Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of the defendants. She brought this action as the administratrix of the estate of Grace Grabel, deceased. In her fourth amended complaint she alleges six separately stated causes of action. The first cause of action is to quiet title to certain real property; the second is against only two of the individual defendants and is for the recovery of the reasonable rental value of the property for the period the said defendants are alleged to have been in possession thereof; the third is for conversion of personal property; the fourth is for money had and received; the fifth is to recover damages because of the alleged fraud on the part of the individual defendants by which title to said property beсame vested in defendant Palmer; and the sixth is for the cancellation of the deed of trust held by the defendant bank on the said property. The third and fourth causes of action were settled.
In 1927 Mike Grabel and his wife, Grace, acquired the real property involved in this litigation from Dolph C. Dodds and his' wife, Helen. The property was at that time subject to a deed of trust executed by the Dodds to the Security Housing Corporation, which was later assigned to the Metropolitan Trust Company. The Grabéis took the property subject to the balance owing on the trust deed. They continuously resided on the property until 1934, when Mr. Grabel died. Mrs. Grabel continued to occupy the property until her death on June 10, 1940.
The trust deed loan not having been paid, the trust company started foreclosure proceedings in 1935. Thereuрon, in October of that year, Mrs. Grabel went to see W. C. Dansie and gave him the money to pay the balance due on the loan and told him to “take the trust deed over for her.” He took care of the matter “merely ... to accommodate Mrs. Grabel.” Upon the payment of the balance due the trust company assigned the trust deed to Mr. Dansie and delivered to him the *317 cancelled note. The assignment of the trust deed was not recorded and Dansie turned the papers over to Mrs. Grabel.
In the fall of 1940 (after the death of Mrs. Grabel) defendant Vernon Wilbur Peterson, who had been living at the Grabel home for some time, told Dansie that he wanted to clear the title to the Grabel home and inquired of Dansie if he had any interest in the property. Dansie told him he had no claim on the property. Somе time later Peterson came back and he (Dansie) “signed some papers for him” which he now believes “was an assignment of the trust deed to the property involved in this case.” Dansie “felt” that he “was helping Mrs. Grabel clear the property.” He did not know that she had passed away until after he had signed the papers. He indicated he would not have signed the papers if he had known that she was dead. Defendant W. H. Beeman was with Peterson on these two occasions. The Dansie assignment of the deed of trust was to defendant Edith Peterson and was recorded on November 19, 1940. She executed a notice of default under said deed of trust on December 31, 1940. It was recorded at the request of the trustee on January 7, 1941. The trustee thereafter duly gave notice of sale; held its trustee’s sale; exeсuted and delivered its trustee’s deed to Edith Peterson as purchaser at said sale. Later, Edith Peterson, who was represented in the foreclosure proceedings and sale by defendant, W. H. Beeman, sold the property to defendant Palmer for $3,350. Thereupon, defendant Palmer borrowed $1,800 from the bank and executed the trust deed as security therefor, which is involved in the sixth cause of action.
The court found that defendant Palmer was a good faith purchaser for value, and that the defendant bank’s trust deed encumbrance on the property was valid. Plaintiff challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding in favor of Mrs. Palmer and contends that the court erred in holding that the bank’s trust deed constitutes a valid lien on the property. Neither of these contentions is well founded.
Therе is no evidence that defendant Palmer knew the chain of circumstances leading up to the acquisition of title by Edith Peterson. She was simply told that Mrs. Peterson had obtained the property “through foreclosure.”
On the question as to the amount paid for the property both Mrs. Peterson and Mrs. Palmer testified that the purchase price was $3,350. Mrs. Palmer testified that she paid *318 $2,000 of this amount to Mrs. Peterson in cash. There was also a trust deed encumbrance against the property which was placed thereon by Mrs. Peterson and which required about $1,223 to satisfy. This obligation was paid through escrow by the bank out of the $1,800 loan which the bank made Mrs. Palmer on the property. She also paid taxes of approximately $50 and a special assessment of some $40. It is thus clear that substantial value was paid for the property by Mrs. Palmer, and the price paid by her does not appear to have been out of line with the fair value of the property at the time of the sale.
Plaintiff makes a strong attack upon the testimony relative to the purchase price paid for the property as inherently improbable and therefore of no evidentiary value. She bases this conclusion upon thе relationship of the parties, the manner in which the transaction was handled, and certain inconsistencies in the testimony of Mrs. Peterson and Mrs. Palmer. She emphasizes the fact that Edith Peterson is the mother of Vernon Wilbur Peterson and that Euth Beeman is her niece; also that some months after the sale to Mrs. Palmer she married Vernon Wilbur Peterson, whom she did not meet, however, until about a week before shе became interested in the property. These were matters for the trial court to take into consideration in passing on the credibility of the witnesses. There is no rule of law that stigmatizes the testimony of persons so related as inherently improbable. Plaintiff attacks the testimony of Mrs. Palmer, relative to the price she paid for the property, as inherently improbable because the sаle was not handled through an escrow. Mrs. Palmer stated by way of explanation on this point that she felt she did not need an escrow because the property “had just been taken through foreclosure. ’ ’ Plaintiff also challenges as inherently improbable her testimony that she paid Mrs. Peterson $2,000 in cash. Such testimony does not come within the rule of inherent improbability. Before evidence can be disregarded as inherently improbable there must exist a physical impossibility of the evidence being true, or its falsity must be apparent without resort to inferences or deductions. (Poe v.
Lawrence
(1943),
Plaintiff’s attack on the validity of the bank’s trust deed lien is based upon the theory that the fraudulent procurement of a deed will not operate to pass title. Hence, subsequent purchasers and encumbrancers, even though they are in good faith and for value, will not be protected. In support of her proposition, plaintiff cites
Gould
v.
Wise
(1893),
When the case was called plaintiff requested a jury, the fee therefor having been previously deposited. The court denied this request “as to the causes оf action in equity” and proceeded to try the first and sixth causes of action without a jury. The court also disposed of the two remaining causes of action, viz., the second and fifth. This was error insofar as the fifth cause of action is concerned as to all of the individual defendants, except the defendant Palmer.
Plaintiff’s first cause of action to quiet title presented purely equitable issues. The allegations of this cause of action are in the usual form. The facts, however, on which it was based, appear in the fifth cause of action. It is there alleged, among other things, that the property of plaintiff’s intestate was subject to a deed of trust; that a trustee’s sale had been held thereunder; and that the defendants Palmer and the bank had succeeded to the title of the purchaser аt the trustee’s sale. Obviously, only a court of equity could set aside this legal title of record in the defendants and adjudicate that the Grabel estate was the owner of the real property in question. The sixth cause of action (against the bank alone) was for the cancellation of the bank’s trust deed and the lien thereby created. The issues thus presented by the first and sixth causes of action and the relief sought were clearly equitable.
The fifth cause of action, however, is to recover as damages the alleged value of the property on the theory that the individual defendants “conspired together for the pur
*321
pose of cheating and defrauding the said estate of Grace Grabel . . . out of said property” and that pursuant to their fraudulent plan and scheme they did defraud the estate out of said property. The relief sought on this cause of action is a money judgment against the individual defendants. Plaintiff’s theory of action, as stated in her fifth cause of action, is obviously an action at law for damages against each person connected with the alleged fraud.
(Hutchason
v.
Marks
(1942),
When the court denied plaintiff’s motion for a jury triаl “as to the equitable causes of action” and indicated its intention to proceed with the trial of the first cause of action without a jury, the plaintiff then made a motion to amend said cause of action by adding the allegation that the plaintiff was out of possession of the said premises and that certain of the individual defendants were in possession. The court denied the motion. Plaintiff’s clаim of error in this ruling is without merit. This was the fourth amended complaint and the trial had opened. The granting or denying of such a motion to amend is largely a matter of judicial discretion, and the ruling will not he disturbed on appeal in the absence of a clear abuse of such discretion. No such abuse is here shown or suggested. No explanation is offered as to the plaintiff’s tardiness in making the request to further amend аnd no showing is made of how such an amendment would be in furtherance of justice.
At the outset of the trial the defendants W. H. Bee-man and Ruth F. Beeman disclaimed any interest in the property. Later the plaintiff sought to examine W. H. Bee-man as an “adverse party as if under cross-examination.” This request, which was based on section 2055, Code of Civil Procedure,
1
was denied. Plaintiff assigns this ruling as reversible error. Her position, hоwever, is not well taken. As to the cause of action to quiet title and the cause of action to cancel the trust deed of the bank the plaintiff was not entitled to examine Beeman under section 2055, Code of Civil Procedure. By his disclaimer Beeman was no longer an adverse party in the quiet title cause of action
(Johnston
v.
St. Sure
(1920),
Although Beeman was still “a party to the record” the plaintiff does not appear to have suffered any prejudice by the court’s refusal to permit him to be examined “as if under cross-examination,” insofar as the first and sixth causes of action were concerned. The real question was whether defendant Palmer was, in fact, a good faith purchaser for value of the property. Beeman, according to the testimony of defendant Edith Peterson, represented her in the trust deed foreclosure sale by which she acquired title to the property and in the sale to defendant Palmer. There is no suggestion that he also represented defendant Palmer in the transaction.
Plaintiff also contends that the court erred in rejeсting certain documents that were offered in evidence. Neither the relevancy nor the materiality of these documents ' on the issues involved in the first and sixth causes of action is made to appear.
The judgment is affirmed except on the fifth cause of action as to defendants Vernon Wilbur Peterson, Edith Peterson, W. H. Beeman and Ruth Beeman, and as to said defendants on said cause of action the judgment is reversed, appellant to recover costs against said defendants.
Shinn, Acting P. J., and Wood, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 28, 1946, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 27, 1946.
Notes
Section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads in part as follows; ‘ ‘ Examination of adverse party. A party to the record of any civil action or proceeding or a person for1 whose immediate benefit such action or proceeding is prosecuted or defended . . . may be examined by the adverse party as if under cross-examination, . . .”
