Craven v. Dominguez Estate Co.

237 P. 821, 72 Cal. App. 713, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 485
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 1925
DocketDocket No. 4323.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 237 P. 821 (Craven v. Dominguez Estate Co.) 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
Craven v. Dominguez Estate Co., 237 P. 821, 72 Cal. App. 713, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 485 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The Dominguez Estate Company, a- corporation, was, on the twenty-first day of March, 1917, the owner of a large tract of land situated in the county of Los Angeles. On that day it executed and delivered a grant deed to all of said real property to the Title Insurance and Trust Company, a corporation. This deed was recorded on the day it bore date, and on the same day the Title Insurance and Trust Company executed a declaration of trust, stating that the real property was held in trust and setting *715 forth the terms of said trust. This declaration of trust was not recorded. On March 20, 1920, and while said land stood of record in the name of the Title Insurance and Trust Company, the Dominguez Estate Company executed an oil and gas lease covering some 140 acres of the same land conveyed to the Title Insurance and Trust Company. This lease was executed in favor of defendant George F. Carson and was thereafter assigned and transferred to the defendant, the Carson Oil Company, and later by said company to the defendant, Joe Grail. This lease, however, was not recorded until October 26, 1921. On August 21, 1921, the Title Insurance and Trust Company executed a paper in which it ratified, or attempted to ratify, said oil and gas lease made as aforesaid by the said Dominguez Estate Company. On April 19, 1920, the Title Insurance and Trust Company executed and delivered to plaintiff a grant deed to about four acres of the 140-acre tract covered by the lease in favor of George Carson, and it was stipulated that plaintiff, at the time she acquired this conveyance, had notice of the execution and delivery of the lease by the Dominguez Estate Company to George F. Carson, dated March 20, 1920. Upon this state of facts the trial court gave judgment in plaintiff’s favor, quieting her title to the land described in her complaint, being the land described in her deed, and from this judgment the defendants, George F. Carson, the Carson Oil Corporation, and Joe Grail, have appealed. The Dominguez Estate Company, although made a party defendant in said action and served with process, never appeared therein and judgment by default was entered against it.

It is appellants’ contention: 1. That the trust executed by the Dominguez Estate Company to the Title Insurance and Trust Company was but a dry trust, the beneficiary and trustor, the Dominguez Estate Company, being the real owner whose conveyance binds the plaintiff who acquired her interest in said real property from the trustee with notice of the previous lease executed by the trustor and beneficiary.

2. That there was sufficient estate in the trustor and beneficiary to enable it to make a lease in favor of appellants, which lease was binding upon the plaintiff who had notice thereof.

*716 3. That ratification by the trustee of the lease made by the trustor and beneficiary was binding upon the grantee from the trustee, such grantee having had notice of the lease.

The portions of the declaration of trust material to the decision of the questions involved herein are as follows:

“Know all men by these presents: That the Title Insurance and Trust Company, a corporation, organized under the laws of the state of California, with its principal place of business at Los Angeles, California, hereinafter called the ‘Trustee,’ has received a deed dated March 21st, 1917, executed by the Dominguez Estate Company, a corporation, filed for record March 21st, 1917, conveying to it that certain real property described as follows, to wit: [Then follows a description of the property.] That whereas it is understood that the consideration paid for said real property, hereinbefore described, . . . was paid by said Dominguez Estate Company, a corporation, hereinafter sometimes called the ‘Beneficiary,’ no part of said consideration having been paid by said Trustee hereunder. [The declaration then recites that a portion of said real property had been subdivided into five-acre lots under the mutual agreement of the trustee and the beneficiary, and was known as tract No. 3218, and that the remainder of said real property may be subdivided “in such manner as may hereafter be agreed upon by said trustee hereunder, said Beneficiary and the agent hereinafter named.”]
“Now, therefore, said Title Insurance and Trust Company, Trustee, hereby certifies and declares that it holds and will hold the real property hereinbefore described . . . in trust under the terms and conditions, and for the uses and purposes set forth in this declaration, namely: [It is then provided that lots in tract No. 3218 might be sold for not less than $2,000 each, and that the balance of said tract might be sold upon such terms and conditions as said trustee might deem best, by lot or lots if subdivided, or by parcel or parcels if not subdivided, and “the sale prices thereof to be not less than those hereinafter to be agreed upon by said Trustee, said Beneficiary and said agent, to be indicated by schedule or schedules to be filed with said Trustee.” The proceeds of said lots in tract No. 3218 were to be distributed by said trustee, first, to the payment of *717 the costs, fees and expenses of said trustee; second, the sum of $1,750 to the beneficiary; third, the balance to H. H. Cotton, the said agent. The proceeds from the sale of the balance of said real property were to be distributed by said trustee, first, to the payment of its costs, fees and expenses; second, to the said beneficiary “such sum, or sums, and at such times as may hereafter be agreed upon by said Dominguez Estate Company and H. H. Cotton”; third, the balance to the said H. H. Cotton.]
“H. H. Cotton is appointed agent of the said Trustee in mating a sale of the real property covered hereby, to collect and disburse all rents (if any) thereof and to generally assume the care and custody of said real property . . .
“It is distinctly understood that all deeds, contracts of sale, and other instruments affecting the property covered hereby, or any part thereof, shall be executed solely by the said Trustee.”
“The costs, fees and expenses of the said Trustee hereunder are hereby fixed as follows: [The usual fees for preparing, executing, and recording instruments and issuing guarantees showing title are to be paid to said trustee, also the sum of $250 for drawing and executing the declaration of trust; also two per cent of all moneys received and disbursed under the trust, and the sum of two dollars for eaeh deed or contract executed by the trustee and a reasonable compensation for any services rendered and not covered by the above fees.]
“This trust shall not cease or terminate in any event until all of the costs, fees and expenses of said Trustee hereunder shall have been fully paid. The conditions and provisions hereof shall inure to and bind said Trustee, said Beneficiary, said agent, their heirs, legatees, devisees, administrators, executors, successors and assigns.”

The trust thus created was an express trust to sell real property and dispose of the proceeds of such sale, and was authorized by the statutes of our state. “Express trusts may be created for any of the following purposes: 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P. 821, 72 Cal. App. 713, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craven-v-dominguez-estate-co-calctapp-1925.