Allen v. McGee

129 P.2d 143, 54 Cal. App. 2d 476, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 380
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 1942
DocketCiv. 13547
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 129 P.2d 143 (Allen v. McGee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. McGee, 129 P.2d 143, 54 Cal. App. 2d 476, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 380 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

BISHOP, J. pro tem.

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment denying him any relief, claiming that the trial court failed to take into account that the effect of a judgment in a previous action had been to establish the title to certain real property in him subject only to a number of liens. We have reached the conclusion that the prior judgment did not have the effect claimed for it by the plaintiff, and that he was rightly denied any relief.

Plaintiff framed his complaint in four counts, each having reference to a piece of real property in Santa Barbara County. In the first count it is alleged that on November 23, 1932, the defendant T. D. Webster executed his grant *478 deed conveying this property in fee to the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff is its owner subject only to certain liens. The judgment in the action which we are going to know as the McGee action was set forth in full, the same judgment that appears in part in the seventh paragraph of this opinion. Bach of the succeeding counts incorporates by reference the allegations respecting the deed of November 23, and the contents of the judgment. The second count differs from the first in that it seeks a judgment in declaratory relief rather than one quieting plaintiff’s title. In the third count the plaintiff complains that several of the defendants took possession of the property without plaintiff’s consent and alleges that the value of the use and occupancy of the property is $250 per month. That the defendants have derived income and profit from their occupancy and should account to plaintiff is the burden of his fourth count.

The problem presented by this appeal is not complicated, but its setting may be said to be, and must be known properly to appraise appellant’s position. One La Torre Webster died in August, 1928, possessed, among other assets, of some sixty acres of land in Santa Barbara County. By his will La Torre Webster provided that of the residue of his estate his daughter, Mary Beckstead, should receive a three-quarters interest, the remaining one-quarter to go to his son, T. Dean Webster. In April of 1930, while the estate was in the course of administration in the probate court, Los Angeles County, Mary Beckstead and Dean Webster agreed in writing between themselves that they should inherit equally, and that upon the distribution of the estate the former should receive the westerly half, Webster should receive the easterly half, of the real property to be distributed. Two other documents were executed during the period of the probate proceedings. The first was one which, if effective, would have served to transfer to Allen, the appellant-plaintiff, all of Webster’s interest in the estate of his father. The second was a grant deed executed by Webster, designed to convey to Allen the real property referred to in the four counts of the complaint. This deed was dated November 23, 1932, recorded December 2, 1932, and the real property described in it by metes and bounds comprises a portion of the property distributed in the estate proceedings.

On December 19, 1932, an order of distribution was made in the Webster estate, decreeing that all the residue of the *479 real property of the estate, consisting of two separate parcels totalling about twenty-six acres (and for convenience’s sake we shall hereafter refer to it as the twenty-six acres) should be distributed, three-quarters interest to Mary Beckstead and one-quarter interest to appellant-plaintiff. By explicit provisions, however, the decree left open for future determination the rights of Dean Webster’s creditors, express reference being made to their right to question the assignment by which the one-quarter interest that was to be Webster’s was distributed to Allen, and their right to insist that by virtue of his agreement with his sister Webster’s interest in the estate amounted to a half interest.

Meanwhile another series of events was taking place which impinged upon those we have just related. On or before September 10, 1930, T. D. McGee had commenced an action against Webster, numbered 308600 in the Superior Court, Los Angeles County, for on that day the sheriff of Santa Barbara County attached all of Webster’s interest in the real property, of which the twenty-six acres was at least a part. In October, 1930, McGee recovered a judgment against Webster in action No. 308600 for over $3,500; an abstract of the judgment was immediately recorded in Santa Barbara County. In February, 1932, the sheriff of Santa Barbara County, under a writ of execution issued in action No. 308600, levied upon all the interest of Webster in the twenty-six acres, which had already been attached, and a little over a year later, in March, 1933, sold that interest to McGee, the judgment creditor. Between the levy and the sale Webster had made the deed of November 23, 1932, already mentioned.

Just when the record before us does not disclose, and it does not matter, McGee brought an action in Santa Barbara County, which we shall hereafter call the McGee action. The first pleading we have is the Amended and Supplemental Complaint for Declaratory Relief, filed some time between June 19 and July 17, 1933, we infer, which would be before the expiration of the twelve months’ period, during which there might have been a redemption from the execution sale. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 701, 702.) As parties defendant in the amended and supplemental complaint we find Webster, Allen, Mary Beckstead, Southwestern Creditors Association, Burt Moore and some fictitiously named persons. In his complaint McGee set forth the facts we have stated in the *480 three preceding paragraphs and he added facts revealing several more judgment liens existing against any real property interests Webster might have in Santa Barbara County. He also attacked by appropriate allegations the assignment by Webster to Allen of Webster’s interest in the estate, and the deed of November 23, 1932, by which Webster purportedly conveyed to Allen a part of the twenty-six acres, claiming them to be void because in fraud of creditors. • The amended and supplemental complaint ended with a prayer upon some of whose terms the plaintiff in the present case places reliance. McGee asked first that the court determine his interest in the land described in the decree of distribution. (McGee was, perhaps we should note, not only the execution purchaser of whatever interest Webster had in the twenty-six acres, but he also had three judgment liens subsequent to the one which had been foreclosed.) Secondly, he prayed that the assignment and the deed from Webster to Allen, both be declared fraudulent and ineffective. Then he asked that Webster “be adjudged and decreed by this Court to have been possessed and entitled to the possession of the Easterly one half of the La Torre Webster Ranch, that is, the Easterly one half of the real property distributed in its Decree of Distribution by the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles, at all times since the 19th day of December, 1932, subject, however, to: ... To (sic) the rights of Plaintiff herein as a judgment creditor in said Action No. 308600 of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles, and as purchaser at execution sale thereunder on the 6th day of March, 1933.

“To the rights of Plaintiff herein as attaching creditor in Actions No. 296096, No. 296222, and Action No.

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Bluebook (online)
129 P.2d 143, 54 Cal. App. 2d 476, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-mcgee-calctapp-1942.