Daneri v. Gazzola

83 P. 455, 2 Cal. App. 351, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 246
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1905
DocketCiv. No. 113.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 83 P. 455 (Daneri v. Gazzola) 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
Daneri v. Gazzola, 83 P. 455, 2 Cal. App. 351, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 246 (Cal. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinions

Action on a promissory note executed by John B. Gazzola in his lifetime as principal, and defendants as sureties, and delivered to plaintiff's intestate as payee. Defendant Cuneo died before service of summons, and his representative was not made a party. The action was originally commenced in the name of John Daneri, but before the trial he died, and plaintiff was substituted in his stead. Defendant John B. Gazzola died pending an appeal to the supreme court from the judgment given at the first trial, and by supplemental complaint his administrator was substituted in his stead. At the first trial the court sustained a demurrer to certain defenses interposed by answer of defendants. This was held error and a new trial ordered. (139 Cal. 416, [73 P. 179].) At the second trial plaintiff had judgment, from which, and from the order denying their motion for new trial, defendants appeal.

The principal defense made and now urged is that plaintiff's intestate had, before his death, conveyed all his property, including the note in question, to his wife, Angella, and that the administrator could not maintain the action, as the note lid not belong to the estate, but was the property of Angella Daneri. This contention rests upon the presumption that the deed of conveyance was deemed executed and delivered (Civ. Code, sec. 1055), and on the admissions made by plaintiff's attorneys at the first trial that the deed was duly executed and delivered. It appears that some twenty days before his death plaintiff's intestate, being then mortally ill, was informed by the attending physician, Dr. Wheeler, that he could not recover, and was by him advised to make such disposition of his business as he thought proper. Deceased accordingly told Dr. Wheeler to send for one Murphy, a justice of the peace, who came the same day (December 5, 1899), and at the request of deceased Murphy prepared the deed in question, it being entirely in his handwriting except the signature. Ambrose Daneri, son of the deceased, testified: "Mr. Murphy came December 5, 1899. At the direction of my father Mr. Murphy prepared the deed you have shown me and the deed *Page 353 was all completed before Murphy went away, excepting the description (describing certain land). Before Murphy left my father signed his name to the deed and acknowledged the same. The witnesses also signed at the same time. My father told Murphy to get the description in the deed, and then Murphy was to return the deed to my father — my father never saw the deed again. . . . Shortly after his death I obtained the description I have designated and gave it to Mr. Murphy, who inserted the same in the deed, put the necessary stamps on the paper, and also his acknowledgment, and sent the deed to Mr. Bondshu, the recorder of Mariposa county. A few weeks afterward I received the deed by mail from Mr. Murphy." The widow of deceased testified that the deed was not delivered to her, that she never saw it until shown her at the trial, and that she knew nothing about the note. Deceased died December 25, 1899, and the deed was indorsed: "Filed for record at the request of J. S. Murphy, Jan. 29th, A.D. 1900." It was understood by the family of deceased that he had deeded all his property to his wife Angella.

The statement on motion for new trial made on the first appeal was offered in evidence by defendants for the "particular purpose of showing that at the former trial the plaintiff admitted in open court that the deed dated December 5, 1899, by John Daneri to Angella Daneri, was duly made, executed, and delivered by said John Daneri." By this statement it appears that, when defendants offered the deed in evidence, plaintiff objected as irrelevant, incompetent, and immaterial, which objection was sustained. The record then shows that before the ruling of the court "it was admitted that the instrument was duly executed and delivered by the said John Daneri, and that there was no objection to the introduction of the instrument on the ground that the proper foundation was not laid." Before the second trial was commenced plaintiff gave notice of a motion for leave to file a second supplemental complaint, and the notice stated as follows: "The plaintiff hereby gives notice that the plaintiff will not make any admission or renew any admission heretofore made as to evidence." When the statement on motion for new trial on the first appeal was offered, counsel for plaintiff asked and obtained permission to state the facts as to the admission made at the first trial. Attention was called *Page 354 to the above notice given twenty-two days before the second trial, and counsel testified that the admission was made "to enable appellants to present the question of law fairly, and not otherwise. We consented out of good nature, and not believing it any way material. We knew nothing of the facts about the matter; it was wholly immaterial, as the court had ruled against the allegations of the answer on that subject on the demurrer, and had wholly rejected the evidence when offered. I thought the deed all right — it came to plaintiff's attorneys from plaintiff himself. I never investigated any of the facts concerning the making, executing, and delivering of the deed until after the decision of the supreme court reversing the judgment in the former trial." The court found as follows: "The facts covered by such admission had been offered and ruled out by the court under previous rulings of the court, and that the admission itself was made under ignorance of the real facts, was wholly irrelevant and immaterial, was wholly unnecessary, was improvidently and carelessly made, and subserved no useful purpose whatever, and that the plaintiff gave due and timely notice of withdrawal." On the evidence the court found that the deed in question was never completed or delivered to the grantee named therein during the lifetime of the grantor and never took effect as a conveyance.

1. The presumption of law stated in section 1055 of the Civil Code that "a grant duly executed is presumed to have been delivered at its date," is not expressly made conclusive, and, unless so made, "may be controverted by other evidence, direct or indirect." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1961; McDougall v.McDougall, 135 Cal. 316, [67 P. 778].)

2. Appellants contend that the admission made at the first trial was on a material question, namely, the ownership of the note sued upon, and that, if the ownership was in Angella Daneri, the plaintiff was not entitled to maintain the action, for to do so he must be the legal owner with right of possession of the instrument; citing Kiel v. Reay, 50 Cal. 62;Woodsum v. Cole, 69 Cal. 145, [10 P. 331]. We think the denials of the answer, apart from the special defense set up as to the execution and delivery of the deed to which the demurrer was sustained (erroneously, as was decided by the supreme court), raised an issue of ownership. Defendants *Page 355 had a right to rebut the presumption of ownership and possession of the estate of John Daneri, deceased, which arose from the possession of the note by the administrator; and we think the deed on its face, its delivery admitted, tended to rebut that presumption. While this is true, it is manifest that the admission was made with reference to the special defense pleaded, and to which a demurrer was sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
83 P. 455, 2 Cal. App. 351, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daneri-v-gazzola-calctapp-1905.