Couts v. O'Neill

196 P. 109, 51 Cal. App. 152, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 640
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3242.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 P. 109 (Couts v. O'Neill) 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
Couts v. O'Neill, 196 P. 109, 51 Cal. App. 152, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 640 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

This action was instituted for the purpose of having two deeds, absolute in form, decreed to be mortgages. Judgment went for the defendant and the plaintiff appeals.

The transactions out of which the controversy arises were between the appellant and Richard 0 ’Neill, who, although of the same- name with the respondent, was the respondent’s predecessor in interest in the land which is the basic subject of the litigation, and who departed this life in 1910. Whenever, in the course of this opinion, Richard O’Neill, or 0 ’Neill, is mentioned, it will be understood that the reference is to the deceased person of that name and not to the respondent.

On November 4, 1895, Richard O’Neill promiséd to lend appellant the sum of $10,000, and, during the succeeding year, redeemed his promise by advancing to ..appellant various sums aggregating a little more than the amount named. On October 16 and November 12, 1896, appellant and his *153 wife executed to O’Neill, in consideration of the loan, their two promissory notes, and they also, on the first-mentioned date, delivered to him their grant deed to certain lands in San Diego County. This instrument is one of those asked by appellant, in his complaint, to be decreed a mortgage, but the litigation is devoid of all interest as far as it is concerned, for it was beyond all question intended by the parties to be a mortgage and the trial court found that it was one.

[1] On October 10, 1901, within a week prior to the expiration of five years from the execution of the deed just mentioned, the appellant executed to Richard O’Neill a second deed, conveying the same property as the first, and it is upon the effect to be given to this second instrument that the appeal turns.

The appellant asks for a reversal of the judgment upon but two grounds, each presenting a question as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the trial court. He contends, in the first instance, that the evidence fails to justify the finding that the deed of October 10, 1901, was an absolute conveyance and not a mortgage.

The evidence tending to support the finding, if any such there be, is, then, to be marshaled and considered. The appellant having failed to satisfy the obligation secured by the deed of October 16, 1896, O'Neill took up with Wm. J. Hunsaker, an attorney at law, on September 23, 1901, the matter of his relations with appellant. On the next day Hunsaker wrote Gouts: “Mr. O'Neill came up yesterday for the purpose of talking over his business with you. Inclosed you will please find copy of a letter I have this morning written him, which explains itself. Mr. O'Neill declines to take a new mortgage, but is willing to take a deed to the property and give you an option to purchase it within a year. I hope you will be able to find some way out of your present difficulties.” The letter to O'Neill, copy of which was inclosed in the letter to appellant, contained the following introductory statement: “In response to your request for a statement as to the amount due from Mr. Cave J. Gouts to you, and of the method by which you can take a deed to the property, and give Mr. Gouts an option to purchase it within a year from the date of the deed, I beg to say.” The letter then set forth a statement of figures and *154 proceeded: “As I understood you yesterday, you do not feel, under the circumstances like taking a new mortgage, as your notes have now run nearly five years, and there has been no payment on account of principal or interest; but that you are willing to give Mr. Gouts an opportunity to repurchase the property within one year and that if Mr. Gouts is not satisfied with this arrangement that your purpose is to have your mortgage foreclosed. In this connection you might call Mr. Gouts’ attention to the fact that your mortgage was executed before the amendment to the law of 1897, extending the time for redemption to twelve months, and that the supreme court has recently decided that as to mortgages executed before this amendment, the mortgagor has but six months within which to make redemption. If you should agree with Mr. Gouts for a conveyance of the property to you in satisfaction of the amount due you under your mortgage, the transaction will have to be brought about in this way: In consideration of the satisfaction of your indebtedness and a surrender of the notes to Mr. Gouts, he will make a deed to you, which will vest in you the absolute title to the property. At the same time you would execute and deliver to Mr. Gouts an instrument giving him the option to purchase the property from you within twelve months at a figure to be named in the option—this figure should be such amount as will cover interest on the amount due you and taxes on the property. As you have determined not to accept a new mortgage from Mr. Gouts, the only course left open to you for the protection of your interests is to enter into such an arrangement with Mr. Gouts as is above suggested, or to commence proceedings to foreclose your mortgage before the 16th of next month.”

On October 7, 1901, Hunsaker wrote appellant, “Inclosed you will please find copies of a letter and papers which I have just mailed Mr. O'Neill.” The “letter” to O'Neill refers to the “papers” mentioned in the quotation in the following excerpt from it: “Inclosed you will please find carbon copies of the papers which should be executed to consummate the business consisting of a deed from Gouts to you for the property described in your mortgage, a release and discharge of Mr. Gouts from all indebtedness to you; . . . a quitclaim deed from you to Mr. Gouts, and the escrow *155 agreement, under the terms of which the deed is to be deposited with the Farmers & Merchants’ Bank of this City.”

The “deed from Gouts to you” was the one above mentioned as having been executed on October 10, 1901. The “release and discharge of Mr. Gouts from all indebtedness to you” contained this language, among other things: “I have remised, released and forever discharged the said Cave J. Gouts from all claims of every kind, nature and character soever against him, from the beginning of the world to this day.” The “quitclaim deed from you to Mr. Gouts” was in the ordinary form. The “escrow agreement” was in the following language: “The within quitclaim deed from Bichard O’Neill to Cave J. Gouts is herewith deposited in escrow by said Bichard O’Neill with the Farmers & Merchants’ Bank of Los Angeles, California, which is to deliver the same to the within named Cave J. Gouts, if said Cave J.

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Bluebook (online)
196 P. 109, 51 Cal. App. 152, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couts-v-oneill-calctapp-1921.