81 P. 138 | Cal. | 1905
This is an action to quiet title to certain real property in the city and county of San Francisco in the possession of defendants.
The court found that plaintiff is not and never has been the owner of said lot, or of any interest or estate therein, and gave judgment for defendants. Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.
Both parties claim under R.H. McDonald, who was the owner of the property on the first day of September, 1891.
The plaintiff claims under an attachment, judgment, and execution sale of the property, in a proceeding against said R.H. McDonald, and the defendants by virtue of a conveyance made by said McDonald, which conveyance antedates plaintiff's attachment and judgment.
Plaintiff claims that said conveyance was void because it attempted to create a trust forbidden by the laws of the state.
Defendant Montgomery, while contending for the validity of the conveyance, further contends that the judgment under which plaintiff claims was void, and that plaintiff derived no title by the execution sale, even if the conveyance by McDonald was void.
The conveyance under which defendants claim purported to grant, bargain, sell and convey the property in question to one Orin F. Miner and his successors in trust "To have and to hold said premises for the following uses and purposes and none other, viz.: *747
"In trust to lease said premises not exceeding a term of five years, to collect the rents thereof and to pay out of the same all taxes, assessments and charges and retain a reasonable sum for the care and business thereof, and to pay to my son Richard H. McDonald the net rentals so long as he shall live and upon his death to convey to any child or children hereafter born to him or the issue of a child not living so born to him said property; but in the event he shall not have such child or children, then my trustee shall convey said property to the child or children or the issue of any child not living of my daughter Mrs. Mattie Spencer share and share alike."
Defendant Montgomery is the duly and regularly appointed trustee in place, and stead of said Miner, also a defendant, the only other defendant being Richard H. McDonald, Jr., the son of the grantor and a beneficiary under the deed.
So far as this deed purports to create a trust for the conveyance of the property upon the death of the son, it must be held to be void under the decisions of this court. (Estate ofFair,
The trust to lease the property, collect the rents, and to pay the net rentals to the son so long as he shall live, is, however, one authorized by the law of this state. (Civ. Code, sec. 857, subds. 2, 3.) The question, then, arises as to whether this valid provision is so interwoven with the invalid one that the invalid provision cannot be eliminated without interfering with and changing the main scheme of the grantor. If not, it will stand(Estate of Pichoir,
We think there can be no doubt that the two attempted trusts are severable. It is impossible to distinguish this deed of trust, so far as this question is concerned, from the deed made by the same grantor, considered in Nellis v. Rickard,
The same, in effect, may be said with equal force of the deed here involved.
The case is clearly distinguished from Estate of Fair,
No such conditions exist here. As in the case of Nellis v.Rickard,
In Estate of Sanford,
Our conclusion on this branch of the case is, that the deed of trust was valid to the extent of the life estate thereby created, and that the estate of the trustee must be upheld to that extent.
The defendants cannot, however, uphold their claim to any greater extent than this. The attempted trust to convey being void, no other estate in the property than that necessary to enable the trustee to execute the valid trust was effectually conveyed by the deed. (See Estate of Pichoir,
The author of the trust here, R.H. McDonald, having a legal estate in this property after the execution of the trust deed, the same must have passed to plaintiff under the execution sale of his interest therein, unless such sale was for some reason invalid.
It is claimed that the sale was void for the reason that the judgment against McDonald upon which the execution was issued was void upon its face, the contention as to the invalidity of the judgment being based upon the further contention that it appears upon the face of the record that return upon the summons was not made within three years after the commencement of the action, and that the court was therefore *750
without jurisdiction to render the judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., sec.
The property in question having been attached in the action in which the judgment was given, that of Sacramento Bank v. J.M. Burnett, R.H. McDonald, et al., an action to recover money, the summons was served upon McDonald by publication.
Assuming for the purposes of this decision that, under subdivision 7 of section
Admittedly the judgment in question cannot be held void upon this collateral attack, unless it is void upon its face, — i.e. unless its invalidity is apparent upon an inspection of the judgment-roll.
From this it appears that the action was commenced on September 1, 1894, and that summons was issued on the same day. The record affirmatively shows that the summons was regularly served by publication within three years. There is contained in the record an affidavit showing the mailing of a copy of the summons and complaint within the three years, which was filed within that time, — viz., on December 1, 1896.
The only affidavit showing publication of summons contained in the judgment-roll is one filed after the expiration of three years, — viz., on April 1, 1898. This affidavit was subscribed and sworn to on February 17, 1897, and showed proper publication within the three years.
The record does not contain the original summons. The indorsement of the clerk upon the complaint shows that the default of McDonald for not answering was entered April 1, 1898.
Judgment was given April 2, 1898, and it was recited therein as follows, viz.: "In this cause the defendant R.H. McDonald having been regularly served with process, and having failed to appear and answer the plaintiff's complaint as amended, the time allowed by law for answering having expired and the default of saiddefendant R.H. McDonald *751 having been regularly entered according to law, and the court having ordered judgment entered in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant R.H. McDonald," etc.
The affidavit of publication of summons filed after the expiration of three years constitutes a part of the record, and if this were the only evidence as to the time of the filing of any such affidavit, defendants' contention that it is apparent from an inspection of the record that no affidavit was filed within three years of the commencement of the action would be well made. But such affidavit is not the only evidence upon this subject. The jurisdictional recitals in the judgment also constitute a part of the record, and it is there solemnly declared that the default of the defendant R.H. McDonald has been regularly entered according to law. Assuming here the soundness of defendants' argument to the effect that the court lost all jurisdiction of the case if an affidavit of publication was not filed within the three years, this recital could not be true if no affidavit had been filed prior to the one contained in the record. The whole record must be construed together, and the jurisdictional recitals in the judgment must be taken on collateral attack as true, unless the record affirmatively shows that the facts upon which they are based are insufficient to sustain them. The remainder of the record here does not show this. It does not appear that the recital that default was regularly entered according to law was at all based upon the affidavit contained in the record. For aught that appears, it may have been made to appear to the court in that action that another affidavit showing due publication was filed within the proper time, and the recital may have been based upon that fact. Such affidavit may have been lost or omitted from the record. Such a condition of affairs is entirely consistent with the whole record before us, and in support of the judgment must be assumed to have existed. To hold otherwise would be to make the record in part speak falsely.
Defendants say that while, where the record is silent as to what was done, it will be presumed in favor of the judgment that what ought to have been done was not only done, but rightly done, yet when the record shows what was done, it will not be presumed that something different was done. This statement is undoubtedly true, and is supported by a wealth *752
of authority. But it has no application where the record does not purport to show all that was done, and the judgment states that all that was necessary to be done was done. This matter was very clearly discussed by this court in Hahn v. Kelly,
"To avoid any misapprehension, we deem it proper to add that, so far we have assumed, for the purposes of the argument, that the record, aside from that portion of it which is denominated the proof of service, is silent upon the question of service. But it may happen that other portions of the record may also speak upon that question. If so, what they say is not to be disregarded. On the contrary, in determining the question whether a want of jurisdiction is apparent upon the face of the record, we must look to the whole of it and report the responses of all its parts. To illustrate: Suppose that portion of the judgment-roll denominated the `affidavit of proof of service' shows that personal service was made upon the son of defendant, and the remainder of the roll says nothing about service. We then have a want of jurisdiction appearing upon the face of the record. But suppose the judgment states that the defendant appeared, or that personal service was made upon him, or something else that is equivalent, as it frequently does, the opposite result follows, for the record cannot lie, and it appears that the father as well as the son had been served, which may well have been the case. The record in such a case does not blow hot and cold, as might be supposed; on the contrary, both acts may have been done. On presentation of the return of service upon the son, the court may have declared it no service, and service upon the father may have been subsequently made, and the wrong return may have found its way into the judgment-roll. To hold thus would be consistent with the record, while to hold otherwise would be to contradict the judgment.
"So in the case of a service by publication if the affidavit of the printer states that the summons was published one month, and yet the court in its judgment states that it was published three, or that service has been had upon the defendant, *753 it will be presumed that other proof than that contained in the judgment-roll was made, for not to so presume would be to deny to the record that absolute verity which must be accorded to it. Thus limited or understood, the point made by counsel for appellant is doubtless well made."
(See, also, Quivey v. Porter,
In Belcher v. Chambers,
We are of the opinion that the judgment in question is not void upon its face, and that the execution sale thereunder conveyed to plaintiff such interest as the judgment debtor then had in the property in question, — viz., such estate therein as was not conveyed by the trust deed.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Shaw, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred.