38 Cal. 586 | Cal. | 1869
Lead Opinion
This is an action of ejectment against several persons who were separately in possession of certain parcels of the land in controversy. As to some of the defendants the plaintiff obtained a judgment, and as to the remainder, the judgment went against him. From the judgment against him the plaintiff has appealed to this Court.
The facts are as follows: Prior to the 1st of March, 1862, the plaintiff claimed and held the same title to the land in controversy upon which he now relies for a recovery. On that day he executed and delivered to one French a deed of bargain and sale, absolute upon its face. On the same day, and as part of the same transaction, French executed and delivered to the plaintiff an instrument in wri'ong, in which he stated that the land had been deeded to him as security
said French agrees to endorse on said note, from time to time, moneys received by him for sales made of said land; and it is further agreed, that as soon as the said note is paid, either from the sales of land, or in any other way, so that the said French receives the amount of his note and interest, he binds himself, his heirs, executors and administrators, to re-deed to said Vance all of the lands first deeded to said French, by deed of March 1, 1862, excepting such land as may have been sold by said French, and the proceeds of said sales applied to the said Vance note.”
At the date of this transaction the plaintiff and French were both residents of this State. In 1863 French removed to the State of New York, and was a resident of that State in November, 1866, at which time an action for the possession of the land in controversy was commenced in his name against these respondents in the Circuit Court of the United States, in and for the Northern District of California. The attorney who commenced the action was requested to do so by this plaintiff (Vance), who paid him $100 to meet costs and expenses of the suit; but he was also the attorney in fact of French. At the trial of said action the title of French, under the deed from the plaintiff, was put in issue and tried, and the plaintiff was present and testified as a witness. The verdict and judgment were against French, and in favor of these respondents. After the determination of that action, and before the commencement of this, French conveyed by quitclaim to Vance, the plaintiff in this action.
The respondents pleaded the judgment of the Circuit Court in bar of this action. The Court below sustained the plea, and whether that was error is the only question presented for our consideration.
Whether the judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States against French is a bar to this action, depends wholly upon the question, whether, by the first transaction between the plaintiff and French, the title passed to the latter; if it did, then the plaintiff claims under French by the same title
That a deed, absolute upon its face, may be proved to have been intended only as a mortgage, is settled in this State. The only evidence to show that’the deed from the plaintiff to French was intended to operate as a mortgage only, is the agreement given by French to the plaintiff, of the same date as the deed and as a part of the same transaction. Does that instrument show that the parties intended the deed to operate as a mortgage only; or, in other words, that they intended not to vest the title in French, but to give him a lien only upon the land for the security of his note ?
It seems clear to us that the transaction was not intended as a mortgage merely. The instrument relied on as a defeasance, although not very direct or explicit in its terms, amounts to a declaration of trust, and shows the intention of both the plaintiff and French to have been to vest the title in the latter, so that he might be able to sell and convey the land. That it ivas intended that French should sell so much of the land as should be necessary to pay his note, does not, we think, admit of dispute. That he could not sell and convey the title, if he held only a mortgage, they were bound to know; but as trustee for his own benefit he could; hence, the transaction was intended to take, and was made to take, the latter form. We are, therefore, of the opinion that it was the intention to vest the title in French, and that the deed in question had that effect.
Judgment affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment, not only for the reasons stated by Justice Sandebson, but on the further ground that even
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment.