Carroll v. Carroll

108 P.2d 420, 16 Cal. 2d 761, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 356
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1940
DocketL. A. 16427, 16471
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 108 P.2d 420 (Carroll v. Carroll) 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
Carroll v. Carroll, 108 P.2d 420, 16 Cal. 2d 761, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 356 (Cal. 1940).

Opinions

SPENCE, J., pro tem.

This action was brought by plaintiff against her husband and several other defendants, the prayer of the complaint containing fourteen paragraphs asking various forms of relief. As to the husband, it sought among other things cancellation of a deed, a declaration of trust as to all property described in the complaint, an accounting, a decree quieting title and a money judgment. As to the other defendants, it sought an injunction restraining the foreclosure of a certain deed of trust and a decree cancelling said deed of trust. The trial of the action resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against her husband quieting her title to the several parcels of property described in the complaint and awarding her a money judgment in the [764]*764sum of $422,297.05. No appeal was taken from those portions of the. judgment. Said judgment also provided that plaintiff take nothing against the remaining defendants and that parcel one of the property was subject to the above-mentioned deed of trust which was given to secure a note in the principal sum of $20,000. The appeal numbered L. A. 16427 is taken by plaintiff from the last-mentioned portions of said judgment.

No restraining order or injunction was issued by the trial court, and, during the pendency of the action, said deed of trust was foreclosed and the property was sold for $23,000 to defendant The Prudential Insurance Company of America, the beneficiary named in said deed of trust. Thereafter a dispute arose concerning the right to the rentals from said property and the tenant, being uncertain as to who was entitled thereto, refused to pay said rentals to either plaintiff or the defendant purchaser. Upon motion of said defendant, the trial court appointed a receiver to collect said rentals and to hold the same subject to the further order of the court. The appeal numbered L. A. 16471 is taken by plaintiff from the order appointing the receiver.

It appears that the main controversy involved in the action was the controversy between plaintiff and her husband arising out of the actions of the husband in dealing with a large amount of real and personal property of plaintiff. The trial court found in favor of plaintiff on practically all of the issues involved in this main controversy and neither plaintiff nor her husband has appealed from the portions of the judgment relating solely to them. Suffice it to state with respect to said controversy that the trial court found that for many years prior to the filing of the action “the defendant Raymond A. Carroll, did and has followed towards the plaintiff a constant course of intimidation, menace, threats, physical restraint and duress for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff of her property and coercing the plaintiff to part with her property for the benefit of the defendant Raymond A. Carroll and in furtherance of his interests’’ and that the husband had “by persuasion, threats and misrepresentations’’ induced plaintiff to sign various instruments.

The controversy which was incidental to the main controversy and which was the only controversy in which the remaining defendants were concerned involved solely the [765]*765claim of plaintiff that a certain note and deed of trust were invalid. Said note and deed of trust, which covered only-parcel one of the property described in the complaint, were admittedly executed by plaintiff on August 23, 1929, and the proceeds thereof were admittedly paid to plaintiff’s husband pursuant to plaintiff’s written order. Plaintiff’s claim of invalidity was based upon the alleged pendency of certain proceedings relating to'her competency at the time of the execution of said instruments. In this connection, it should be stated that there was no allegation or proof that plaintiff was in fact incompetent at the time of the execution of said instruments, the claim being that said note and deed of trust were invalid as a matter of law by reason of the alleged pendency of the above-mentioned proceedings. We will therefore direct our attention to the facts concerning said proceedings.

On April 17, 1929, an affidavit was filed in the superior court alleging that plaintiff was insane. Upon the hearing it was found that plaintiff was “mentally sick and bordering on insanity, but not dangerously insane” and plaintiff was thereupon committed to the custody of the psychopathic probation officer under the provisions of section 2167b of the Political Code and was placed in Casa del Mar Sanitarium. On May 29, 1929, in an ineompeteney proceeding filed in the probate court under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure (secs. 1763-1767), plaintiff was adjudged to be incompetent. On August 8, 1929, plaintiff was released from the sanitarium and was permitted to return to her home. On August 15,1929, plaintiff signed and filed a petition in the ineompeteney proceedings in the probate court seeking a decree judicially restoring her to competency. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1766.) The hearing on said petition was had on August 22, 1929, and the court found and decreed “that said Catherine M. Carroll is now fully restored to mental competency and was restored to mental competency at the time her petition for restoration to competency was verified and filed herein. ’ ’ This decree was signed by the judge of the probate court and was filed on August 22, 1929. The note and deed of trust in question were signed by plaintiff on the following day. Thereafter and on September 5, 1929, the clerk entered in the judgment book said decree restoring plaintiff to competency. It does not appear that any further steps were taken in the proceeding brought under the sections of the Political Code until [766]*766October 24, 1929, when the court dismissed said proceeding upon the recommendation of the psychopathic probation officer.

The foregoing facts with respect to said proceedings are undisputed and plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in admitting in evidence said note and deed of trust, executed on August 23, 1929, and in finding that said instruments were valid and in decreeing that parcel one of the property was subject to said deed of trust. In our opinion, this contention is without merit.

Plaintiff relies upon section 40 of the Civil Code which provides in part, “After his incapacity has been judicially determined, a person of unsound mind can make no conveyance or other contract, nor delegate any power or waive any right, until his restoration to capacity.” Plaintiff apparently takes the position that her incapacity was judicially determined in the so-called insanity proceeding brought under the provisions of the Political Code and also in the incompeteney proceedings brought in the probate court under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure and that the note and deed of trust were executed prior to her “restoration to capacity”.

We may first dispose of the so-called insanity proceeding. It appears well settled that such proceedings are summary proceedings instituted for a particular purpose and that “insanity or incapacity is not ‘judicially determined’ within the meaning of section 40 of the Civil Code” by a commitment in such proceedings instituted under the sections of the Political Code. (Guardianship of Carniglia, 139 Cal. App. 629, 631 [34 Pac. (2d) 752] ; see, also Hitch v. Superior Court, 2 Cal. App. (2d) 406 [38 Pac. (2d) 190]; Fetterley v. Randall, 92 Cal. App. 411 [268 Pac.

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Carroll v. Carroll
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P.2d 420, 16 Cal. 2d 761, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-carroll-cal-1940.