69 P. 700 | Cal. | 1902
The court below sustained a demurrer to the third amended complaint. Upon the plaintiffs declining to further amend, judgment was entered in favor of the defendants. From this judgment the appeal is taken, accompanied by a bill of exceptions. The grounds of the demurrer were: 1. That the facts stated in the complaint do not state a cause of action; and 2. That the action is barred by the statute of limitations. *62
From the complaint it appears that the plaintiff Sarah G. Tully married John Tully, deceased, February 29, 1884; said Tully at the time was a widower, and the defendants, except Maurice Higgins, are his children by the former wife, who died in 1881; that the plaintiff Sarah G. Tully, owing to the dissipated and licentious habits of said John Tully, deceased, instituted a suit of divorce July 29, 1885; that thereafter, August 1, 1885, the said John Tully conveyed his property, consisting of several separate tracts of land, and also some personal property, to his children by the former wife, the defendants herein. Thereupon the plaintiff in said action for divorce amended her complaint by making the grantees in said conveyances, defendants herein, parties to said action. The findings and decree in that action for divorce are appended to the complaint herein and made a part thereof. In said findings it is recited: "That said conveyances were without any valuable consideration from said grantees to said grantor, and were made by the said defendant John Tully because of the institution of this action, and for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff out of any interest which she might assert or seek to establish as to said property by or through this action, or any benefit she might derive in this action from the ownership and possession of said property by said defendant." And, as conclusions of law, the court finds that the plaintiff therein was entitled to a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony, and to the custody of an infant child (which appears to have been born after the institution of the suit); and that she was entitled to permanent alimony for the support of herself and the said minor child in the sum of fifty dollars per month until the further order of the court; "that the conveyances of the defendant John Tully to the other defendants herein are fraudulent, inoperative, and void as to any interest or claim of the plaintiff therein or thereto as his said wife." And in the decree entered upon the findings it is adjudged that John Tully pay to the plaintiff therein, Sarah G. Tully, the sum of fifty dollars per month for the support and maintenance of herself and said infant, "and the payment thereof, and of any other sum which may be hereafter awarded instead thereof, is hereby secured and charged and declared a lien upon that certain tract of land mentioned in the complaint and described as follows: Three hundred and seventy acres of *63 land bounded north and east by the county road, south by lands of Weather, Tuers, and Riordan, on the west by the Coyote Creek." And it is further adjudged "that the conveyance by said John Tully, of his private property to his codefendants, his children by a former marriage, was and is inoperative and void as to any interest or claim of plaintiff therein or thereto as his said wife." The decree in the divorce suit was entered May 14, 1886, and a little over one month thereafter, — to wit, June 19, 1886, — the parties thereto remarried and lived together until said John Tully died, November 26, 1894. The plaintiffs herein, other than Sarah G. Tully, are the minor children of said Sarah G. Tully and John Tully, deceased. It is averred in the complaint herein that prior to his (said John Tully's) death he, wishing to protect the plaintiff, Sarah G. Tully, on the 20th of September, 1894, in part fulfillment of his marriage contract with her, executed and delivered to her a grant, bargain, and sale deed for one undivided third interest in and to said lands and premises, which deed is appended to and made a part of the complaint herein. It is further averred that thereafter, on the twelfth day of October, 1894, said John Tully duly made, executed, and delivered to the defendants herein, other than Maurice Higgins, being his said children by his former wife, a deed purporting to be in consideration of love and affection, and for the better maintenance, support, and protection of said grantees, in which he purported to grant and confirm unto the said grantees the lands and premises described in the former deed by said John Tully to said children, the defendants herein, which deed of confirmation is appended to the complaint and made a part thereof. It is further averred that said deed of confirmation was made subsequent to and subject to the rights and equities of the plaintiff growing out of the contract of the second marriage between the said Sarah G. Tully and John Tully, and subject to her equity to have said one-third interest in said land conveyed to her free from the pretended claim of said defendants. It is further set forth in the complaint that prior to the commencement of this action, — to wit, on the fifth day of December, 1896, — plaintiff Sarah G. Tully commenced an action at law in the superior court of said county of Santa Clara, state of California, against the above-named defendants, save said Maurice Higgins, in the nature of ejectment, to recover from said *64 defendants her undivided one third in and to the said lands and premises; that summons was thereupon issued, and said defendants duly and regularly appeared in said action and filed their answers therein, claiming to be the owners of said lands and premises, and denying ownership to and in said lands and premises, or any part thereof, upon the part of the plaintiff, said Sarah G. Tully; that said action came on regularly for trial in said superior court, and said court held and decided that the plaintiffs therein could not prove the invalidity of the deeds to said defendants from said John Tully, or that said defendants held the said lands in trust for said plaintiff; that said defendants, upon the trial of said action, offered, and they were admitted, in evidence, deeds to them from said John Tully, made as aforesaid, and thereafter, on the sixth day of July, 1897, the court filed its findings and entered judgment in said action against said plaintiff therein, Sarah G. Tully, and in favor of the defendants herein, save said Maurice Higgins. It is further averred that the defendants are threatening to dispossess the plaintiff from said lands and premises under said judgment. It is also averred that said John Tully remained in possession and control of the land set forth in the deeds of conveyance to the defendants up to the time of his death, claiming the same as his own; that he cultivated and controlled said lands and paid the taxes thereon. It is further averred that the conveyances from said John Tully to his said children, the defendants herein, were procured by false representations and the exercise of undue influence and control and without any consideration. Wherefore it is prayed that it be adjudged and decreed that the defendants have ever since the first day of August, 1885, held said lands and premises in trust, and that the plaintiff Sarah G. Tully be decreed and adjudged to be the owner of an undivided one third of said lands and premises, and that the children of said plaintiff Sarah G. Tully and John Tully, the other plaintiffs herein, be decreed and adjudged to be the owners of an undivided four tenths of the remaining two thirds of said lands and premises, and that it be decreed said defendants make, execute, and deliver in due form deeds to plaintiff Sarah G. Tully of one undivided third, and to the other plaintiffs of four tenths of the remaining two thirds.
1. The deed of conveyance by John Tully to his children *65
by his first wife was not entirely void, but only voidable so far as it affected the rights of then existing creditors, and the plaintiff Sarah G. Tully, being entitled to alimony and support, may be considered as a creditor. And the findings and decree in the divorce suit, as will be seen, go to this extent only. InMurray v. Murray,
The deed of John Tully passed the title to his children, the defendants, and that title has continued to remain in the grantees. Even the one tract on which a lien was declared to secure payment of the alimony did not divest them of the legal title, but simply rendered that tract subject to the payment of said alimony. And the fact that Tully remained in possession of the premises up to the time of his death, and used the same and paid the taxes thereon, did not have the effect to divest his grantees of the title by him conveyed. (Emmons v. Barton,
2. The action would seem to be barred by the statute of limitations. As already shown, John Tully had neither legal nor equitable title after his conveyance to his children, and there is no trust relation so as to save the operation of the statute of limitations. (Nougues v. Newlands,
The demurrer to the complaint was properly sustained.
The judgment is affirmed.
Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.