Baker v. Baker

100 P. 892, 9 Cal. App. 737, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 344
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 560.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 100 P. 892 (Baker v. Baker) 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
Baker v. Baker, 100 P. 892, 9 Cal. App. 737, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 344 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

HART, J.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of certain real property, situated in San Joaquin county, and that the defendant claims an interest therein adversely to her; that the claim of the defendant is without any foundation whatever, he having no estate or interest in or right or title to said premises. The prayer is for judgment, quieting plaintiff’s title to the land described in the complaint.

The answer denies plaintiff’s ownership of the premises, admits that defendant claims an estate and interest in the same, and also interposes an affirmative defense, in which it is averred that the plaintiff conveyed to him said premises by deed, the same being set out in full, and further alleging that said deed was delivered in escrow to one A. H. Carpenter with instructions to the “escrowee” to deliver the same,, upon the death of,plaintiff, to the defendant.

The court below gave plaintiff judgment, from which, upon a bill of exceptions, the defendants present this appeal.

The main assault' upon the judgment involves the contention that the findings upon which it rests are not supported by the evidence.

*739 It may be well to explain at this point that, after the institution of this suit, the defendant, Zachariah D. Baker, died, and that thereafter, Jennie Baker, his widow, as the administratrix of his estate, and Raymond Baker et al., surviving children of the deceased, by said Jennie Baker, their guardian ad litem,, and Jennie Baker, in propria persona, were substituted as parties defendants in the place of the said Zachariah D. Baker, deceased.

Before proceeding with an examination of the evidence for the purpose of ascertaining whether the findings are sufficiently supported thereby, we will consider the pleadings and the issues tendered thereby, it being argued by the appellants that certain evidence admitted at the trial was inadmissible thereunder.

The complaint, as we have seen, is in the ordinary form for actions to quiet title. The answer, as before observed, besides denying the averments of the complaint, sets up an affirmative defense, pleading that plaintiff, prior to the commencement of the suit, executed to the deceased Zachariah D. Baker a deed, conveying to him the land in controversy. At the trial plaintiff was sworn as a witness, testified that she was the owner of the land described in the complaint, was then in the possession thereof, and had been in such possession for many years before the inauguration of this action, and thereupon rested her ease.

The defendants then introduced the purported deed in evidence and presented testimony showing the circumstances under which said deed was executed.

Upon the close of the case for the defendants, the plaintiff, in rebuttal, admitting the making of the alleged deed, offered and the court received evidence for the purpose of showing that the same had been procured through fraud and undue influence practiced upon her by her son, the grantee.

It is now contended by the appellants that evidence upon the questions of fraud and of undue influence was inadmissible, because no such questions were within the issues tendered by the pleadings; that such evidence could be pertinent only where fraud or undue influence, or both, had been specially pleaded and relied upon, and that no such issue having been made by the complaint, the court erred, to the prejudice of appellants, in allowing proof of the alleged fraudulent practices of the deceased and alleged acts of undue influence *740 claimed to have been exerted by him upon the plaintiff in the procurement of the execution by her of the deed set up in the answer.

The general rule is, it is true, that fraud is never to be presumed, and that when it constitutes an element of a cause of action or of a defense which is of an affirmative nature, and invoked as conferring a right against a party, it must be alleged. (Whetherly v. Straus, 93 Cal. 286, [28 Pac. 1045].) But the plaintiff’s cause of action in the case at bar does not rest upon fraud, and the necessity of proving fraud appeared only after the answer of the defendant. (Sterling v. Smith, 97 Cal. 343, [32 Pac. 320].) The case of Moore v. Copp, 119 Cal. 433, [61 Pac. 630], was an action to quiet title to certain real property on which there was a granite quarry, the complaint being in the ordinary form for such relief. The defendant set up, as an affirmative defense, a certain instrument executed by plaintiff, by which the latter agreed to sell and convey to the defendant the portion of the land containing the quarry, etc. The court allowed a jury for the purpose of trying certain special issues, involving the mental competency of plaintiff to make the contract pleaded in the answer; whether the same was executed under undue influence of the defendant, or through fraud or by mistake. It was contended by the appellant in that case that the special issues were not properly allowed, because not' alleged in the complaint. The supreme court held against that contention, saying: “In the first instance the law requires the defendant to answer; but, when he has done so, the law in the other instance operates to' make answer for the plaintiff without any replication on his part. The many cases decided show various issues thus permitted to be tried, such as: The statute of limitations, in Curtiss v. Sprague, 49 Cal. 301; want of consideration, in Colton etc. v. Raynor, 57 Cal. 588; undue influence, in Rankin v. Sisters of Mercy, 82 Cal. 88, [22 Pac. 1134]; fraud, in Sterling v. Smith, 97 Cal. 343, [32 Pac. 320], In the present case, plaintiff could not know, when she filed her complaint, that defendant would answer, nor that, if he did, he would claim under the instrument in question. After answer there was no pleading open to her under our system”; citing In re Garcelon, 104 Cal. 570, [43 Am. St. Rep. 134, 38 Pac. 414]; Pomeroy’s Remedies and Remedial Rights, sees. 587, 588.

*741 The evidence shows and the court finds, as we shall presently see, that the plaintiff was, at the time of the commencement of her suit, and had been for many years prior thereto, ■in the possession of the premises in controversy. She knew that she had made the deed pleaded in the answer; but, according to her testimony, which we must accept as representing a truthful narrative of the facts connected with that transaction, since the court' below found it to be so, she explicitly declared to the grantee named in said deed and the alleged “escrowee” that she intended to call for and demand possession of the deed, and did in fact do so, thus clearly indicating an absence of intention to part with control and dominion over it, and it is therefore not to be supposed that she could anticipate the defense, if any, which her son might interpose against the relief sought' by her, or that -he would set up against her claim for a decree a deed which she had every reason to know was not a deed in law, because lacking in the essential element of delivery.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fay v. Norquist
140 P.2d 141 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
Dinneen v. Younger
134 P.2d 323 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
Kroeker v. Hurlbert
101 P.2d 101 (California Court of Appeal, 1940)
Foster v. Foster
68 P.2d 719 (California Supreme Court, 1937)
Brown v. Brown
268 P. 401 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Purcell v. Victor Power & Mining Co.
156 P. 1009 (California Court of Appeal, 1916)
Melander v. Western National Bank
132 P. 265 (California Court of Appeal, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P. 892, 9 Cal. App. 737, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-baker-calctapp-1909.