Bradley v. Butchart

20 P.2d 693, 217 Cal. 731, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 678
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1933
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13067.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 693 (Bradley v. Butchart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. Butchart, 20 P.2d 693, 217 Cal. 731, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 678 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This is an action wherein the plaintiff, alleging that she is the owner and entitled to the possession of certain real property, to wit: lots 2, 3, and 4, Norwood Terrace, Los Angeles, and that the defendants have no right, title or interest in said property, sought a decree quieting her title to said property against any claim on the part of the defendants. Her claim of ownership is predicated upon a chain of title consisting of a conveyance in the form of a grant deed from Prank 0. Dalton, Roy A. Dalton and Alice Dalton to the English Realty Corporation under date of September 29, 1925, recorded on September 30, 1925; a conveyance from the English Realty Corporation in the form of a grant deed to Harriet W. English dated January 7, 1926, signed by Edward C. English, as president, and P. M. Jones, as secretary of the corporation, and under the seal of the corporation, recorded February 16, 1926, and a deed of conveyance from Harriet W. English to Ethel 0. Bradley, under date of July 18, 1928, and recorded July 19, 1928. Defendants J. H. Butchart, Ben Ames and Isobel K. Ames filed answers denying plaintiff’s ownership. By way of a further and separate answer defendants Ben Ames and Isobel K. Ames, setting up the fact that they were creditors of the English Apartment Company, alleged that the English Apartment Company and the English Realty Corporation were the alter ego of Edward C. English, and that Edward C. English caused said deed from the English Realty Corporation to his wife, Harriet W. English, dated January 7, 1926, and recorded February 16, 1926, to be executed by said corporation without any consideration and with the intent to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors. Defendant J. H. Butchart, claiming as a creditor of the English Apartment Company, and Edward C. English personally, set up the same defense. These defendants also filed cross-complaints in which they set forth the above matters and in addition alleged fraud on the part of each and every person or corporation in any *734 manner connected with the financial transactions involving said property. There were named as cross-defendants by said cross-complaint the following parties: Edward C. English, Harriet W. English, E. E. Alexander, Ethel 0. Bradley, and C. L. Olson, attorney for Ethel 0. Bradley and who had acted as attorney for Harriet W. English in the transactions involving the property here in controversy. Upon the trial of the case, judgment was made and entered in favor of the plaintiff quieting her title to said lots, and from this judgment the defendants appeal.

The facts of the case, briefly stated, are as follows: On December 22, 1922, Edward C. English and Harriet W. English, his wife, entered into a contract settling their property rights, whereby certain community property became the sole and separate property of Mrs. English and certain other community property became the separate property of Mr. English. At the time of the agreement, Mrs. English had separated from her husband and had filed a suit asking for a separate property settlement. Under this agreement there was conveyed to Mrs. English by grant deed from Mr. English the residence property situated at 124 Fremont Place, Los Angeles, of the approximate value of $65,000, the furniture and furnishings of the Fremont Place house, 100 shares of the Western Electric Products and 50 shares of Western State Bank. The suit by Mrs. English was thereupon dismissed and the parties continued to live together until April, 1926, when Mrs. English separated from her husband. Mr. English was a prosperous contractor and Mrs. English’s share of the community property, which by the carrying out of the terms of the agreement became her sole and separate property, was of the value of more than $100,000. All of the proof is to the effect that this was a bona fide settlement and division of the property rights and interests of the parties thereto, and it is to be noted that it was entered into at a time when it does not appear that Edward C. English had any creditors and at least two years prior to the time he became interested in the apartment house deal by which appellants claim to have become his creditors.

In 1925 Edward C. English became interested in a plan to build an “Own-your-own" apartment on the property in controversy, i. e., lots 2, 3 and 4, Norwood Terrace, Los *735 Angeles, and organized the English Apartment Company with the object of carrying this plan into effect. It seems that defendant Butchart and defendant Ben Ames had each previously entered into a contract with parties by the name of Zaiser & Killen, Butchart having paid $9,500 and Ames $11,500, under agreements to purchase from Zaiser & Killen apartments in a proposed apartment building to be erected on the Ruth Roland property at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Normandie Street, being an entirely different piece of property from that involved herein. Dalton Brothers, who owned the property here in controversy, had given an option bn this said property to Zaiser & Killen. The latter assigned said option to Mr. English and in some deal between the English Apartment Company, Zaiser & Killen and the appellants Butchart and Ames, the English Apartment Company took over the contracts between appellants and Zaiser & Killen, and the amounts paid over by appellants to Zaiser & Killen were accepted as payment on apartments to be erected by English on lots 2, 3 and 4 of Norwood Terrace. English found that he was unable to raise sufficient money to finance the purchase of these lots without assistance and approached his wife with the idea that if she would put up her separate property, in addition to certain property which he also would put up, the Citizens National Trust and Savings Bank would loan him the sum of $170,000. Mrs. English at first refused, but after being urged by her two sons and after consulting her attorney, Mr. C. L. Olson, she consented to said arrangement upon the understanding that she should receive a promissory note in the amount for which she would be liable to the bank, together with a trust deed upon the lots to be purchased as her security. She thereupon signed a ninety-day promissory note, together with her husband, Edward C. English, and his brother, Richard C. English, to the Citizens National Trust and Savings Bank for $170,000, and to secure payment of this note hypothecated to the bank her sole and separate property consisting of the real property located at 124 Fremont Place, Los Angeles, a chattel mortgage on its furniture and furnishings, 100 shares of Electric Products Corporation (formerly Western Electric Products) and 50 shares of Bank of America (formerly Western State Bank). At the same time Mr. English pledged with the *736 bank, as security for this note, 100 shares of stock of Electric Products Corporation, 10 shares of stock of Citizens Savings Bank of Champaign, Illinois, and 39 bonds of Elks Building, Champaign, Illinois. In the meantime the English Realty Corporation had been organized by English for the purpose of holding title to the property. Nine thousand dollars.which had been paid by Zaiser & Killen for the option on the property had been credited to English on the purchase price of these lots; he had previously paid an additional sum of $31,000; and $80,000 out of the money loaned by the Citizens Bank was paid as the purchase price, making the total purchase price of the property $120,000. The property was thereupon conveyed to the English Realty Corporation by the Daltons.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 693, 217 Cal. 731, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-butchart-cal-1933.