Clay v. Saute

295 P.2d 914, 140 Cal. App. 2d 681, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2301
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1956
DocketCiv. 5301
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 295 P.2d 914 (Clay v. Saute) 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
Clay v. Saute, 295 P.2d 914, 140 Cal. App. 2d 681, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2301 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an action to quiet title to 40 acres of land. The plaintiff and the individual defendants are the children of Charles C. Teague, now deceased. His son, as administrator of his estate, was also named as a defendant. The complaint, which is in the usual form, was filed on November 12, 1954. Marie Teague Saute, who was a half sister of the other parties, filed an answer alleging that she is and for a long time has been the owner and in possession of this land, denying that any of the other defendants have any interest therein, and praying that title to the land be quieted in her. Gloria Dale and Charles B. Teague, individually and as administrator, filed a separate answer alleging that the deceased was the equitable and beneficial owner of this land, and praying that title be quieted in Charles B. Teague as administrator of the estate of the father.

*683 From the evidence at the trial it appears that a general power of attorney from Marie Teague Saute to Charles C. Teague was recorded on July 24, 1923, and that thereafter as long as he lived Charles C. Teague had and kept all of his property in Marie’s name. During some 20 years he bought and sold a great deal of property in her name that she never knew about. The record does not disclose when the title of the land here in question was taken in her name except that it was prior to 1929, but there is evidence that during his lifetime she did not know that title to this property stood in her name.

On April 1, 1942, Charles C. Teague conveyed this land to the plaintiff by a deed from Marie Teague Saute, which he signed as her attorney in fact. On April 3, at the hospital where Mr. Teague had gone for an operation, he told the plaintiff to be sure to go to a title company before she went home and pick up a deed that a Mr. Patterson had for her. He also explained it to her and told her he wanted her to have the property so that her son would eventually benefit from it. Mr. Teague was operated on the next morning, April 4, 1942, and died that night. The plaintiff went to see Mr. Patterson immediately after the funeral and at her request he recorded the deed, which was then mailed to the plaintiff. A week or two later Charles B. Teague asked her to deed the property to him, which she refused to do. He made similar demands at several times in later years, which were refused. He was appointed administrator of the father’s estate in 1951, but nothing was done by any of the defendants to further assert a claim to this property until after this action was brought by the plaintiff.

There was also evidence that on October 26, 1927, Charles C. Teague was declared incompetent and incapable of managing his property, and that he was restored to capacity on January 24, 1929. There was also evidence that a judgment was entered in the Superior Court of Fresno County on February 27, 1940, decreeing that Marie Teague Saute was the owner of this land. In this connection, it appears that two attorneys had sued Mr. Teague for attorneys’ fees and had attached 80 acres of land, which included the land here in question. In that action Mr. Teague filed an answer alleging that Marie Teague Saute was the owner in fee of the property. Before Mr. Teague was called on to testify in the action the matter was compromised, and a stipulated judgment was *684 entered giving the attorneys 40 acres of the land and decreeing that Marie was the owner of the remaining 40 acres. An attorney, who had represented Mr. Teague from 1925 until the time of his death, testified that in the beginning Mr. Teague told him that he was going to hold his property in Marie’s name and that he had her power of attorney; that he did this because of some trouble he was having with his old partners; that on many occasions he conveyed property in Marie’s name by using his power of attorney; that this was the way he handled his property through the years and this was the way he did his business; that the property here in question was included as a part of Mr. Teague’s property in the guardianship proceeding; that Mr. Teague had always dealt with the property in question as his own; that he talked to Mr. Teague a few minutes after the deed to the plaintiff was executed on April 1, 1942; that Mr. Teague then told him that he had deeded this property to Lenore; and that he did not say that he had deeded it to Lenore for the purpose of having her deed it to the other children.

The court found in all respects in favor of the plaintiff finding, among other things, that on April 1, 1942, and prior thereto, Charles C. Teague was the equitable and beneficial owner and in possession of the land in question; that the bare legal title to said land was in the name of Marie Teague Saute; that aside from the holding of said bare legal title Marie had no right, title, interest or claim in or to said property; that at said time and prior thereto she well knew that she had no right, title or interest in or to said property, except for holding the bare legal title for the use and benefit of her father; that on April 1, 1942, Charles C. Teague was the attorney in fact of Marie Teague Saute and was empowered and' authorized by her to execute and deliver a valid deed conveying said property ; that on that day Marie Teague Saute by said Charles C. Teague, her attorney in fact, executed and delivered to the plaintiff a grant deed conveying title to said property to the plaintiff; and that since said date the plaintiff has been and now is the owner of and entitled to the possession of said real property. It was also found that for more than five years last past the plaintiff has been and now is in the open, notorious, exclusive and adverse possession of this real property under claim of right and by virtue of said deed, and that for more than five years last past the plaintiff has paid all taxes levied or assessed on said property. Judgment was entered quieting title to this property in the plaintiff, from *685 which judgment the defendant Marie Teague Saute has appealed.

This is an equity case and there is very strong evidence that Charles C. Teague was the equitable and beneficial owner of this land at the time he conveyed it to this respondent, and for many years prior thereto. There was no evidence tending to show that the appellant had any beneficial interest in the land or equitable right thereto, with the possible exception of the statement made by Mr. Teague in his answer in the 1940 suit for attorneys’ fees, to the effect that this appellant was the owner in fee of the property. The appellant now contends that the judgment entered in that action is conclusive of her ownership under the doctrine of res judicata. That judgment was entered by stipulation as a result of a compromise between the parties to that action which, in effect, left the 40' acres here in question in the same situation as it was before the action was filed. None of the parties to the present action was a party to that action. Nothing in that proceeding is important here except as an admission against interest on the part of Mr. Teague, and that admission is not conclusive as to the rights of the parties involved in the present action. The most that can be said is that it presents some conflict in the evidence. It clearly appears that the purpose and intent of the judgment was to settle the controversy between the parties, and to leave the title to this 40 acres where it was before that action was commenced.

It is next contended that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
295 P.2d 914, 140 Cal. App. 2d 681, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-saute-calctapp-1956.