57 Cal. 493 | Cal. | 1881
The gravamen of the complaint is, that the plaintiffs were induced to convey, without consideration, their interests in certain real estate to one Thomas Hope, the testator of the defendants, by reason of its being falsely represented by the agents of said Hope to the plaintiffs that they had no valid claim or title to said real estate and that said Hope had a perfect title thereto, and that he desired a deed from them merely confirmatory of one previously executed by their mother, as their guardian, to him, which the plaintiffs supposed, at the time of making their said conveyance and for several years thereafter, and which the agents of said Hope assured them, was a valid deed, and that all their right, title, interest, and claim in and to said real estate had thereby been effectually transferred to said Hope; and that, relying upon said representations, the plaintiffs executed the deed which they now seek to avoid, without taking any independent counsel or advice, or having it read (they could not read it), or its contents explained to them.
The misrepresentation complained of was as to the title of the plaintiffs to the premises which they were induced to convey, under the impression that they had no title thereto, and we understand the rule to be, as stated by the learned judge who sustained a demurrer to this complaint, that “ a person is conclusively presumed to know the state of his own title to real property. This is always the case where the party deals with a stranger, as in the present case. No misrepresentations made by Hope or his agents, therefore, as to the proceedings in probate concerning plaintiffs’ title, or as to the state of their title in any respect, could have had the effect of misleading them.” And the learned counsel for the appellants, if we rightly apprehend his position, concedes the rule to be as above stated.
It will thus be seen that it is only upon the question of the relations which existed between the parties, that the Court below and the learned counsel for the appellants differ. The Court held that the relation of Hope to the appellants was that of a stranger. The counsel insists, if we do not mistake his position, that conceding that to be so, the deed was procured through the misrepresentations of Hope’s agents, between whom and the appellants confidential relations did exist, and the transaction must therefore be viewed in the same light as it would be if such relations had existed between Hope and the appellants, and he, instead of said agents, had made the misrepresentations complained of. Whether under the maxim, qid facit per alium facit per se, a principal must be held to adopt the relations which exist between his agent and those with whom he is transacting business through such agent, may well be doubted. But does it appear that confidential relations did exist between Hope’s agents and the appellants? One of those agents was Albert Packard, a practicing lawyer, and he, some three or four weeks prior to the execution of the deed which the appellants seek to avoid, “visited Z. Branch, the father of F. Branch, then and now being the husband of the said plaintiff, Conception Branch, at their place of residence in the County of San Luis Obispo, and also said Encarnación (the mother of the plaintiffs), all of whose confidence he possessed to an almost unlimited extent, and over whom he exercised a great influence,” and then and there made the misrepresentations complained of, to the persons above named, who repeated them to the plaintiffs. Wow it is alleged that Z. Branch and F. Branch—one the father-in-law and the other the husband of one of the plaintiffs (four of the five plaintiffs are married women) —and the mother of the plaintiffs, had almost unlimited confidence in said Packard, and that he exercised great influence over them. Does that show that a confidential relation existed between Packard and the appellants, or even between him and the three persons to whom he directly made the alleged misrep
It is alleged that one Charles W. Dana, a “ first cousin ” of the appellants, was also employed by said Hope to procure said deed, and that he brought the same to the appellants already prepared for their signatures, and that he possessed the entire confidence of the appellants, “ and understood well the English
It has never been held, as far as we are advised, that the relation of first cousin is a peculiar one, or that first cousins do not deal with each other at arm’s length. It is not a relation which would naturally inspire unlimited confidence, affection, or sense of duty on either side. But if no relation existed between Hope and the appellants which would render the deed executed by them voidable, if said misrepresentations had been made by him directly, is it not voidable because made by agents of his, in whom the appellants had unlimited confidence ? It is not alleged that he knew that they had unlimited confidence in said agents. The most that can be claimed, we think, is, that the acts and representations of his agents were his acts and representations. We do not think that, by reason of his employment of them, their' relations towards the appellants became his relation towards them. If they did not, it is quite clear that the complaint does not show that Hope’s relation to the appellants was other than that of a stranger, or that he and they were not dealing at arm’s length.
It is alleged that the appellants made said deed without consideration. But it is not alleged that Hope did not pay the full value of this property to the mother of the appellants when he purchased from her, as he and she and all others interested in the property supposed at the time, a perfect title to it; and it is not, therefore, difficult to discover an adequate motive for executing a deed which should vest in him that which he had purchased for full value, and which it was supposed the previous deed had vested in him. Want of consideration is a cir
It is alleged that the deed was not read, or its contents explained to appellants before they executed it. It is not alleged that they expressed any wish to have it read, or to have its contents explained to them, which may be accounted for by the fact that they were under the impression that all their interest in the property had been previously conveyed to Hope by what they then supposed to be a valid guardian’s deed, executed by their mother. If they had read the deed which they executed witli the greatest care before executing it, or if its contents had been fully and faithfully explained to them, it would not have had the slightest tendency to remove that impression from their minds; and so long as that impression remained undisturbed, it is in the highest degree improbable that they would have deemed it of the slightest importance that the deed purported to convey all their interest in the property in which they believed that they had no interest, instead of merely confirming and ratifying a sale and conveyance which they believed to be valid.
It is not claimed that the signatures of the appellants were obtained by any trick or artifice, by which they signed a paper different from that which they intended to sign, nor that its contents were falsely stated to them ; but they signed it under the impression that they were conveying property in which they had no interest, and they have since learned that they had an interest in it; and if they had ascertained that before they executed the deed, they would not have executed it without consideration. Without other help, they might have read that deed hourly, from its date to the present time, without ascertaining from it that they had any interest in the property described in it.
The deed was not executed until about a month after Packard had communicated to the husband and father-in-law of one of the appellants, and to the mother of all of them, the desire of
As before remarked, it does no appear that Hope did not pay full value for the appellants’ interest in the land, when it was supposed that he had made a valid purchase of it at the invalid guardian’s sale; nor is it shown that the appellants were not as much benefited by that sale as they would have been by a valid one. It is not alleged that any of the appellants are weak-minded, or that they were at the time of the execution of their said deed suffering under any affliction or embarrassment. Four of them were married women, but their husbands united with them in the execution of the deed.
Aside from the misrepresentations complained of, the equities of the case are not very strongly on the side of the appellants, and as those misrepresentations related solely to their title, and if made as charged, were made by one dealing with them at arm’s length, they do not, upon well-established principles, constitute a sufficient ground for the granting of the relief prayed. We therefore think that the demurrer to the complaint was properly sustained, on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
Whether the action was brought within the time limited by the statute for the commencement of such an action, is a point upon which we express no opinion, although that question was raised by the demurrer, and ably discussed by counsel in their oral arguments and briefs.
Judgment affirmed.
Morrison, C. J., Ross, J., McKinstry, J., and McKee, J., concurred.
Thornton, J., and Myrick, J., dissented.