Arakelian v. Sears

200 P. 757, 53 Cal. App. 646, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 468
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 25, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2273.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 200 P. 757 (Arakelian v. Sears) 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
Arakelian v. Sears, 200 P. 757, 53 Cal. App. 646, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 468 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

On April 6, 1915, Charles Murray and W. A. Jones and their wives were the owners of the lands in controversy situated in the county of Merced. On said date they executed and delivered to the Commercial and Savings Bank of Stockton a deed of trust covering said lands together with another small tract to secure a loan of ten thousand dollars. This deed of trust was recorded in said county on April 14, 1915. On February 17, 1916, this deed of trust was assigned by said hank to the First National Bank of Modesto. On May 12, 1916, the indebtedness secured by this deed of trust being due and unpaid, the lands which are the subject of this action were sold to W. N. Steele, then president of the last-named hank, for the sum of ten thousand six hundred dollars, the amount of the indebtedness. The proceedings under which this sale took place were found by the trial court to be entirely regular, and there is no dispute that they complied strictly with the requirements of the law. A trustees ’ deed was duly made to said Steele on said May 12th. One week later, on *647 May 19th, Steele and wife conveyed said lands to plaintiff Harry Arakelian. The consideration paid therefor by said Arakelian was the sum of twenty-one thousand dollars. On January 3, 1916, respondent, William M. Curtner, began an action in the superior court of Stanislaus County against Murray and Jones and their wives to recover the sum of fifteen thousand dollars and interest. On said date a writ of attachment was issued by said court and thereupon levied upon said lands by the sheriff of said county. This attachment was recorded in the county recorder’s office on the following day. In that action Curtner recovered judgment against the defendants therein for five thousand eight hundred dollars, and a copy of this judgment was duly recorded on June 19, 1917. The present action to quiet title was brought July 10, 1916, against Curtner and others, and its specific purpose was to secure an elimination of a reservation of five acres of land for road purposes, being a p.art of said land purchased as aforesaid by said Harry Arakélian. The rights of the other defendants have been foreclosed, and they are not parties to this appeal, and we may add that Harry Arakelian seems to be the only one of the plaintiffs that has any interest in the controversy, and we shall hereafter refer to him as plaintiff and appellant. Defendant Curtner appeared in the action, and on November 22, 1916, filed an answer, in which he set up his writ of attachment and prayed that it be adjudged superior to the title of plaintiff. The trial of the case was begun on April 5, 1917, and at the close of the taking of the testimony respondent Curtner asked leave of court to file an amended and supplemental answer and cross-complaint. Such leave was granted and said pleading was filed on the ninth day of October, 1917. An answer to said cross-complaint was filed on November 12th following, and further evidence was taken on January 21, 1918. Thereafter findings were filed and the judgment entered in favor of cross-complainant Curtner, from which plaintiff has brought the appeal. In respect to the sale under the deed of trust and the transfer to plaintiff, the amended answer and cross-complaint charged that: “Said W. N. Steele, said Charles Murray and W. A. Jones, and the said Harry Arakelian conspired and contrived together by means of the transaction hereinabove set forth ... to defeat the lien of the said attachment of de *648 fendant, William M. Curtner, upon the said land, and to defraud and cheat the said defendant thereby, and that they did, with the fraudulent intention of cheating and defrauding the said defendant, by means of the purchase of said indebtedness and deed of trust by the First National Bank of Modesto, and the sale of the said land thereunder to W. N. Steele, attempt to effectuate and accomplish a transfer of the title in and to the said land to the plaintiff, Harry Arakelian, freed from the said lien of plaintiff’s attachment, and did thereby effect a fraudulent conveyance of the said land from the said Charles Murray and W. A. Jones to the said Harry Arakelian for the purpose of attempting to deprive defendant, William M. Curtner, of his lien upon and interest in said land.” The court found that Curtner had not been informed that" the land was about to be sold under the trust deed; that the price for which the said land was sold to said W. N. Steele under said deed of trust was not a fair and reasonable price for the land, but was an inadequate price therefor; that the said land was within one week thereafter sold to plaintiff, Harry Arakelian, for more than ten thousand dollars in excess of the amount paid by Steele; that the said excess was not kept by Steele as his private property, but a portion thereof was used by him in the payment of notes of the said W. A. Jones and Charles Murray, held by the First National Bank of Modesto, and that the benefit thereof was thereby given to the said Jones and Murray, and that a portion thereof was paid in cash by said Steele to said Murray and Jones, and that said deed of trust and the indebtedness secured thereby was not purchased by said bank as an investment, but for the purpose of foreclosing the same and of selling the land as aforesaid and for the purpose of defrauding Curtner; that the transfer to plaintiff was fraudulent, and that he had knowledge of and was a party to the fraud, and therefore took the land subject to the lien of Curtner’s judgment.

The case naturally divides itself into two parts: the first relating to the question whether the sale to* Steele under the trust deed was fraudulent, and the second, whether plaintiff, if fraud existed, participated in it, or as a purchaser, was charged with such knowledge as to make the property in his hands burdened with the lien of Curtner’s judgment.

*649 As to the general principle that such conveyance may be avoided or subjected to the lien of a creditor’s claim, where the purpose -exists to defraud a creditor, there is no controversy, and hence that feature of the case may be dismissed without comment.

Respondent claims that certain “badges of fraud” characterized the transaction resulting in the sale to Steele sufficient to warrant the finding of the court as to the invalidity of said purchase.

The various circumstances, which, in their aggregate probative effect, are deemed by respondent sufficient for this purpose, are argued with great force and learning by counsel on both sides, but as we have reached the conclusion that there is insufficient support for the finding that appellant participated in or was charged with notice of any fraud, we may omit consideration of the finding that Steele’s purchase for the said bank was fraudulent. We may say, however, that if such fraud was perpetrated there can be no doubt that an action would lie against Steele and the said bank to establish a trust in said surplus fund and make it subject to respondent’s claim. This would follow from the established principles of equity practice and is directly within the contemplation of section 2224 of the Civil Code.

There is no evidence in the record that plaintiff actually committed fraud or that he had actual knowledge that any fraud had been committed in reference to the conveyance of this property.

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Bluebook (online)
200 P. 757, 53 Cal. App. 646, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arakelian-v-sears-calctapp-1921.