DocketNumber: No. 14025
Judges: Sharpstein
Filed Date: 8/31/1891
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
— This action is for the specific performance of a contract whereby defendant Gothard and his late wife, Elizabeth Jarte, agreed to convey to the plaintiffs a certain tract of land, and forty shares of water stock appurtenant thereto, upon'their paying the stipulated price therefor in certain installments, all of which, excepting the last, had been paid before the commencement of this suit as stipulated; and the plaintiffs are ready and willing to pay the last installment to such person or persons as the court may determine is or are entitled to receive the same. The defendants Gothard and Edwards each claim to be entitled to receive said last installment; and defendant Gothard claims that he is also entitled to the installments which have been paid to defendant Edwards since the death of said Elizabeth Jane. The contest is wholly between the defendants Gothard and Edwards, as to which of them is entitled to receive and hold the proceeds of said sale. The decision and judgment were in favor of Gothard
The facts found by the court are, that the allegations of the plaintiffs’ complaint are true. That entitled them to the relief prayed by and granted to them. The residue of the findings are upon the issues raised by the answers of defendants Gothard and Edwards as to their respective claims to the moneys paid and to be paid by plaintiffs under thei-r contracts with the Gothards.
The first finding upon the issue is, that “ Elizabeth Jane Gothard (the wife of the defendant George Gothard, and mother of B. T. Gothard), on the eleventh day of January, 1887, made, executed, and delivered to the defendant Thomas Edwards a conveyance of her interest in the real estate described in the plaintiffs’ complaint herein. The conveyance was made in view of the approaching death of said Elizabeth J. Gothard, and for the purpose of putting the legal title to said realty in said Edwards, to collect the money then due on the contract for the sale thereof in said complaint set out, and hold the same, in trust, for Bertrude Gothard alone, and with an oral understanding then and there with said Edwards to that effect, and without other consideration than such understanding.”
The next finding is: “ That thereafter, to wit, on the twelfth day of January, 1887, the said Elizabeth Jane Gothard, in anticipation of death, and cum animo testandi, made and signed ” a paper, of which a copy is inserted in said finding, and, among other things, contains the following:—■
“I deed to my father, Thomas Edwards, all interest in that property at Anaheim that I now own, being the same that was given me by deed of gift, except twelve hundred dollars, to pay the mortgage thereon, also five hundred dollars that we received on the sale of the said land now due; three thousand one hundred dollars, which I request be used as follows: two hundred dollars to be*606 paid to Mr. Melrose, commission fees for selling the said place; one hundred dollars to my husband, being in lieu for the one hundred dollars that he has paid out of the five hundred dollars that I gave him from my separate property; twelve hundred dollars, to be used to the best advantage in buying a lot for my remains and erecting a good stone thereon, fencing the said lot in good shape, also to pay what portion of my funeral expenses shall be left unpaid. The remainder, which is sixteen hundred dollars, is to be kept for the use of my child, Bertrude Thomas Gothard, until he becomes twenty-one years old, all interest on the same to be invested and added to the principal, with the exception of ten or fifteen dollars a year to keep my grave and lot- in good condition; if he dies before the age of twenty-one years, then to my brothers’ and sisters’ children. It is also my desire that my burial lot shall be put in my child’s name.
“ (Signed) Elizabeth J. Gothard.”
The court finds that the paper was not olographic, but was written by said Edwards, and was only subscribed by said Elizabeth Jane Gothard, and was without attesting witnesses, and that she died within less than twelve hours thereafter, and said paper “ was intended by said decedent as her last will and testament, but that she died intestate and leaving no estate, and said attempted will was worthless for any purpose, and that she left no heirs at law other than the said George Gothard, her surviving husband, and said Bertrude T. Gothard, her minor child.”
From the foregoing facts the court finds, among others, the following conclusions of law: “That the said sum of $1,398.95 so due from plaintiffs shall be paid by them into the hands of said George Gothard, guardian; that the defendant Thomas Edwards is indebted to the estate of the minor, B. T. Gothard, in the sum of $1,971, less $211.”
There is nothing in the findings of fact, much less in the evidence, to base such a conclusion upon. The finding is, that “Elizabeth Jane Gothard, on the eleventh day of January, 1887, made, executed, and delivered to the defendant Thomas Edwards a conveyance of her interest in the real estate described in the plaintiffs’ complaint.” That imports a deed absolute on its face, as the evidence proves it to be. But the evidence aliunde the deed, at least, tends to show that it was made, as the court finds it was, for the purpose of putting the legal title to said realty in said Edwards, to enable him to collect the money then due on the contract for the sale thereof in said complaint set out, and hold the same in trust. If the evidence is sufficient to establish a trust, there is nothing in the evidence or findings of fact to support the decision that Edwards, under the trust, is not entitled to hold all of the money paid and receive all to be paid by the plaintiffs for a conveyance to them of the land described in their complaint. A fortiori, if a trust has not been established, he is entitled to receive and hold it. We think, however, that a trust is established, and that the objects for which it was created are specified in the paragraph above quoted from the writing which the court finds was made and signed on the twelfth day of January, 1887, the day following the execution of the deed to Thomas Edwards. We do not overlook the provision of the code that “no trust in relation to real property is valid unless created or declared by a written instrument, subscribed by the trustee or by his agent thereto, authorized by writing.” (Civ. Code, sec. 852.)
The defendant Edwards, by his verified answer in this
The contention of counsel for respondent Gothard is, that the writing of the date of January 12, 1887, was intended as a will, and being so intended, it nullified the deed of January 11, 1887; that the deed, which is properly executed, was vitiated by a subsequent futile attempt to make a will; that the two instruments are so blended as to constitute but one, and that both must stand or fall “ with the sufficiency or insufficiency of the execution of the testamentary paper dated January 12, 1887.” There are cases in which it is held that a deed and will made upon the same day constitute one testamentary act; and other cases, in which deeds have been held to be testamentary. But we are unable to find any case in which it has been held that a deed, otherwise valid, is rendered invalid by a void instrument subsequently made by the grantor.
The theory of respondent Gothard’s counsel does not appear to have been adopted by the court below. But we can conceive of no sounder or more plausible theory upon which the decision of the court below could be sustained. We think the decision clearly erroneous, and would modify or direct a modification of the judgment in accordance with the views above expressed were it not for the fact that there is no finding on one of the material issues.
By the contract between the Gothards and the plaintiffs the former agreed to convey with the land described therein a “ water right thereunto appertaining, viz., forty shares.” In his answer, defendant Gothard states that he is the owner of said forty shares of water stock, and that it “ is distinct and separate, and distinct property, from said land.”
We think appellant is entitled to receive and hold all the moneys paid or to be paid for the land conveyed to him by Elizabeth Jane Gothard. But if the water stock is owned by George Gothard, he is entitled to the money paid or to be paid for that. And it is necessary that the court should find who owns the water stock, and what proportion of the money paid or to be paid by the plaintiffs is for said water stock.
So much of the judgment only as adjudges “that on payment of the money remaining due by plaintiffs on the contract of purchase set up in plaintiffs’ complaint, to wit, the sum of $1,398.95, the said Thomas Edwards and said George Gothard convey to plaintiffs herein the land and water stock in the complaint described” is affirmed.
With that exception, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the court below to try and find upon the issue raised by the allegation of defendant George Gothard, that he is the owner of said forty shares of water stock, and upon the trial of said issue the respective parties will be allowed to introduce any evidence pertinent to said issue.
Harrison, J., Paterson, J., McFarland,, J., De. Haven, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.