Blair v. Mahon

230 P.2d 832, 104 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1568
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1951
DocketCiv. 17948
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 230 P.2d 832 (Blair v. Mahon) 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
Blair v. Mahon, 230 P.2d 832, 104 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1568 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

VALLÉE, J.

Appeal by plaintiff from a judgment of dismissal entered pursuant to an order sustaining the demurrer of Florence Z. Mahon, referred to as defendant, to the second amended complaint' without leave to amend in a suit to establish a constructive trust. Florence Z. Mahon died after the commencement of the action and the executor of her will was substituted in her stead.

The complaint alleged:

Plaintiff at all times mentioned prior to October 1, 1945, was in the Army. In July, 1944, he was in England preparing to depart for France for combat. While in England, between July 3 and 24, 1944, he received a document dated July 31, 1944, by which he agreed that the sum of $5,000, in stocks and cash, should be distributed to him from the estate of Herman Zuber, his paternal grandfather, and by which he assigned to Grace A. Zuber, his maternal grandmother, Lucile Blair, his mother, and Florence Z. Mahon, his maternal aunt, such additional amounts as he “might have been entitled to *46 if distribution were made in accordance with the terms of the Will.” The document in full is set forth in the margin. 1 When plaintiff received the document it was signed by Cecilia Blair, his sister, Donald Blair, his brother, and Lucile Blair, his mother, and blank spaces were provided for his signature and those of Grace Zuber and defendant Florence Z. Mahon.

*47 Plaintiff signed and mailed the document prior to July 24, 1944. He became 21 years of age on July 24, 1944, and left for Prance on that day.

The document was mailed to plaintiff by Florence Z. Mahon or her agent. It was not accompanied by any letter or explanation, or any disclosure of information with reference to the death of Herman Zuber or as to the terms of his will, or any information or facts as to any distributive share plaintiff was entitled to receive under the will. Because he was in the Army and about to depart for France for combat, he was unable to acquire any information or knowledge of his rights. Defendant knew plaintiff’s incapacity to gain any independent information or knowledge in reference to his interests or rights under his grandfather’s will. Placing trust and confidence in Florence Z. Mahon and Grace Zuber and in the fact that the document was signed by his mother, sister, and brother, and being in no position to seek or obtain advice from any other person, being entirely ignorant of the facts, except as informed by the document, believing that his relatives would deal fairly and justly with him, believing that his interest in his grandfather’s estate was $5,000 in stocks and cash, knowing nothing of his rights under his grandfather’s will, and without any consideration to him, he signed the document and returned it to defendant through the Army Post Office.

Plaintiff returned to Los Angeles on October 12, 1945, and thereafter resided with his mother. In June, 1948, in a conversation with his mother, Lucile Blair, he learned for the first time that his mother, his grandmother, Grace Zuber, and defendant Florence Z. Mahon, on May 13,1944, five days after the death of his grandfather, agreed to sign the document and agreed to have plaintiff, his sister Cecilia and his brother Donald “hand over their respective inheritances” in the estate of their grandfather for $5,000 each in stocks and cash, and that defendant, his grandmother, and his mother would divide the remainder of the estate equally between them. His mother did not know how much he was entitled to receive under the will of his grandfather but she relied on her mother, Grace Zuber, and her sister, defendant Florence Z. Mahon, “for all information, and that they would protect and deal justly with the plaintiff, his sister and his brother. ’ ’ The will was in the possession of defendant Florence Z. Mahon.

Immediately upon receiving the foregoing information, plaintiff consiilted with an attorney, inspected the file in his grandfather’s estate in the office of the county clerk, and *48 learned that (1) Herman Zuber died in the county of Los Angeles on May 8, 1944, leaving a will in which he bequeathed to plaintiff 700 shares of Union Oil Company stock; (2) defendant Florence Z. Mahon had petitioned for probate of the will; it had been admitted to probate, and defendant had been appointed executrix.

Defendant prepared the document knowing that plaintiff had been bequeathed 700 shares of Union Oil Company stock and that they would be distributed to him. Defendant, as executrix, maintained a fiduciary relationship to plaintiff as a legatee under the will. She violated her trust when, with knowledge of the contents of the will and plaintiff’s inability to gain independent information respecting his interests and rights under the will, she failed to disclose to him that his grandfather had bequeathed to him 700 shares of the capital stock of the Union Oil Company, having an appraised value of $19.25 per share, or $13,475, as of May 8, 1944.

If plaintiff had known the true facts, he would not have signed the document or consented to receive 259 shares of Union Oil Company stock.

Defendant “became and still is unjustly enriched by the use and benefit of plaintiff’s said stock she now holds, contra to her trust and duty imposed upon her as Executrix of said Will, to deal fairly and communicate all material facts in connection with a transaction between herself and plaintiff, a beneficiary under said Will.”

The file in his grandfather’s estate in the office of the county clerk contains a receipt purportedly signed by plaintiff on January 9,1945, acknowledging receipt of 259 shares of Union Oil Company stock. On that date plaintiff was in combat in World War II in Europe. He did not sign the receipt.

Plaintiff informed his mother of the true facts and she transferred to him the 147 shares of Union Oil Company stock which had been bequeathed to him and which she had received from the estate.

The court, in the estate of Herman Zuber, acted on the document signed by plaintiff; and pursuant thereto, on January 8, 1945, distributed to defendant and to Grace Zuber, plaintiff’s grandmother, 147 shares each of the 700 shares of Union Oil Company stock bequeathed to plaintiff by the will. In May, 1946, Grace Zuber transferred these 147 shares to defendant and they are now held by her “in her own name.” Defendant now holds and has possession of 294 shares of said stock, registered in her name, which were bequeathed to and *49 belong to plaintiff. Had it not been for the alleged violation and breach of trust on the part of defendant as executrix, said shares would have been distributed to plaintiff pursuant to the will.

The 294 shares are the property of plaintiff, and defendant “holds legal title to said shares of capital stock in trust for the plaintiff herein, and to his use and benefit.”

The prayer is for a decree that (1) plaintiff is the sole owner of the 294 shares; (2) defendant holds them in trust for plaintiff; (3) defendant be directed to transfer them to plaintiff, or in the event of her failing so to do, for judgment for their value; (4) defendant be required to account for the dividends therefrom; (5) plaintiff be awarded general relief.

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Bluebook (online)
230 P.2d 832, 104 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-mahon-calctapp-1951.