Cole v. Gill

144 P.2d 24, 62 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 728
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 1943
DocketCiv. No. 14042
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 144 P.2d 24 (Cole v. Gill) 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
Cole v. Gill, 144 P.2d 24, 62 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 728 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

This is an appeal from a portion of a judgment in favor of defendant, in an action brought to reform a promissory note and trust deed, and to cancel a promissory note.

The record discloses that on July 20, 1940, respondent Gill sold to appellants Cole a certain lot situate in South Pasadena which was improved with a large dwelling divided into three apartments, for an agreed price of $3,000. Of this amount $300 was paid in cash, and a trust deed was executed by appellants to secure the payment of a promissory note for the remaining $2,700, which was payable in monthly installments of $25 each.

The deed from respondent to appellants reserved to the former a life estate in one of the apartments in said dwelling, but through error said life estate was reserved to the “grantee” instead of the “grantor,” and that portion of the judgment herein correcting such error is excepted from this appeal.

The complaint alleges that on the day the deed and trust deed were executed, it was agreed between the parties that in the event of the death of respondent Gill prior to the full payment of the trust deed, the balance remaining due thereunder should be cancelled and the appellants Cole should not be required to pay such balance; that through the mistake of the scrivener and by mutual mistake of the parties, the provision terminating the obligation of the appellants upon the demise of respondent was omitted from the trust deed and the note secured thereby, and the same were delivered to respondent and recorded without discovery by appellants of such omission.

Mrs. Cole’s version of the transaction which took place on July 20, 1940, is to the effect that she, her husband and Mrs. Gill met at the office of Mr. Victor Spaulding, a real estate broker, in South Pasadena, to consummate the sale of the property, and at that time Mrs. Gill suggested that the note representing the balance of the purchase price be cancelled upon her death. Mr. Spaulding replied that that was “a job for an attorney” and took the parties to the office of attorney Louis T. Fletcher, located nearby. Mrs. Gill then stated to Mr. Fletcher that she wanted a life estate reserved to her in the lower north apartment and wished the trust deed and note cancelled unon her death; that she was going to make a will [4]*4but not that day. To this Mr. Fletcher replied: “If you are going to make a will, we won’t put that (the two provisions) in the trust deed.” Mrs. Cole testified that the note and trust deed were signed by her and her husband in blank, and because they were going on a trip and wanted something to show their agreement with Mrs. Gill, the latter at the suggestion of Mr. Fletcher executed an irrevocable will, the fourth paragraph of which provided “I further direct that in the event said note is no longer my property at the time of my death, that my said executor pay out of my estate the remaining balance of principal and interest unpaid thereon. It is my intent that the said Richard Cole and Rose Marie Cole shall be relieved from the burden of paying the balance of said note after my death.” This will was witnessed by Mr. Spaulding and Mr. Fletcher and handed to Mr. Cole. A short time thereafter, Mrs. Gill and Mrs. Cole called at Mr. Fletcher’s office for the deed and trust deed, which had meantime been recorded. Mr. Fletcher turned the trust deed over to Mrs. Gill saying that he had mislaid the original note but would send it to her when it turned up. Mrs. Gill then handed the documents to Mrs. Cole to keep for her in the latter’s safe deposit box. It was too late in the day to place the documents in the box and Mrs. Cole took them home with her. When the Coles read the trust deed that evening, they discovered that “the provision where she was to have the north lower apartment had been recorded and was in the trust deed, but the provision that the note would be canceled at her death was not in there.” Thereupon appellants Cole and respondent Gill called at Mr. Fletcher’s office, and, according to Mrs. Cole, “Mrs. Gill said ‘Mr. Fletcher when we came in to make this agreement, I wanted it stipulated in here that the note would be canceled at my death. We don’t find it in there. Will you put it in there for the Coles?’ Mr. Fletcher said, ‘It is not necessary but to satisfy the Coles I will put it in there.’ Whether he copied it or the secretary I do not know, but it was put in there.” A second note was drawn at this time containing the cancellation clause, and was signed by the Coles. Also, the cancellation provision which had been inserted in the trust deed was initialed by Mr. Fletcher and the Coles, but Mrs. Gill, although present, did not initial the change. The revised trust deed was left with Mr. Fletcher for re-recording, and sometime later Mrs. Gill [5]*5and Mrs. Cole received the document from Mr. Fletcher and Mrs. Cole put it away in her safe deposit box. Early in the year 1942, when Mr. Cole who was then engaged in the war effort, was leaving the country, Mrs. Gill asked him for her papers which were in the Cole safe deposit box. Mrs. Cole did not know which documents belonged to Mrs. Gill, so she took the joint tenancy deed to the property and the trust deed, not to Mr. Fletcher, but to another lawyer, who informed her that the trust deed belonged to Mrs. Gill, but that it looked to him as though the provision regarding cancellation had been added after the document was recorded. “And I said, ‘Yes, we know that, but it has been re-recorded.’ He said, ‘Well, you go to the Hall of Records and find out if it has before you hand her the papers.’ I went to the Hall of Records and the man looked it up in the books and I read that page where it was recorded and that provision that the note would be cancelled was not recorded, and I asked the man there if he wouldn’t re-record it then. He said, ‘No, I can’t have that recorded, because Mrs. Gill has not initialed it the way you and Mr. Cole have.’ He said, ‘Have her initial it and then bring it down and I will have it recorded.’ I thought, being Mr. Fletcher was the one that made that out, I went to him, and when I went in his office: ‘ Oh, yes, ’ he said, ‘Mrs. Cole, I have been looking for you. Mrs. Gill has been in to see me, ’ and I told him about the paper and he said, ‘How about having Mrs. Gill initial it, being she didn’t initial it at the time it was made?’ And I said, ‘I want to have it re-recorded, and I thought it had been recorded. ’ He said, ‘That is a mere formality; she will initial that.’ I said, ‘When do you want to go to see Mrs. Gill?’ And he said, ‘Why don’t you leave the paper with me, and I will take it to her and have her initial it?’ I said, ‘No,’ it had not been done right the first time, I wanted to be sure when she initialed it, and I wanted it done right this time, and I wanted to be the one to have it recorded. ... I went to hire a lawyer for a few hours so he would come to Mrs. Gill’s house and witness that initialing on there.” At this meeting there were present Mrs. Gill, Mrs. Cole, the two attorneys, Fletcher and Cockerell, and Mrs. Cole’s sister-in-law. “Mr. Fletcher went in to see Mrs. Gill by himself first, then he came into the other room and called us to come in to Mrs. Gill . . . and Mr. Cockerell showed Mr. Fletcher the trust deed and he said, [6]*6‘All we want here is to have Mrs. Gill initial it, and Mrs. Cole would like to have it recorded. ’ He (Mr. Fletcher) said, ‘Mrs. Gill you get the first note.’ He handed the first note to me, he handed it to Mr. Cockerell. He said, ‘This is the original deal,’ he said, ‘that doesn’t count.’ Mr. Cockerell said, ‘Being you made the second note here, why don’t you just destroy the first note ? ’ He said,‘No, no. I advised Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
144 P.2d 24, 62 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-gill-calctapp-1943.