American Medical International, Inc. v. Feller

59 Cal. App. 3d 1008, 131 Cal. Rptr. 270, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1693
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 13, 1976
DocketCiv. 47634
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 59 Cal. App. 3d 1008 (American Medical International, Inc. v. Feller) 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
American Medical International, Inc. v. Feller, 59 Cal. App. 3d 1008, 131 Cal. Rptr. 270, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1693 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

JEFFERSON (Bernard), J.

Plaintiff, American Medical International, Inc., a California corporation, sought partition of certain real property through judicial sale. Named as defendants were their coowners, Jack D. Feller and Mollie P. Levin. Defendants answered the first amended complaint, denying that plaintiff had grounds for the relief sought by denying some of plaintiff’s allegations and alleging certain affirmative defenses. The cause was submitted to the trial court for decision pursuant to a stipulation of facts.

The trial court found for plaintiff and rendered an interlocutory judgment of partition of real property which provided for the appointment of referees' to supervise the sale. Defendants have appealed from the interlocutory judgment; the appeal is properly before us. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (i).)

From the stipulation of facts, including the exhibits which accompanied the stipulation, and the trial court’s findings, we glean the following information: The real property in question consists of land and buildings known as the Westside Hospital, located in Los Angeles. Prior to 1960, the hospital was owned and operated by Denward, Inc., a California corporation. Apparently the hospital was in financial difficulty in 1960. As a result, in furtherancé of an investment scheme, Denward transferred a 50 percent interest in the hospital to Bruce I. Hochman, as trustee. In February 1960, Hochman and Denward leased the hospital for a 20-year term (with option to renew at the end of that time) to W B & H, Inc., a California corporation. The annual rental for the first 10 years was $153,000, and for the second 10 years was $132,000.

It was contemplated by the lessors that the net rental receipts-—that sum available after payment of the first trust deed note (an estimated *1011 amount of $72,000)—would be payable to persons investing in the property. The plan devised by Denward was that investors would be solicited to purchase undivided interests of not less than .25 percent of the 50 percent controlled by Hochman as trustee for such investors.

In April 1960, Hochman duly applied to the State of California Commissioner of Corporations for a permit to sell these undivided percentage shares in the real property to certain persons, including some to whom the hospital was indebted, and also staff doctors of the hospital. In his application for the permit, Hochman declared that the market value of his 50 percent interest was $600,000. The application, in setting forth the investment plan, included the following statement: “Purchasers shall waive their statutory right to partition the realty, except that the right to partition may be available to the prospective purchasers thirty (30) days after the trust deed holders on said realty shall file a Notice of Default in payments on the trust deed.” 1 The permit was issued.

Defendants Feller and Levin, along.with other investors, received grant deeds in 1960 from Hochman. The Feller deed recites that they (Jack D. Feller and Eudice M. Feller, husband and wife) 2 were granted a “one-half of one percent undivided interest” in the described real property (the Westside Hospital), and the Levin deed recites that she was granted an “undivided three-quarters of one percent interest” in the same property. The stipulation of facts sets forth that these grant deeds “were executed pursuant to an application filed with the California Commissioner of Corporations. . . .” Examination of the contents of the grant deeds issued to defendants, a part of our record, reveals that the waiver of the right of partition was not contained therein.

The record reveals that there was recorded in the office of the County Recorder of Los Angeles County in November 1960, a document that sets forth the terms of agreement between Hochman, as trustee, and Denward, with reference to the operation of the property pursuant to the investment plan. The recorded agreement does not refer to the investors’ “waiver of the right of partition,” as expressed in Hochman’s application for a permit to sell undivided interests in the real property, but does recite that “Hochman, as trustee, has applied to the Commissioner of *1012 Corporations of the State of California and has obtained a permit to sell and dispose of the 50% undivided interest in said real property standing in his name as trustee in undivided interests of not less than ¼ of 1%.”

An additional party to this recorded agreement was a partnership known as Invesco Associates, identified as the owner of 100 percent of the capital stock of Denward. The recorded agreement provided that Denward and its grantees and successors-in-interest were obligated to pay off the trust deed encumbrance and hold Hochman, the trustee, and his grantees and successors-in-interest harmless in the event of a default under the terms of the trust deed. The Denward obligation on the trust deed note was thus made to inure to the benefit of the investors who purchased from Hochman, the trustee, undivided interests in the hospital property.

The factual stipulation states that, on or about January 1970, plaintiff acquired for value the undivided 50 percent interest remaining with Denward, and that in 1972, plaintiff acquired for value an undivided 48.75 percent interest of the interest of which Hochman had been trustee. Defendants Feller and Levin apparently refused to sell their undivided interests to plaintiff

In their answer to the first amended complaint, defendants alleged as a defense that partition of the real property by sale was banned by a waiver of the right of partition. Defendants also asserted as a defense that at the time they obtained their interests in the real property, it was understood by all coowners of the property that the property had been leased until 1980, thereby assuring a long-term, secure investment for those purchasing undivided interests in the property.

The stipulation of facts sets forth that the parties to the action agree that physical partition is not possible; and that plaintiff now holds a 98.75 percent undivided interest in the premises, while the defendants hold, between them, a 1.25 percent undivided interest.

Among the findings of fact made below is finding number 7, which recites: “That the successors in interest to Bruce I. Hochman, Trustee, namely, the Defendants, Jack D. Feller and Mollie P. Levin and the Plaintiff, American Medical International, as to 48.75% only, had a restrictive right in which to seek partition. Such right was waived in the application by Bruce I. Hochman, as Trustee for purchasers, to the *1013 Commissioner of Corporations dated April 19, I960, except that the right of partition would be available to the Defendants, Jack D. Feller and Mollie P. Levin and the Plaintiff, American Medical International, is to 48.75% only, in the event the trust deed holders on said real >roperty shall have filed a notice of default in the payments of the deed >f trust and that default was not cured for a period of thirty (30) days.”

We turn now to a discussion of the legal principles applicable to partition of real property. The right of a coowner to seek partition is governed by statute. (Code Civ.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Cal. App. 3d 1008, 131 Cal. Rptr. 270, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-medical-international-inc-v-feller-calctapp-1976.