Barry v. Sutter

146 P. 527, 26 Cal. App. 240, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 1
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 28, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1230.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 146 P. 527 (Barry v. Sutter) 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
Barry v. Sutter, 146 P. 527, 26 Cal. App. 240, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 1 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

The controversy is over a narrow strip of land, constituting a part of Mission block number 84 in the city and county of San Francisco. There are three counts *Page 241 in the complaint. The first is in the usual form of an action to quiet title; the second and third counts seek to set aside a deed from John Barry, the original plaintiff, to William Lyons, respondent's grantor, on the ground of fraud, mistake, failure of consideration, and misrepresentation. Said instrument is in the form of a quitclaim deed and purports to convey by metes and bounds the land described in defendant's answer. The answer disclaims all interest in the property described in the amended complaint except so much thereof as is embraced within that described in the answer and specifically denies the allegations of the second and third counts of the complaint in reference to the execution of said deed and alleges that it was freely and voluntarily made with full knowledge of the facts. After the commencement of the action, the original plaintiff died and John Barry, his son, was substituted as plaintiff. On November 28, 1911, by stipulation, plaintiff had entered a "judgment in part," quieting his title to all of the property described in the amended complaint except the portion thereof embraced in the answer, "said judgment being without prejudice to any rights which the plaintiff or said defendant William Sutter may have in the land or premises in the answer described, as to which last mentioned land and premises the cause was adjudged to remain at issue to be tried upon the law and facts applicable thereto." The adjoining owners acquired their properties in 1873 from a common grantor. A year later they built their houses and occupied them without dispute or question from 1874 to 1910, over thirty-five years. In 1910 one of the adjoining owners sold his piece to William Sutter, defendant and respondent herein. He had the land surveyed and found that the boundary line described in the deeds of 1873 was three feet and seven inches from the line which had been recognized as such and upon which the houses had been built. Whereupon, possession was demanded by respondent of said strip and this action was begun soon thereafter.

Appellant, in addition to his attack upon said quitclaim deed, claims that the facts bring the case within the rule announced in Dundas v. Lankershim, 155 Cal. 692, [102 P. 925], and other cases, holding that the line actually located and marked on the ground must be accepted as the true boundary regardless of its accuracy as shown by subsequent *Page 242 measurements, but especially and emphatically is it declared that we have the condition pointed out in Helm v. Wilson,76 Cal. 486, [18 P. 608], as follows: "Besides, it appears that in 1884 the defendant, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the plaintiff, erected valuable improvements upon the disputed strip. It has been held that, even without any agreement more than is implied from these acts, if two persons trace their dividing line, and both recognizing it as such, one goes forward with the knowledge and acquiescence of the other, and makes valuable improvements, so valuable as to work great injury to the party making them if the line be disturbed, the other will be estopped from afterward alleging such mistake as shall deprive the builder of his improvements, and especially if the party seeking to disturb the line knew, at the time the improvements were made, all that he subsequently learned or if he had the means of knowledge." Therein is stated what is deemed to be a well-established principle, but we think it is not necessary to determine whether it has application to the case in hand, as we feel constrained to uphold the judgment on the other ground suggested.

After alleging that said deed was signed by John Barry, Sr., and that it purported to convey to W. H. Lyons a portion of the property in controversy, the complaint proceeds: "That said signature was procured without the presence or advice of his attorney or of any other person upon whom plaintiff is or at any time herein was accustomed to rely for the transaction of his affairs. That the plaintiff was unable to read and did not read said deed and did not know the contents thereof at the time he signed the same, and that said deed was not read over to him and that he would have been unable by reason of the aforesaid to understand the purport or effect if it had been read over to him." Furthermore, that defendant falsely represented to him that he was not thereby conveying any of his property to said Lyons and that he would not be occasioned any loss thereby; that said deed was not acknowledged by him, that it was wholly without consideration and "that plaintiff at the time of said deed was unconsciously ignorant of the fact that said deed conveyed to W. H. Lyons a portion of the real property first herein described, and of the fact that said deed conveyed to said W. H. Lyons property of which the plaintiff was the rightful owner." *Page 243

It is not disputed, and indeed cannot be, that the presumptions are in favor of the validity of the deed and the burden of proof was, of course, upon plaintiff as to the issues affecting the purported conveyance of the title. There is, however, no evidence from which a rational inference can be drawn that any misrepresentations were made to the grantor, that any undue influence was exercised, that he did not have the deed read to him or did not thoroughly understand its terms, that it was not, in other words, his entirely voluntary act made understandingly with the intention to convey to the grantee therein named whatever interest said grantor had in the premises included in the description. At most, we may infer that the grantor was somewhat advanced in years, not very strong physically and that he acted without the advice of his attorney to whom he generally applied for assistance in matters of such moment. These circumstances, however, fall short of justifying an appellate court in reversing the finding in favor of a deed apparently and presumably executed with the formality and solemnity usually and naturally associated with such transactions, there being no confidential relation between the parties.

All the evidence upon the subject was offered by plaintiff and is substantially as follows: Witness Lyons testified that immediately after he discovered from the survey that there was an error in the Barry line he informed Barry that there was a mistake and that the latter did not say anything; "he didn't have anything to say. I did not say anything to him about making a deed to me, or a quitclaim, or moving the line. I didn't at any time ask him for a deed of that property, and I do not know how he came to make the deed that he did make to me."

Augusta Barry, daughter of the grantor, testified that she could not say whether any money passed at the time of the execution of the deed as she was not present when it was executed. She was asked whether her father was sick at the time but an objection was sustained, the court, however, stating that plaintiff would be allowed to prove any fact bearing upon the incompetency of the grantor. Counsel for appellant thereafter stated: "If your honor will give me a chance I will prove the fact that he was an old man, who had been out of work for a long time; he was getting weak; he was of sound mind, as far as matters go. He left matters in my hands as *Page 244

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Bluebook (online)
146 P. 527, 26 Cal. App. 240, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barry-v-sutter-calctapp-1914.