Andreotti v. Andreotti

224 Cal. App. 2d 533, 36 Cal. Rptr. 709, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1498
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 7, 1964
DocketCiv. 7216
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 224 Cal. App. 2d 533 (Andreotti v. Andreotti) 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
Andreotti v. Andreotti, 224 Cal. App. 2d 533, 36 Cal. Rptr. 709, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1498 (Cal. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

COUGHLIN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment quieting title to certain real property.

In 1913, Joe Andreotti, a native of Switzerland, bought the property in question, which is a ranch or farm in Imperial Valley consisting of approximately 125 acres of land. Thereafter he, his wife, and his family, consisting of several sons and a daughter, worked and lived upon this ranch. The wife and one of the sons predeceased the events hereinafter related.

The defendant Guido Andreotti, an appellant herein, was the oldest son; lived on the ranch until 1935; moved away when he married; was then 29 years of age; and up to that time had helped farm the property for approximately 22 years. When Guido left, the plaintiff, Andrew Andreotti, who was the youngest son, then being about 20 years of age, worked and managed the ranch by himself, because all of the other relatives had moved away and his father’s health was failing.

In the fall of 1936 Joe Andreotti, the father, went to Switzerland to settle a property matter; told Guido that he would return in six months; did not return; died in August 1944; and left a will devising all of his property to his remaining three sons and his daughter.

At the time the father left for Swizterland the plaintiff, *536 Andrew, was living upon and working the ranch; also was working two other ranches which he had rented, one on a sharecropper basis and the other for $15 an acre per annum; thereafter continued to live on and operate the Andreotti ranch; paid all of the expenses in connection therewith and, except as hereinafter noted, kept all of the proceeds therefrom; paid the taxes thereon, although the record at hand does not show the amount thereof; and also paid off two encumbrances against it. One of these encumbrances was a mortgage securing a loan in the sum of $2,000 payable to a man named Holt; was not known to the plaintiff until sometime after his father had left for Switzerland; was paid off in 1943; and thereupon was assigned to the plaintiff. The other encumbrance was a deed of trust securing a loan in the sum of $5,000 payable to the Federal Land Bank in semiannual payments of $250, commencing in 1937; was paid off in 1947; and was released by a reconveyance.

The plaintiff testified that he did not know whether the debts secured by these encumbrances were paid with money that he “made off” of the Andreotti “farm or some other farm.” The checks given in payment of the February 1945 and July 1946 installments of the Federal Land Bank loan were entered in the plaintiff’s books “as a credit to the bank and a debit to farming expense labeled ‘rent.’ ” The plaintiff’s bookkeeper testified that the aforesaid checks should have been posted to “ ‘land payment.’ ” There is no evidence showing bookkeeping entries with respect to the other payments on the indebtedness. The plaintiff refused to disclose whether in his income tax returns he had claimed these payments as rent.

In August 1948, which was the year following final payment on the Federal Land Bank loan, the plaintiff delivered to his sister and to the defendant Guido, respectively, checks in the sum of $500 and $1,000, each bearing the notation “Rent” in his handwriting; in December 1949, delivered to each of them, respectively, a check in the sum of $1,000 bearing the notation ‘ ‘ Rent ’ ’; each year thereafter to and including 1957, delivered to them, respectively, a check in the sum of $500; and for the years 1959 through 1960 delivered to his sister alone a check in the sum of $500. It was stipulated that all of these payments were “noted on the plaintiff’s records as rent or charged to rent.”

In 1958 the defendant Guido sought a division of the property, and to this end instituted proceedings to probate his *537 father’s will. Thereupon the plaintiff brought the instant quiet title action against Guido individually and as administrator with will annexed of his father’s estate, his sister, and his brother, Aldo, who has been missing for many years and apparently is dead; alleged, in substance, that he had acquired title to the property by adverse possession for a period of over 20 years; and caused default judgments to be entered against his sister and Aldo. Guido contested the action, and from the judgment against him he appeals.

In the course of his examination, the plaintiff was asked the basis for his claim to the property, and he answered: “Well, I don’t know how to explain it now, but after I paid the mortgages off, some of these papers that we looked over, well, will bear out that if I hadn’t paid them off, no one volunteered to pay them off, everybody left the ranch and I was out there, I took it over, and when my dad left for Switzerland in 1936, he told me to take the ranch, take it over, and I made all the payments on it, I paid all the taxes, and if I hadn’t paid off the second mortgage or the first mortgage, it would have been nobody’s ranch, so I just figure it’s my ranch, my property.”

The court found that for more than 20 years the plaintiff had been “in actual exclusive possession” of the property, “claiming the same adversely against all persons and claiming to hold fee interest” therein; that he paid the taxes thereon during that period “from his own personal funds”; that the defendant Guido was not a cotenant of the plaintiff at the time of the commencement of the action; that neither the defendant Guido, the estate of Joe Andreotti, nor the latter’s heirs, with the exception of the plaintiff, had any interest in the property at that time; and that the father, Joe Andreotti, had no interest therein since January 1, 1938.

The defendant contends that the evidence does not support these findings because there is no proof that the plaintiff’s possession of the ranch was hostile or adverse; that the plaintiff’s possession during his father’s lifetime was with the latter’s permission, and after his death as a cotenant with the defendant; and that there is no substantial evidence that the father or the defendant had notice that the plaintiff was claiming the property as his own. In reply, the plaintiff claims that his father made an oral gift of the property to him; that, in any event, he held possession thereof adversely to his father and all others under a claim of gift, thereby *538 acquiring title thereto prior to his father’s death; that the defendant did not acquire any interest in the property under his father’s will because the father had no title thereto at the time of his death; and, for this reason, the defendant did not become a cotenant with the plaintiff.

Primarily the plaintiff’s argument is based upon a contention that his father’s statement to him: “... to take the ranch, take it over” effected a parol gift of the property to him. In determining whether or not the testimony of the plaintiff relating to this statement justifies the conclusion that the father thereby intended to give the ranch to the plaintiff, it is necessary to review such testimony in context with other testimony and with undisputed facts in the case.

If the evidence supports the conclusion that the father, by his statement aforesaid, intended to make a gift to his son it was a gift in praesenti and not a promise to make a gift. Preliminarily it should be noted that the statute of frauds forecloses a gift of real property by a mere oral transfer. (Civ.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 Cal. App. 2d 533, 36 Cal. Rptr. 709, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andreotti-v-andreotti-calctapp-1964.