Asisten v. Underwood

183 Cal. App. 2d 304, 7 Cal. Rptr. 84, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1751
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 1960
DocketCiv. 6183
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 183 Cal. App. 2d 304 (Asisten v. Underwood) 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
Asisten v. Underwood, 183 Cal. App. 2d 304, 7 Cal. Rptr. 84, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1751 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

*306 GRIFFIN, P. J.

This is an action (1) to quiet title to the real property covered by two deeds; (2) to cancel the deeds; and (3) for compensatory and exemplary damages. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made in favor of the plaintiff upon which a judgment was entered quieting plaintiff’s title against the defendants. Defendants Jacobson and Chiodo appeal from the judgment.

Plaintiff was approximately 53 years of age and employed as a cook at the time the events involved in this case occurred. He was born in the Philippines, had never attended school and spoke poor English. In February 1958 he owned the property involved in this action, upon which was located a duplex dwelling, one unit of which was occupied by the plaintiff and the other being rented by him to a tenant. It was stipulated by the parties that the value of this property was $14,000.

In February 1958 plaintiff was introduced to Jeri Underwood, who was approximately 22 years of age and without funds. Norman Williams’ wife went with her. Jeri’s acquaintance with plaintiff arose from plaintiff’s statement to his friend that he would like to know some girl because of his lonesomeness. Her true name was Geraldine Murphy and she had previously been married, had obtained an interlocutory decree of divorce, but the final decree of divorce had never been obtained. At the time she met plaintiff, Jeri was living in the home of Norman Williams (whose true name was Norman Williams Ashook). Shortly after they met, Jeri told the plaintiff that she and Williams were planning to open a dance hall and she asked him to advance funds to enable them to obtain a lease. Plaintiff gave Jeri $200 for this purpose and a short time later gave Norman Williams an additional $300 with which to finance preparations for the opening of the dance hall. However, Jeri Underwood’s application for a license to operate a dance hall was denied and she and Williams then decided to operate a surplus store instead. Jeri approached the plaintiff and asked him if she could borrow $3,000 to stock the store. Since he had already given her and Williams all the cash he had available, Jeri suggested to plaintiff that the money could be borrowed by using his house as security for the loan and that the loan would be repaid out of the profits of the store. Plaintiff assented to this plan. Jeri moved into plaintiff’s apartment with him. On March 13, Jeri and Williams called on plaintiff at his *307 place of employment and told him the papers were ready to be signed. They had already located a notary public in a nearby office and asked her to be on hand, knowing that plaintiff could be absent from his work for only a few minutes. Plaintiff went with them to the office of the notary public and signed the paper. He testified that he hadn’t read the paper before he signed it because another paper was clipped across the top of it and that he didn’t know what the paper was when he signed it, but he thought the paper was part of a loan transaction. Plaintiff testified that he would not have signed the document had he known that it was in fact a quitclaim deed transferring his property to Jeri. In her testimony she admitted that the proposal made by her to plaintiff was that his property be used as security for a loan to raise funds to be used to start the business. She admitted that she knew that the deed transferred title of the plaintiff’s house to her and testified that she had told plaintiff that it would give her authority to get a loan for him and to save him from missing work while endeavoring to obtain a loan. After plaintiff signed the quitclaim deed, he was given Jeri’s promissory note in the face amount of $5,000, payable one year from date. After the quitclaim deed was returned to Jeri from the recorder’s office, she gave it to Norman Williams.

Testimony concerning subsequent events is conflicting, but it seems well established that a few days later Jeri and Norman Williams offered to sell the property to defendant and appellant Joe Chiodo for $6,000. Chiodo had been previously acquainted with Norman Williams and other members of his family and had previously loaned them money (evidenced by promissory notes). Chiodo went to look at the property and examined it from the outside. He testified that he did not inspect the premises on the inside, although the offer made to him by Jeri and Williams included the furniture within the house. Apparently Jeri gave Chiodo a bill of sale for all of the furniture in plaintiff’s property, which bill of sale was placed in escrow. Nor did Chiodo inquire directly of the plaintiff as to his interest in the property, although plaintiff continuously resided in the premises after the date of the purported quitclaim deed from plaintiff to Jeri. Chiodo agreed to buy the property on the terms offered and on March 17, 1958, an escrow was opened to complete the sale. As an offset against the purchase price, Chiodo cancelled certain promissory notes of Norman Williams and members of his family *308 and paid the balance of the purchase price with two checks which were cashed by Jeri who then turned the funds over to Williams.

At Chiodo’s request, the title to the property was transferred to I. Jacobson and Rose Jacobson, who acted as Chiodo’s nominees, taking title to the property as his agents. The Jacobsons then gave Chiodo a deed to the property, listing him as grantee, which deed was never recorded. The Jacob-sons testified that they were close friends and business associates of Chiodo and that they took title to the property as his agents at his request. Chiodo testified that he had the title placed in the Jacobsons’ name because he planned to travel to Omaha during September 1958 to visit his brother and he wanted the title in the name of someone who could take care of the property for him in his absence. Chiodo’s plans for his trip to Omaha never materialized. Contemporaneously with his purchase of the property from Jeri Underwood, Chiodo gave her an option to repurchase, within six months, at a price of $8,200. Shortly afterward, Jeri assigned this option to Norman Williams.

After the sale of plaintiff’s property to Chiodo, Williams and Jeri Underwood opened a surplus store in National City and operated it for approximately one month. On April 8, 1958, plaintiff and J eri went through a marriage ceremony in Tijuana, Mexico. She had not obtained a final decree of divorce at that time. Immediately after the ceremony, Jeri complained of feeling ill and at her request plaintiff took her to the bus depot where she embarked for Los Angeles to visit her mother, where she remained. About April 30, 1958, Norman Williams and a prospective buyer for the surplus store visited Jeri in Los Angeles, at which time the store was sold to the prospective buyer for $5,000. Jeri testified that she endorsed the check over to Williams. Plaintiff did not receive the proceeds of the sale to Chiodo or the proceeds of the sale of the business.

The appellants contend that the trial court’s finding that Norman Williams and Jeri Underwood entered into a fraudulent scheme to deprive plaintiff of his real property, and, by means of fraudulent representation, obtained plaintiff’s signature on a quitclaim deed transferring title to Jeri, is unsupported by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
183 Cal. App. 2d 304, 7 Cal. Rptr. 84, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asisten-v-underwood-calctapp-1960.