quieted until said mortgage is *358 paid. The judgment, which follows strictly the conclusions of law, decrees that the defendants and cross-complainants are entitled to retain possession of said premises until plaintiff pays to defendants and cross-complainants the sum of $3,297.50, the amount found by the court to be due on said mortgage from Olds and his wife to Thorington, and that upon the payment of said sum said debt will have been fully paid, and plaintiff will thereafter be the owner in fee simple of said premises, subject only to the administration of the estate of Martha D. Olds, deceased, and that upon the payment of said sum plaintiff will be entitled to a decree quieting his title to said premises.
[1] Preliminary to the main questions presented by the appeal, respondent contends that the appeal should be dismissed upon the ground that said judgment is interlocutory in its character and not final. We are of the opinion that the point is not well taken. The form of judgment is one falling within the rule stated in Zappettini v. Buckles,
"Know all men by these presents, that I, David Olds, of Round Valley, county of Inyo, state of California, a married man and the head of a family, residing with my family on the northwest one quarter section twenty-eight, township six south, range thirty-one east, do hereby declare my intention to claim as a homestead the N.W. 1/4 Sec. 28, T. 6 S., R. 31 E., less 32 feet in width off the east side of said section conveyed to William Horton and less 31 rods wide off the west side of said section conveyed to W. R. Thorington, and the actual cash value I estimate at three thousand dollars.
"In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal this, the 10th day of August, A.D. 1881.
"DAVID OLDS. (Seal)"
It will be observed that the declarant declares that he resides on the northwest quarter of section 28, which, according to the description immediately following in the homestead, consists of three distinct parcels of land, two of which the declarant does not own. He fails to specify, however, on which of those three parcels he was then residing. In other words, it cannot be determined from the declaration whether the declarant was then residing on the thirty-two foot strip on the east side of said quarter-section, or on the thirty-one rod strip, on the west side of said quarter section, or on the mid parcel which he afterward attempts to select as a homestead. We are of the opinion that such omission is fatal.
Section 1263 of the Civil Code, as it read at the time of the filing of this declaration, required that a declaration of homestead must contain a statement "that the person making it is residing on the premises and claims them as a *360
homestead." If the statement of residence, or any of the other statements required to be made by said section, is omitted the homestead is void. It was said in Jones v. Gunn,
And in Tappendorff v. Moranda,
In Boreham v. Byrne,
The case of Harris v. Duarte,
Respondent endeavors to sustain the homestead by invoking the doctrine of liberal construction, as stated inSouthwick v. Davis,
[3] Respondent further contends for the application of the rule that ambiguity or obscurity in a written instrument may be removed by extrinsic evidence, from which he argues that since the evidence shows that the dwelling was located on the mid parcel the defect in the declaration is cured. The established rule is, however, that the right of a claimant to select a homestead and impress upon it an exemption from forced sale must appear upon the face of the declaration, and its omission cannot be supplied by extraneous evidence. (Reed v.Englehart-Davidson Co., supra; Boreham v. Byrne, supra.)
In the light of the authorities above cited, the homestead in question must be held to be void, upon the ground that said declaration contained no statement that the declarant resided on the premises which he claimed as a homestead. That being so, the deed from David Olds to Thorington became an operative conveyance and vested title in Thorington, and the determination of the question of the defendants' prescriptive title becomes unnecessary.
Judgment reversed.
Waste, P. J., and Richards, J., concurred. *362
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 July 1, 1920.
All the Justices, except Olney, J., concurred.