Carr v. Anderson

288 P. 117, 105 Cal. App. 570, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 751
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 10, 1930
DocketDocket No. 7307.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 288 P. 117 (Carr v. Anderson) 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
Carr v. Anderson, 288 P. 117, 105 Cal. App. 570, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 751 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

McKENZIE, J., pro tem.

The defendant, under the name of Maynard Anslyn, which he stated at the trial was his true name, in the year 191É married Eva V. Ansyln, plaintiff’s intestate. They lived together about ten years and then were divorced. In '1926 defendant, under the name of Milton Anderson, married another woman. The defendant and his second wife separated at a time not disclosed by the record, but prior to his first wife’s appearing again on the scene. This second marriage had not been dissolved at the time of the trial. On the 1st of January, 1928, the first wife (plaintiff’s intestate) came to defendant’s home in Berkeley, where he was living alone in a house which he owned. From the 1st of January, 1928, to March 6th of the same year, when the woman died, the defendant and his former wife lived together in this house without other occupants.

Some time between January 1 and January 27, 1928, plaintiff’s intestate and defendant discussed the proposition of conveying the real property of each to the other and of his converting a bank deposit of his into a joint account. The amount of money in bank was five hundred dollars, but there is no satisfactory evidence in the record which shows that this account was transferred to a joint account. There is no direct evidence as to the value of the respective real *572 properties; however, the record shows that the intestate’s real property involved in this action, which is situate in Merced, brings a monthly rental of two hundred dollars per month, but is encumbered with a trust deed to secure an undisclosed amount. It may be inferred that the property has a substantial value. It may also be inferred from the evidence that she had no other property of substantial value. In many respects the record is not comprehensive, but it may be inferred therefrom that the intestate’s nearest relatives were nieces and nephews. It may likewise be inferred that defendant’s Berkeley property was a modest residence, but of substantial value, and that the residence and bank deposit of five hundred dollars constituted all of defendant’s property. The evidence does not disclose any relative of defendant, other than his second wife, who was not living with him, but from whom he had not been divorced.

On the twenty-seventh day of February, 1928, the intestate and defendant went to an abstract office and had prepared two ordinary grant deeds, one from the intestate to defendant of the Merced property and the other from defendant to the intestate of the Berkeley property. Both deeds described the defendant as an unmarried man. These deeds were signed and acknowledged by the respective parties; the defendant then going to his place of employment and the intestate returning to their home with the two deeds and placed them in a drawer where she had a number of her personal papers. Shortly after midnight on March 7, 1928, the defendant on returning to his home from work found the intestate dead in a bathroom. The next day a woman friend of the deceased came to the residence and while there examined the house to ascertain what papers could be found which had belonged to the deceased. In the drawer, where Mrs. Anslyn had placed them when she returned from the abstract office, she found the two deeds in question, together with a number of other papers belonging to the deceased.

The defendant was the only witness who testified concerning the negotiations and understanding concerning the making of the two deeds; and he testified that the agreement was that his deed was to have no. effect unless he died before the intestate and the same understanding was had in regard to her deed, and that neither of the said deeds was delivered at the time Mrs. Anslyn placed them in the drawer.

*573 Up to this point both sides agreed that the foregoing are the facts. The controversy centers around an incident that defendant claims occurred at defendant’s home on the second day of March, 1928, when the intestate, the defendant and W. F. Sergeant were present. At this time the defendant claims there was a complete delivery of Mrs. Anslyn’s deed to him. To prove this fact he relies upon the testimony of himself and Mr. Sergeant, the only living witnesses to what occurred at this time.

At the trial Mr. Sergeant testified that he was manager of the insurance department of a real estate concern in Berkeley; that he called at defendant’s home about 10 o’clock on the morning of March 2, 1928; that he did not know Anderson very well, but had met him in November; that he had never seen or heard of Mrs. Anslyn until this morning; that he went to the house to collect a premium that was due for insurance on Anderson’s house; that he was in the house for an hour with Anderson and Mrs. Anslyn and that they were in the kitchen all the time, he and Anderson standing and Mrs. Anslyn sitting on a chair; that they engaged in conversation and from this conversation he learned that she owned an auto camp in Merced with which he was familiar and that after some conversation about the auto camp Mrs. Anslyn got up from the chair she was sitting in when she was talking to Sergeant and went out of the room. “Coming back into the kitchen again where Mr. Anderson and I were talking, she said, ‘Here is a deed to the property we were talking about at Merced, ’ and I cannot remember the exact words she said to Mr. Anderson, but she just handed me the deed and I gave it back to her, and she said something to the effect that she was giving this property to Mr. Anderson.” At this point counsel for Anderson asked the witness: “Did she hand the deed to him?” Answer: “Yes, she handed him the deed.” “And he put it in his pocket?” “Yes.” “You actually saw her deliver that deed?” “I saw her.” “And heard what she said about giving him the property?” “Yes.” On cross-examination Mr. Sergeant testified: That no mention was made of a deed from Anderson to Mrs. Anslyn and there was no mention of any other deed; that he did not know what prompted Mrs. Anslyn to spring out of her chair and get the deed or do what she did and that the only reason he knew of was that they had been discussing the property.

*574 In regard to Mr. Sergeant’s testimony concerning the hour of the day he went to Anderson’s house, he was asked on cross-examination if he had not told Mr. Fraser, one of counsel for plaintiff, that at the time in question he went to the Anderson house at about 8 o’clock in the evening and he said he had not; that he had a conversation with Mr. Fraser and that he told him about having met Anderson about 8 o’clock in the evening during the month of November. To impeach Sergeant, Mr. Fraser testified that on the 3d of April, 1928 (within a month after Mrs. Anslyn died), Mr. Sergeant told him that the meeting when the deed passed took place at 8 o’clock in the evening; that there was no talk between them about a meeting in November and there was no occasion to talk about a meeting in November.

Concerning what happened at the house when the deed is alleged to have been delivered, the defendant testified that he saw the deed in the drawer where Mrs. Anslyn had placed it and the next time he.saw it was when she brought it in the kitchen and “She brought it in there and told Mr. Sergeant she was going to deliver it to me, and he glanced at it and looked over it and handed it back to her, and she presented it to me. She gave it to me. I don’t remember what was said. She said it was mine. I give it to you.

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Bluebook (online)
288 P. 117, 105 Cal. App. 570, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-anderson-calctapp-1930.