Back v. Farnsworth

77 P.2d 295, 25 Cal. App. 2d 212, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 793
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1938
DocketCiv. 6000
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 77 P.2d 295 (Back v. Farnsworth) 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
Back v. Farnsworth, 77 P.2d 295, 25 Cal. App. 2d 212, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 793 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

Upon appropriate pleadings the trial court decreed that the appellants held a Los Angeles lot and dwelling house together with a sum of money collected as rental therefrom in trust for the respondent. It was held the facts involved establish a resulting trust in favor of the respondent. From that decree this appeal was perfected.

It is contended the findings and judgment are not supported by the evidence for the reason that the facts related by the respondent’s witnesses are inherently improbable; that the original trustee of the property held only a community interest with her husband in the house and lot, and that she therefore could not lawfully devise by her will his portion of the property, and that the money judgment for accumulated rental was erroneously rendered for the reason that no claim therefor was previously presented to the estate of either Mr. or Mrs. Reiber, deceased.

Mary and Philip Reiber were husband and wife. The respondent, who was then a married man, was their very close friend. They all resided in Los Angeles and they belonged to the same nationality. Neither of them was acquainted with legal proceedings or the formal requirements of transferring title to real property. The respondent was not well educated and expressed himself in English with great difficulty. Mrs. Reiber was about eighty years of age and moved about with difficulty. The respondent was a frequent visitor in the Reiber household and performed many courtesies for the benefit and welfare of Mrs. .Reiber, who held him in high esteem. January 30, 1905, lot 187 of the Ford tract *215 of the city of Los Angeles, together with the dwelling house situated thereon, was, for a valuable consideration, deeded by Laura and David M. Young, husband and wife, to Mary Reiber. It was worth about $5,000. December 1, 1921, Mrs, Reiber agreed to sell the house and lot to the respondent for $4,200. He then paid her the sum of $2,000 on the purchase price thereof. A written agreement of sale of the property was executed and delivered to the respondent on the last-mentioned date. Philip Reiber also signed that contract with his wife. The contract specified as consideration for the sale the sum of $2,276.93, which was the unpaid portion of the purchase price of the property, plus some expenses incident to the transaction. This balance was to be paid in equal instalments of $30 on the first of each and every month, together with 7 per cent interest per annum on all deferred payments, until the entire amount was fully satisfied. The purchaser agreed to pay all assessments and taxes levied against the property and to keep it in good repair. The respondent took and remained in possession of the property for about ten years, but was very slow in making his payments thereon. During that time, however, he paid all taxes and assessments, together with the sum of $1268.41 on the unpaid principal and also interest in the aggregate sum of $681.94. By March 14, 1931, he had reduced the unpaid purchase price of the property to $1,031.54. In the meantime he remained on the best of terms with Mr. and Mrs. Reiber, who apparently never complained of his failure to meet the deferred payments. The respondent was embarrassed by that and other indebtedness. Mrs. Reiber agreed to take and hold title to the property in trust for the respondent and apply the rental thereof to the payment of the deferred instalments on the purchase price of the property. In that regard, Mr. Back testified that on March 14, 1931:

“I went out there and told them I couldn’t make a payment,—I told them I can’t make a payment on the house, and Mrs. Reiber and Mr. Reiber both was there, and they both was telling me ‘Don’t worry about the house.’ Mrs. Reiber says ‘I can take the house over, and collect the rent, and that will be paid on the payments on the house. ’ She says she don’t want the house. She says that she was going to hold the house for me, but she says that she don’t want my house. She says that she want to collect the rent, and *216 that the rent would be paid on the house, and for me to give her a quitclaim deed, so nobody else could put some kind of a claim on it, and she was telling me that she would like to have me give her a quitclaim deed for it, and she would like to have it all in her name, and she would hold the house for me.”

Pursuant to the foregoing understanding, the respondent executed and delivered to Mrs. Reiber a quitclaim deed to the premises. Later he moved to another residence. Thereafter the respondent paid taxes on the property amounting to $97.42, and street assessments on the property in the sum of $53.92. He also made repairs on the house and insured the building in his own name. Mr. Joseph Herrick testified to a conversation, in which he participated, between Mr. and Mrs. Reiber and the respondent early in 1932. He said that both Mr. and Mrs. Reiber confirmed the fact that Mrs. Reiber was holding the property in trust for the respondent, and that she was applying the rent which was collected therefrom to the payment of deferred instalments on the contract of purchase. The property was actually rented during much of the time after the respondent surrendered possession of it. In March, 1932, Mary Reiber executed her will, bequeathing to the respondent whatever sum remained unpaid on his contract to purchase the house and lot. That provision of the will reads:

“Item (K) To my friend Andrew Bak, of 544 B. 53rd Str. Los Angeles, Calif., whatever amount, if any, may be due on a house and lot which he purchased from me.”

This provision of the will confirms the theory that Mrs. Reiber was holding the property in trust for the respondent. The will was made about a year after the testatrix took the quitclaim deed from the respondent. At the time the deed was executed, he owed her about $1,031. It is evident Mrs. Reiber assumed the purchase price might be fully paid by applying before her death occurred the rental which she was collecting. In that event the above-quoted clause of the will would become inoperative, and the bequest would lapse.

In the summer of 1933, Mrs. Reiber told the respondent she considered that his contract to purchase the property was fulfilled; that the purchase price had been fully paid and that she was ready to give to him “the deed and all the papers” to convey to him clear title. Accordingly she *217 went with the respondent to her safe-deposit box in the Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles and delivered to him her original deed from Mr. and Mrs. Young, a certificate of title to the property issued by the Title Insurance and Trust Company, an insurance policy for $4,000 on the dwelling house in favor of Andrew Back, with a rider attached thereto, naming Mrs. Reiber as mortgagee of the premises, and entitling her to payment in case of fire as her interest might appear. Mrs. Reiber also returned to the respondent the original contract of sale of the property. She then told him that any time he would present to her a deed to the property she would execute it. He, however, failed to procure the making of the deed, and Mrs. Reiber died within five months thereafter.

There is no question regarding the actual delivery of those instruments to the respondent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 P.2d 295, 25 Cal. App. 2d 212, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/back-v-farnsworth-calctapp-1938.