Cole v. Manning

248 P. 1065, 79 Cal. App. 55, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 20
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 29, 1926
DocketDocket No. 5477.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 248 P. 1065 (Cole v. Manning) 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. Manning, 248 P. 1065, 79 Cal. App. 55, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 20 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

The plaintiff John R. Cole obtained a decree herein against the defendant Effie T. Manning adjudging him to be the owner of an undivided one-half interest in a ranch in Sonoma County, California, and sole owner of two parcels of land situate in the state of Idaho. Said decree furthermore ordered the cancellation of certain deeds theretofore executed by plaintiff to defendant conveying to the latter said Idaho property, and directed defendant to execute and deliver to plaintiff instruments of conveyance to all property of which he was by said decree declared to be the owner, or in the event of defendant’s failure so to do, that the clerk of the court execute and deliver the same. It was further adjudged that plaintiff was entitled to his share of the income from said properties subsequent to the entry of said decree. Defendant appeals and as first ground for reversal urges that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings.

It appears from the evidence that during the year 1910 plaintiff, an unmarried man, residing in Inchelium, Washington, began corresponding with defendant through the medium of an advertisement inserted in a Los’ Angeles matrimonial publication by defendant at the request “of her sister Mrs. Taylor, with whom defendant was then living near Los Angeles. About six months later, in October, 1910, defendant went to Washington for the purpose of meeting plaintiff, the latter having sent her $50 to defray traveling expenses.. Upon her arrival there the parties w'ere not married, but began and for three months thereafter continued an illicit cohabitation, at the end of which period defendant returned to her home near Los Angeles. About a month later, in February, 1911, plaintiff went to Los Angeles, where he resumed the cohabitation with defendant while she was living at her sister’s *58 home, the defendant having advanced plaintiff $50 for traveling expenses. They continued to live in that relationship near Los Angeles until May 7, 1911, and during that time, to wit, on February 25, 1911, plaintiff conveyed to defendant his interest in the Idaho property, valued at about $6,500, and assigned to her a contract for the sale of land in Canada, calling for the payment to him of a balance of $600. He also made a bill of sale transferring to her title to personal property worth about $500. During the early part of May, 1911, they moved to San Francisco, where they entered into an installment agreement for the purchase of the Sonoma County ranch for the sum of $2,550, Mrs. Manning making an initial payment thereon of $250. Cole and Mrs. Manning took possession of the property about May 11, 1911, and Cole immediately began building a house thereon, into which they moved as soon as it was completed, and occupied until the year 1922, representing themselves to be brother and sister, but in fact maintaining a meretricious relationship. During these years the place was cultivated, fenced, and set out to orchard. Cole constructed a barn, windmill, and other improvements thereon, and also worked for various employers in the vicinity, earning approximately $2,658, which was turned over to Mrs. Manning and by her applied to the payment of the purchase price and the improvement of the ranch. Besides his earnings, Cole turned over - to Mrs. Manning various sums which he received on a life insurance policy, from loans, sales of land in Canada and other sources, which sums were also put into the property. Mrs. Manning contributed toward the purchase price and improvements a sum not exceeding $2,500. In 1913 the installment contract was extinguished and the property was deeded to Mrs. Manning as sole grantee, subject to a mortgage of $2,000. In 1920 the ranch was leased and the equipment thereon sold to a tenant for the aggregate sum of $3,590,. or thereabouts, and this money was used to discharge the mortgage, amounting to $2,110:83, including interest. In October, 1922, Mrs. Manning, upon Cole’s application, was committed to the state hospital for the insane, but was shortly afterward released on parole; given into the custody of relatives and subsequently legally restored to competency.

*59 At the time plaintiff conveyed the Idaho property to Mrs. Manning he owned only a half interest therein, his brother owning the remaining interest, but the property was subsequently partitioned and title to the separate share plaintiff was entitled to was conveyed to Mrs. Manning. This property brought in a rental of between $15 and $25 a month, and the Sonoma ranch at the time of the trial was valued at about $12,000.

Plaintiff’s complaint is in one count, his cause of action being based upon an alleged trust relationship. In this respect it was in substance alleged in the complaint and found by the trial court that a relation of confidence and trust existed between plaintiff and defendant arising out of exchange of promises to marry which were made and accepted for the first time during defendant’s visit to Washington, and which were afterward renewed from time to time during the following years; that relying upon said promises of marriage plaintiff, at the solicitation of defendant, was induced to convey to defendant said Idaho property, to contribute toward the purchase price and the improvement of the Sonoma County ranch, and to allow title thereto to be taken in defendant’s name with the understanding and agreement, and pursuant to representations made by defendant to the effect that she would hold the same in trust for the use and benefit of plaintiff and herself until the marriage was consummated, and that in the meantime she would preserve and protect the property so that when married they might enjoy the ownership of the same as husband and wife; that shortly before the commencement of this suit plaintiff learned that defendant was not a single person and therefore had no intention of fulfilling her repeated promises to marry; that upon learning of her marital status he demanded a reconveyance of the Idaho property and the conveyance to him of a half interest in the ranch in Sonoma County, whereupon defendant repudiated her agreements as to her trusteeship, claimed to be the exclusive owner of all of said property, and excluded him from said ranch. Plaintiff then commenced this suit.

Defendant’s contention that the findings are not supported by the evidence is based mainly upon the claim that the evidence proved that the transactions involving the *60 conveyance of the Idaho property and the acquisition of the Sonoma County ranch were consummated principally in consideration of defendant’s consent to maintain meretricious relations with plaintiff; that there never was any promise or any intention on the part of either to enter into the marital relation, but that they agreed from the outset not to marry; that, therefore, the parties being in pari delicto, the court, in the exercise of its jurisdiction in equity, may not intervene in the settlement of property rights acquired as a result of such relationship, but must leave the parties where it finds them.

Assuming, as defendant contends, that the record reveals evidence from which this inference might be fairly drawn, still the testimony given by plaintiff was wholly to the contrary, and his testimony, having been accepted as true by the trial court, is legally sufficient to sustain the findings on this essential issue.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 1065, 79 Cal. App. 55, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-manning-calctapp-1926.