Anthony v. Janssen

191 P. 538, 183 Cal. 329, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 411
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5038.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 191 P. 538 (Anthony v. Janssen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthony v. Janssen, 191 P. 538, 183 Cal. 329, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 411 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

*330 THE COURT.

This is an appeal from the judgment in an action brought by the plaintiffs, as trustees of the Palagonite Industrial Mining Company, a defunct corporation, and of the stockholders thereof, to quiet title to four separate mining claims in San Diego County. The complaint is in the form usual in such cases. In the answer of the defendant it is not only denied that the plaintiffs are the owners of the premises or have any interest therein, but facts are therein set forth constituting the basis of the defendant’s alleged title, for the quieting of which he also prays the court’s decree.

The court by its decision determined, first that the plaintiffs have no interest in these mining claims and are not entitled to any relief in the action; second, that defendant is the owner of the portion claimed by him of the said mining claims. Judgment was entered accordingly, and the plaintiffs appealed therefrom. Plaintiffs also duly presented in the lower court a motion to vacate the judgment and for a new trial. On that motion it was ordered “that the said judgment and decree be vacated and set aside and a new trial be and the same is hereby granted as to all matters contained therein quieting defendant’s title to the described premises and as to all affirmative relief to the defendant other than his judgment for costs.” At present, therefore, and assuming that the said order did not vacate the entire judgment, it is only necessary to consider that part of the judgment from which the appeal is insisted upon at this time, viz., the determination “that the plaintiff take nothing by this action.” This adjudication resulted from a finding that' the allegations of the complaint are untrue; in other words, a finding that it is not true that the plaintiffs own or have any interest in the described property.

At the trial it was stipulated that on the second day of June, 1910, title to the said mining claims was vested in the plaintiffs as trustees of the Palagonite Industrial Mining Company and of its stockholders. On this stipulation plaintiffs rested; whereupon the defendant in support of the allegations of his answer introduced in evidence a contract entered into between the plaintiffs and Ralph E. Pearce on the second day of June, 1910, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to convey the premises to Pearce for fifty thousand dollars *331 upon certain specified conditions, and under which Pearce went into possession of said claims. Thereafter on or about July 15, 1910, Pearce assigned this contract to the Premier Investment Company, a corporation, at the same time delivering to said corporation possession of the premises. On August 1, 1910, Margaret Standeford, one of said plaintiffs, conveyed to Pearce all her interest in the mining claims as one of the trustees of said defunct corporation, and Pearce two weeks later conveyed that interest to the Premier Investment Company. Oral evidence was also introduced tending to show a similar conveyance from Mabel E. Anthony and Ada D. Anthony, the remaining trustees. While the Premier Investment Company was in possession of the mining claims debts were incurred by it for work and labor done thereon, for which liens were filed. James R Haddock became the owner of these liens, and in August, 1911, commenced an action to foreclose the same against these plaintiffs and the Premier Investment Company. All of the defendants in said suit failed to appear and their default was entered; the judgment, however, ran against the Premier Investment Company alone. By it the sheriff was directed to make a sale of the property and to execute a deed thereof to the purchaser “for the interest of said defendant Premier Investment Company.” In the month of May, 1917, the sheriff of San Diego County sold and conveyed the property described in the judgment to the plaintiff therein, James R. Haddock, who thereafter conveyed it to I. P. Janssen, the defendant and respondent herein.

It is not claimed by the respondent that the option agreement divested plaintiffs of their title, but that he deraigned title from the plaintiffs by means of the above-mentioned conveyances to the Premier Investment Company coupled with the sheriff’s deed made in the foreclosure suit and which purported to convey to the grantee therein named whatever interest in the property was owned by said corporation. As before stated, the defendant introduced evidence for the purpose of establishing that plaintiffs, as trustees of the Palagonite Industrial Mining Company, had conveyed the real property involved in this action to the Premier Investment Company. Such evidence included a deed from Margaret S. Standeford, but the only evidence produced tending to show a similar conveyance by the other two trustees was in the *332 form of testimony offered and received on the theory, as counsel for the defendant stated, that there had been executed by said plaintiffs as trustees a deed conveying the property to Pearce, which deed had been lost and had not been recorded. There were two witnesses on the subject. The testimony of Charles L. Brown, at one time president of the Premier Investment Company, amounted to nothing more than that “the assignment from Mabel E. Anthony and Ada D. Anthony to Pearce” had been brought to him by Pearce and had been examined by him; that afterward this document and others having been deposited in the files of that company, the papers had been missing, had been searched for, and returned to the files. This testimony was stricken out by the court, except the statement that the papers were missing, were sought for, and returned. J. E. Neal, a bookkeeper of the Premier Investment Company for about a year following September 1, 1910, after examining the deed from Standeford to Pearce and of Pearce to the Premier Investment Company, testified that he saw a paper “similar to the first of these instruments,” but whether the wording was just the same he could not say. Further he testified: “I know nothing of any search being made for the papers and was not aware of it. It is among the files of the company now.” [1] It is manifest that no sufficient foundation was laid to entitle the defendant to introduce secondary evidence of the contents of the deed said to have been made by plaintiffs Anthony. So far as appears, if searched for, it would have been found and could have been produced at the trial. Moreover, there is no evidence -of its delivery by the grantors. It is also clear that the testimony does not show what property, if any, was conveyed thereby.

The only other evidence relied on by the defendant to show that the title of the trustees had passed to him consisted of the decree of the superior court of San Diego County and the sheriff’s deed executed to James R. Haddock above referred to, purporting to be made under the authority of that decree, which evidence was received over the objection of plaintiffs. The Premier Investment Company was in possession of the property under the optional contract of purchase, according to the terms of which the corporation was authorized to do certain development work. It was while operating the property under this contract that the company *333 incurred certain debts for such work for which the mining claims were legally subject to liens as against the plaintiffs as well as against that company.

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Bluebook (online)
191 P. 538, 183 Cal. 329, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-v-janssen-cal-1920.