Cooley v. Miller & Lux, Inc.

142 P. 83, 168 Cal. 120, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 298
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1914
DocketS.F. No. 6298.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 142 P. 83 (Cooley v. Miller & Lux, Inc.) 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
Cooley v. Miller & Lux, Inc., 142 P. 83, 168 Cal. 120, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 298 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an action for the partition of real property. The defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial.

The claim of the plaintiff to an interest in the land is founded upon an instrument, designated in the record as “Exhibit B,” purporting to be a conveyance from certain legatees and devisees under the will of Charles Lux, who died on March 15, 1887. These persons are referred to in the record as the “German heirs.” They were represented in California by one of their number, Henry Lux, who was the attorney in fact for the others and as such executed for them the instrument in question. It was executed on July 14, 1890, to James H. Campbell, who was at that time the attorney for the German heirs, employed by them to represent them in the matter of the administration, settlement, and distribution of the estate of Charles Lux and to protect their interests therein in the mean time whenever it became necessary to do so. Cooley afterwards obtained the Campbell interest. The same instrument was under consideration on a former appeal in this case, the opinion being reported in 156 Cal. 510, [105 Pac. 981]. In that decision we held that the instrument was not a mortgage to secure Campbell in the ultimate payment of compensation for his services under said employment, but was a present grant of an interest in their part of the estate, and intended as payment for said services. This *124 decision has now become the law of the case and is conclusive upon us at this time. Upon further consideration we are satisfied that it is the correct interpretation of the instrument. The document is set forth in the previous opinion but for convenience we here give the parts thereof which are important to our present consideration, substituting “German heirs” for “parties of the first part” and “Campbell” for “party of the second part”:

“The German heirs for and in consideration of the reconveyance and agreement hereinafter contained, and of the services already rendered and to be rendered by Campbell, hereby grant to said Campbell an undivided interest in all the property of the estate of Charles Lux, deceased, equal to three-hundredths (3-100) of the shares and interests therein devised to the German heirs by said decedent in his last will and testament. . . .
“It is agreed that whatever compensation shall be allowed to Campbell by the superior court of the county of San Mateo, as attorney for absent heirs, shall be first applied, to reimburse him for all outlays made by him in rendering his services to the German heirs, and the balance shall be credited to the German heirs in final settlement.
“It is fully understood that the compensation herein provided for shall embrace all services rendered in the administration of said estate by Campbell up to and including the final distribution thereof.”'

The former appeal was from a judgment given before the great San Francisco fire of April, 1906, by which the records in the ease were destroyed. It was presented in this court upon a somewhat meagre restored record. After the reversal, amended answers were filed in the superior court and there was a new trial which resulted in the judgment in favor of plaintiff. This is the subject of the present appeal.

In the opinion on the former appeal, in discussing the meaning and effect of this instrument, after stating that these allowances to an attorney for absent heirs, though paid to Campbell, were in the nature of a partial distribution to such heirs, and that the instrument evinced an intention to provide for an adjustment of the matter between them and Campbell, we said that the instrument in effect provided that he should deduct his outlays and “adjust the balance on final settlement of the estate, by considering the same as an advance *125 ment solely upon the three-hundredths going to him, or, as between him and them, ‘crediting’ the same to them.” This, as we intended it to be understood, meant that upon the final distribution of the Lux estate, the sums paid to Campbell should be taken as having been advanced to the German heirs, and’ that, as between him and the German heirs, it should be considered as a part of his three per cent given to him in advance, so that on the final, settlement between them he should receive property of a value, or money in a sum, which, with the sums already received, would make up his full three per cent of their shares of the estate. In a petition by the defendants for a rehearing, it was urged that the passage quoted might be understood as saying that the instrument constituted a grant to Campbell of an interest in the specific property of the estate, in kind; whereas they claimed the correct interpretation was that it was a grant of an amount equal in value to three per cent of their shares of the estate, real and personal, a grant which would be satisfied by the receipt of either property or money, or both, equal in value to three per cent of the value of their shares. In response to this, in denying a rehearing, the court said that if, upon a new trial, “it should be claimed that the aforesaid instrument should be construed as a grant of a share in value, only, of the estate and not of the specific property, and that Campbell has already received all, or a large part, of it, thus satisfying the grant or a due proportion of it, or if it should be asserted that he has elected to take the whole, or part of it, in money, by retaining such sums as he may have received under the orders of the court as attorney for absent heirs, and that the plaintiff is thereby estopped from now claiming any of it, or the ratable part of it, as a share of the real estate, there is nothing in the opinion rendered which precludes such inquiries. ’ ’

Upon the trial from which the present appeal is taken, evidence of the circumstances leading up to and attending the execution of this instrument was introduced and the defendants again claimed that it should be interpreted as above indicated. The court below held the contrary. It made the following findings of fact with reference thereto:

“It was not intended to be, nor was it in fact, an agreement that Campbell should receive as his compensation for his services as the attorney for the German heirs, money and *126 property equal in value to 3-100ths, of the shares of the German heirs in the said estate, and that he might receive the same from time to time during the administration of the said estate, in cash, through the instrumentality of the probate court. The true intent and meaning of Exhibit ‘B,’ the conduct of Campbell with reference thereto, and the circumstances of its execution, were as in these findings set out.” Elsewhere the findings state that the instrument was “an absolute present grant of an undivided 3-100ths of the interest of the German heirs in the estate of Charles Lux, deceased, and derived under his will,” and that “plaintiff as the successor in interest of the said James H. Campbell, holds the title in fee to an undivided 3-100ths of the shares derived by the German heirs from the estate of Lux.”

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 83, 168 Cal. 120, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooley-v-miller-lux-inc-cal-1914.