County of Los Angeles v. Winans

109 P. 640, 13 Cal. App. 234, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 201
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 693.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 109 P. 640 (County of Los Angeles v. Winans) 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
County of Los Angeles v. Winans, 109 P. 640, 13 Cal. App. 234, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 201 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

TAGGART, J.

This is a proceeding in eminent domain brought by the county of Los Angeles to acquire lands upon which to construct a hall of records. Interlocutory decree and final order or judgment of condemnation were entered in favor of plaintiff. By the former the court, besides finding the value of the premises condemned, ascertained and adjudged the rights of the respective defendants in the property and apportioned among them the sum, decreed to represent the value of the property condemned.

Separate appeals were taken by each of the appellants Winans, Cole, Anderson and Joyce from the final judgment,. from the interlocutory judgment, and from the orders denying their respective motions to vacate and set aside certain findings, and their motions for a new trial. No objection is made to the value of the property fixed by the court, but its apportionment among the various defendants is questioned.

On June 27, 1881, J. E. Hollenbeck, who was the owner in fee simple of all the lands affected by this proceeding, *239 executed a deed conveying said lands to Mrs. Emma Means “for and during the term of her natural life and upon her death to the heirs of her body”; the habendum clause of said deed reading: “To have and to hold, all and singular, the said premises, together with the appurtenances, unto the said party of the second party, for life, remainder to the heirs of her body.” J. E. Hollenbeck died in the year 1885, leaving, as the sole executrix of his will and residuary devisee of his estate, his wife, Elizabeth Hollenbeck, who, after the regular distribution to her of said premises, and on the twenty-eighth day of June, 1887, made a deed of all her interest in said lands to said Emma Means. At the time of the making and ..delivery of the former deed there were living: three children, heirs of the body of said Emma Means, to wit: Elfie 0. Means, Claude E. Means and J. Worthington Means; two other children have since been born to her, as follows: Fairy A. Means (now Blee), about three years thereafter, and Juliet E. Means, born in the year 1890. The defendants Chester Kenneth Hendricks, Elizabeth Rosine Hendricks, James Bryan Hendricks, Merle Raymond Hendricks, Esther Georgia Hendricks and Clarence Donald Hendricks are grandchildren of said Emma Means and children of the defendant Elfie 0. Hendricks (formerly Means); and the defendants Claude Edward Means and Dorothy Mátele Means are also grandchildren of said Emma Means, being children of said defendant Claude E. Means.

The defendants who are appellants here claim to have succeeded to the title to various portions of said premises, together including the entire property, by sales thereof made in various proceedings to foreclose street assessments, mechanics’ liens, etc., had in the superior court of Los Angeles county, and by virtue of certain decrees quieting their titles so acquired, made by the same court. The portions claimed by the appellants are respectively designated as follows: That of Winans as lot 4; that of Cole as lot 5; and that of Joyce as lot 6, all of the “Court House Block” in the city of Los Angeles. Lot 4 comprises the east half of the condemned lands; lot 5 the southwest quarter, and lot 6 the northwest quarter thereof.

The trial court found, in effect, as to each of the said appellants Winans, Cole and T. F. Joyce that he had acquired *240 all the right, estate and interest of Emma Means as life tenant and as successor to the estate of J. E. Hollenbeck, deceased, and of her children as remaindermen in and to the portion of the condemned property claimed by said appellant, but that he did not acquire the rights, interest or estate of the grandchildren of Emma Means in said premises. The finding in this respect as to the Hendricks grandchildren and lot 4 being as follows: “The defendants Hendricks, children of defendant Elfie 0. Hendricks, have an interest in said lot four (4) contingent upon the death of their mother, Elfie 0. Hendricks, during the lifetime of the said Mrs. Emma Means, and also contingent upon their surviving said Mrs. Emma Means; and upon the happening of said contingencies they, or the survivor or survivors of them, will be the owners of an interest and estate in fee in said lot four. by virtue of said deed of J. E. Hollenbeck as heirs of the body of said Mrs. Emma Means, the extent of which cannot now be determined.” Similar findings were made as to the other lots, and also as to all the lots, in favor of the other grandchildren, Claude Edward Means and Dorothy Mátele Means, children of Claude E. Means. The appellant Anderson’s interest is found to be that of mortgagee of the interest of appellant Cole in lot 5.

' The appellants attack these findings (other than the last) and the conclusions of law drawn therefrom and the directions of the court as to the disposition of the funds in accordance therewith, and contend: (1) That the remainder created by the deed of J. E. Hollenbeck vested at once in the children of Emma Means, under the provisions of section 694 of the Civil Code; (2) That whether such remainder be regarded as vested or contingent, service of process upon and the appearance in the various proceedings by Mrs. Means, her children with the guardian of the latter, by application of the principle of virtual representation, operated to bind the interests of the grandchildren yet unborn; and (3) that certain of the proceedings were in rem and jurisdiction of the interests of the grandchildren was obtained by following the statutory method of bringing the property into court.

The proceedings in which it is claimed jurisdiction of the interests of the unborn grandchildren was thus acquired so as to estop or bar them from now claiming any interest in *241 the sum found to be the value of the property are as follows: In support of the titles of Cole and Winans (which may be considered together), the following judgment-rolls: (a) The rolls in actions Nos. 14,109 and 10,983 to foreclose street assessment liens against certain portions of said property, brought against Mrs. Emma R. Means, her husband J. W. Means, the defendants named herein who are children of Emma R. Means, and W. E. Rogers, who is the lessee of Mrs. Means, and also of the children under a proceeding in equity (No. 8,616) by their mother and guardian to obtain consent to the execution of a lease in their name; (b) that in an action to quiet title, No. 18,501, by Abbott, the successor in title of the purchasers at the sales made pursuant to the decrees in the above-mentioned foreclosure proceedings, against Mrs. Means, her husband and children; (c) that in an action, No. 21,002, brought by Winans against Abbott, trustee, etc., Mrs. Means, husband and children, to foreclose a mortgage on the portions of the premises now claimed by Winans and Cole; (d) that in an action to quiet title to the same premises, No. 24,146, by Gosch, the successor in title to the purchaser (McCollum) at the commissioner’s sale made in execution of the decree in action No. 21,002, against four of the Means children, J. Worthington Means, Claude E. Means, Fairy A. Means and Juliet E. Means, minors; (e) and that in an action by the same plaintiff to quiet title (No. 28,196) against Mrs. Means, her husband and five children. Incidental to and explanatory of these proceedings, it is also necessary to consider the effect of the proceeding No. 8,616 above referred to, and of probate proceeding No. 5,874, of the lease of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
109 P. 640, 13 Cal. App. 234, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-los-angeles-v-winans-calctapp-1910.