Couts v. Winston

96 P. 357, 153 Cal. 686, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 515
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1908
DocketL.A. No. 1960.
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 96 P. 357 (Couts v. Winston) 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
Couts v. Winston, 96 P. 357, 153 Cal. 686, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 515 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

In 1902 the plaintiffs executed and delivered to the defendant Carolina M. Winston a deed of certain real property in San Diego County. This action was brought to have that deed declared a mortgage, and to redeem the land. The defendants answered, denying that the instrument was intended as a mortgage, and filed a cross-complaint praying-judgment for possession of the premises. Upon a trial, the findings were in favor of the plaintiffs, and they had judgment granting them the right to redeem. Appeals are taken from the judgment and from an order denying the defendants’ motion for a new trial.

The only contention made by appellants is that the evidence was insufficient to justify the finding of the court that the deed from plaintiffs to Carolina M. Winston was intended to be, and in fact was, a mortgage.

It is no doubt the law, as repeatedly declared in our decisions, that clear and convincing evidence is required to justify a court in finding that a deed which purports to convey the title to land in. fee. simple was intended to be a mortgage. “That a deed purporting on its face to convey the title absolutely may be shown by parol evidence to be something else—namely, a mortgage—is a striking exception to the general rule, and it has been universally held that the character of the instrument cannot thus be changed except upon clear and convincing evidence.” (Woods v. Jensen, 130 Cal. 201, 203, [62 Pac. 473] ; see, also, Mahoney v. Bostwick, 96 Cal. 53, [31 Am. St. Rep. 175, 30 Pac. 1020] ; Sherman v. Sandell, 106 Cal. 373, [39 Pac. 797] ; Ahern v. McCarthy, 107 Cal. 382, [40 Pac. 482] ; Sheehan v. Sullivan, 126 Cal. 189, [58 Pac. 543] ; Emery v. Lowe, 140 Cal. 379, [73 Pac. 981].) But whether or not the evidence offered to change *689 the ostensible character of the instrument is clear and convincing is a question for the trial court. (Brison v. Brison, 90 Cal. 323, 334, [27 Pac. 186] ; Mahoney v. Bostwick, 96 Cal. 53, [31 Am. St. Rep. 175, 30 Pac. 1020].) In such cases, as in others, the determination of that court in favor of either party upon conflicting or contradictory evidence is not open to review in this court. (Sherman v. Sandell, 106 Cal. 373, [39 Pac. 797].) If, therefore, the evidence offered by plaintiffs, taken by itself, was sufficiently “clear, satisfactory and convincing” to satisfy the trial court that the deed was in fact a mortgage, the finding made cannot be overthrown merely because numerous witnesses, whose character is not impeached, gave positive testimony to the contrary effect. As was said in Wadleigh v. Phelps, 149 Cal. 627, 637, [87 Pac. 93], the appellate court “will not disturb the finding of the trial court to the effect that the deed is a mortgage, where there is substantial evidence warranting a clear and satisfactory conviction to that effect. All questions as to preponderance and conflict of evidence are for the trial court.”

Reading the record in the light of these rules, we cannot say that the finding declaring the deed in question to be a mortgage was without sufficient support in the evidence.

The land in controversy is a tract of 233 acres, the greater part of which is farming land. The plaintiff John P. Gouts had resided on the property for a number of years. The defendant Carolina M. Winston is his sister. In 1898, John P. Gouts and his wife, the co-plaintiff, executed a mortgage of the property to the German American Savings Bank to secure a loan of fifteen hundred dollars. In 1902 the bank commenced suit to foreclose its mortgage. Gouts testified that, while this suit was pending, he wrote to John B. Winston, the husband of his sister Carolina, asking him for help and offering to secure him with a deed if he would loan the money required to pay the mortgage. Winston replied in a letter in which he said, among other things, “If you care to accept, on the proposition to deed over the property as you suggested, I can offer you two thousand dollars.” Gouts then went to Los Angeles, the home of the Winstons, to close the matter up. He told Mr. Winston, as he testifies, that “it was very nice of him to help me, if he was going to lend that money I would deed him the property, you know, that when *690 the time came if he had to have his money, there would not be any trouble between us. He could have the right to sell the property and pay himself and if I didn’t have the money and he had to have his settlement with the bank (from which he was borrowing the money), I would get out of there and give him a quitclaim deed. . . . He said he hated to go into debt, but he would do it for me.” On the same day the parties met at the office of Winston’s attorneys, and steps were taken for consummating the transaction. It was finally concluded in this form: The plaintiffs executed and delivered to Carolina M. Winston a grant, bargain, and sale deed purporting. to convey the property subject to the lien of the mortgage of the German American Savings Bank, and of unpaid taxes. The deed recited a consideration of two hundred dollars. Mrs. Winston executed and delivered to the plaintiff Susie G. Gouts, an instrument, in form a lease of the property for one year from September 19, 1902, in which Mrs. Couts agreed to pay the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars as rent, and was given, on condition of her paying the rent of one hundred and fifty dollars, the option of purchasing the property at any time before the nineteenth day of September, 1903, for $2,150. This amount of $2,150 was actually paid out by Mrs. Winston. She satisfied the mortgage of the German American Savings Bank, expending $1,950 for this purpose, and paid two hundred dollars in cash to Couts. The two hundred dollars, as Couts says, ois an amount which he asked Winston to loan him over and above what was needed to pay the bank. It was to pay other debts owing by Couts. The rent of one hundred and fifty dollars, fixed in the “lease” is seven per cent of $2,150, and this was the rate of interest paid by Mrs. Winston on the loan negotiated by her to raise this money.

The plaintiffs remained in possession of the property. At the end of the year Couts paid to the defendants two hundred dollars, and received an extension of the option for one year. In the following year, 1904, Couts sought further extension, and this was granted by the Winstons for a period of six months. No payment was made by the plaintiffs within the time as so extended, their efforts to make a sale of the property having been unsuccessful. In August, 1905, the plaintiffs tendered to Mrs. Winston the amount advanced *691 by her, with interest and costs, and demanded a reconveyance. This tender and demand were refused.

At the time of the execution of the deed, in September, 1902, the land in controversy was worth, with improvements, some thousands of dollars in excess of the debt to the German American Savings Bank.

Much of the foregoing statement is based on the testimony of the plaintiff John F. Gouts. In some particulars it is corroborated by other witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
96 P. 357, 153 Cal. 686, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couts-v-winston-cal-1908.