122 P. 976 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1912
The action is in partition. Appellant states that "there is practically no controversy as to the facts." The amended complaint alleges that plaintiff and defendant, Mary Gray Tobin, are the owners as tenants in common of certain personal property consisting of notes and bonds; that the Mercantile Trust Company of San Francisco claims some interest adversely to plaintiff, but that it is without right. The answer denies that plaintiff and said defendants are the owners or tenants in common or otherwise of the property and admits that the said Mercantile Trust Company claims an interest in the property adverse to plaintiff, but denies that such claim is without right. It is alleged in the answer that the property is held in trust by said company as follows: That on the fifteenth day of August, 1893, the plaintiff, defendant, Mary Gray Tobin, and Edwin R. Dimond, together with their father, W. H. Dimond, entered into an *182
agreement with Horace G. Platt, which is set forth as exhibit "A," according to the terms of which said Platt was to receive certain real and personal property belonging to W. H. Dimond and to his three children, in trust for said children during the term of their lives, applying the income to their use and support, and to "give and convey" one-third of said property to E. R. Dimond upon the death of said W. H. Dimond, and, upon the death of either of the daughters, "to give and convey" one-half of the remaining two-thirds to the devisees and legatees or heirs of the one so dying. On August 16, 1893, another agreement was made whereby W. H. Dimond succeeded Horace G. Platt as trustee under the same trust; that said W. H. Dimond died on or about the eighteenth day of June, 1896, without having appointed his successor in said trust either by will or deed; that thereafter Edwin R. Dimond and the Union Trust Company of San Francisco, as executors of the last will and testament of said W. H. Dimond, brought an action in the superior court in and for the county of San Francisco, against plaintiff herein, her husband, Paul R. Jarboe, Mary Gray Tobin and her husband, Joseph S. Tobin; that in the complaint therein the execution of said deed of trust referred to as exhibit "A" and also the execution of the deed of trust from said Platt to W. H. Dimond and also the death of said Dimond without having appointed a successor were alleged and set forth, and the prayer was that the court appoint a successor in said trust to said W. H. Dimond and that the plaintiffs as said executors be authorized to turn over to said trustee so appointed by the court the property set forth in said deeds of trust; "that Eleanor Sophie Jarboe (the plaintiff herein) appeared in said action and contested the same; that said action was tried upon its merits; that the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law and found that all the allegations of the complaint were true, and that a judgment and decree should be entered adjudging that said W. H. Dimond was the trustee under said trust, and that Horace G. Platt and B. P. Oliver should be appointed trustees in place of said W. H. Dimond, deceased, with all the powers, duties, liabilities and obligations set forth in said trust as incumbent upon and belonging to the trustee under said trust, and thereupon the court duly made, gave and entered its judgment and decree appointing *183
Horace G. Platt and B. P. Oliver trustees in the place and stead of W. H. Dimond, deceased, as trustees under said trust, with all the powers, duties, liabilities and obligations set forth in said trust as incumbent upon and belonging to the trustee under said trust"; that they accepted the trust and so entered upon the discharge of their duties; that certain other actions were brought, in which plaintiff herein was a party, relating to this trust property; that they were contested by plaintiff herein and tried upon their merits and judgment rendered therein. The answer further alleges that the action is barred by the laches of plaintiff and by the provisions of section
On the other hand, it is the contention of appellant that estoppel upon a different cause of action only extends to matters actually litigated and determined and not to questions involved and defenses which might have been, but were not, made. And that it must appear from the record affirmatively that such question was raised and litigated in order to preclude the losing party from contending to the contrary in another suit. As authority for this position, the principal cases cited are: Cromwell v. County of Sacramento,
In the Freeman case, supra, the said opinion of Judge Field is cited with approval, and it is held that this rule "applies to the question as to the constitutionality of subdivision 36 of section 25 of the county government act of 1893. It is true that matter was necessarily involved and must have been determined before judgment could have been entered in the former suit. But it does not appear from the record that such question was raised and litigated. This being a different action upon a different cause of action, the defendant is not estopped from raising the objection."
In Ephraim v. Pacific Bank,
But, accepting appellant's view of the law of estoppel as applied to judgments, supported, it may be said, as that view is by the Freeman case, supra, that a judgment is conclusive only as to the material matters which appear on the face of the record to have been actually determined, still it does not follow that this particular finding of the lower court lacks sufficient support. To the contrary, we must hold that the validity of the said trust was directly put in issue and determined in the former actions. This follows from the stipulation that the answer of respondent herein contains a correct statement of the contents of the judgment-roll in each of said actions. It must be accepted as true, therefore, as alleged in said answer, that the existence and validity of said trust were put in issue and adjudicated. Of course, there is no legal objection to giving effect to this stipulation of the parties, and the case is no different from what it would be had the entire judgment-roll in said actions been incorporated in the bill of exceptions and in the pleadings therein should be disclosed a specific averment as to the validity of said trust, followed by an affirmative finding thereon by the court. Indeed, we have a right to assume that such would appear from a full exposition of said judgment-rolls, but that they were omitted in consequence of said stipulation.
But if we have given this stipulation a wider scope than was intended by the parties, nevertheless, by virtue of the presumption suggested by respondent, we must uphold the finding of the lower court. As we have seen, it appears that appellant contested each of the actions the judgment-rolls in which were introduced in evidence in this case and were before the trial court. It does not appear what the grounds of contest were. There is nothing in the record before us to negative the assumption that one of the grounds of said contest was the invalidity of said trust. Since the record does not purport to set forth all the findings of the court in said actions, we may assume also that the validity of said trust was expressly found. If the contrary be the fact, appellant should have exhibited it in the record. *188
But aside from the foregoing, it is apparent that appellant's position is entirely untenable. The rule as to estoppel by judgment is not correctly stated in the Freeman case,supra. The learned justice who wrote the opinion apparently overlooked the latter part of section
In Wolverton v. Baker,
In Flynn v. Hite,
In Crew v. Pratt,
In Bingham v. Kearney,
It seems entirely clear that, in the actions for the appointment of a trustee under the trust and for an accounting and distribution of the trust fund, the validity of said trust was necessarily involved. The manifest foundation for such action is the existence and legal effect of the trust. Its validity may not have been questioned; it may have been conceded by all parties; the court may have given it little consideration, but it is indisputable that the determination of its validity is inseparably associated with the judgments to which we have referred. It would be a grave reflection upon any court to suggest that it would appoint a trustee to carry out the provisions of a purported trust without inquiry as to its validity and without being satisfied that it is legally operative. There is, manifestly, no authority for the appointment of a trustee to carry out the provisions of a void trust or to determine the existence of a trust fund and direct its apportionment and distribution in accordance with the terms of such trust. We must assume that the court would, if possible, avoid any such illegal and abortive act, and that it would preliminarily determine that the contemplated proceeding was legal as being based upon a valid declaration of trust. At least, such is manifestly its duty, and we must hold that it was performed.
The estoppel was properly pleaded; it was established by the record of the former actions, from which it appears that the validity of said trust now assailed by appellant was necessarily involved in the judgments rendered in those actions; *191 and, under the authorities, it must be held that the question is res adjudicata.
We deem it unnecessary to notice other points made by respondent in favor of the judgment, as we feel satisfied that the finding as to estoppel is correct and is decisive of the controversy.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Chipman, P. J., concurred.