Davis v. Perry

8 P.2d 514, 120 Cal. App. 670, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4536.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 514 (Davis v. Perry) 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
Davis v. Perry, 8 P.2d 514, 120 Cal. App. 670, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 126 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

This is an action to quiet title to real estate situate in San Diego County. A large number of defendants were brought in, but the real controversy was between plaintiffs and the appellant above named. From a decree in favor of plaintiffs, defendant William H. Perry has appealed.

The complaint is in the usual form, setting up the ownership in fee by plaintiffs and that defendants claim some right, title or interest adverse, wholly without right and a prayer for a decree adjudicating those claims and such other relief as usually follows. Defendant William H. Perry alone answers. The answer is brief. It denies title in plaintiffs; admits the claim of defendant and alleges that each and every claim of plaintiff is subsequent and inferior to his interest and asks that his title be decreed.

All parties claim title through a common source. The property here involved was owned by one Clarence D. Hill-man and it is agreed that the fee rested in him on October 14, 1916. We will therefore commence from that date. The title is, as indicated, in Hillman. About this time a person named Durbin instituted an action in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County against Hillman and sued out a writ of attachment. This writ was levied against the interest of C. D. Hillman in and to the property in which we are now interested.

On May 4, 1917, judgment was entered for plaintiffs in the action and on May 12, 1917, a transcript thereof was recorded in San Diego County. An appeal was taken from the judgment and on August 20, 1917, the appealing defendants filed a supersedeas bond, not only staying the execution but by its terms obligating the sureties to pay the amount of the judgment in case of affirmance or dismissal of appeal.

*673 At this point it may be well to consider the situation as of the date of filing the supersedeas. The lien of the judgment and the lien of the attachment on real property are both terminated by the filing of a supersedeas bond. (Sec. 671, Code Civ. Proc.; Brun v. Evans, 197 Cal. 439 [241 Pac. 86].) So we find the property owned by Hillman unencumbered. On April 18, 1919, C. D. Hillman conveyed the property to Estrella Ranch Corporation by a good and sufficient deed which was placed of record in San Diego County on November 17, 1919. On September 22, 1921, a judgment was rendered by the Superior Court in and for Los Angeles County in favor of Davis and Ford (respondents herein) against Hillman. The amount of the judgment was some eight thousand dollars and prior to judgment the lands here involved had been subject to levy of a writ of attachment. On September 28, 1921, in satisfaction of said judgment against Hillman, the Estrella Ranch Corporation conveyed the property here in question, together with other property, to Davis and Ford and this deed was duly recorded in San Diego County on November 9, 1921. The title of respondents, other than Davis, deraigns through Ford. It further appears that on appeal in the case of Durbin v. Hillman, 50 Cal. App. 377 [195 Pac. 274], the judgment was affirmed and in October, 1921, an abstract of said final judgment was recorded in San Diego County and writ of execution issued thereon on March 3', 1922. Thereafter on April 26, 1922, a sheriff’s sale took place and the certificate of sale was recorded on June 8, 1922.

The title of appellant is based on the Durbin judgment and the sale thereunder. No question is raised as to the regularity of the proceedings.

From the foregoing it is apparent that the legal title is in respondents. The appellant sets up no equitable defenses. His answer sets up his title to the property without qualification or without reliance upon any equitable interest. The record indicates, beyond dispute, that at a time when the property stood free and clear from any lien or claim of appellant and at a time when the fee rested in Hillman, the latter vested the title in Estrella Ranch Corporation. From that time on Hillman was out. The corporation, for a good and sufficient consideration, transferred to Davis and Ford, and the respondents acquired title through these last named. *674 The sole claim of appellant rests upon a judgment against Hillman, the lien of which judgment is subsequent to the transfer from Hillman to the corporation. It is obvious that in the state of the record there could be no actual controversy.

But appellant contends that the Estrella Ranch Corporation was in fact the alter ego of Hillman and that the transfer between them was actually no transfer at all and that, therefore, at all times the property and the title thereto was in Hillman and that the recording of the abstracts of judgment prior to the recordation of the conveyance from the corporation to Davis and Ford gives appellant the priority and consequent higher title. This, of course, does involve an equitable defense, the contention of appellant being that the corporation was a trustee for Hillman. Under the practice well recognized in this state such a defense must be specifically pleaded. (Robinson v. Muir, 151 Cal. 118 [90 Pac. 521]; Reilly v. Wright, 117 Cal. 77 [48 Pac. 970] Milliken v. Valencia, 47 Cal. App. 16 [189 Pac. 1049].) That no such defense was pleaded appears from the record herein.

Appellant urges in this connection that the trial court refused permission to amend the answer and assigns this refusal as error. The nature or extent of the proposed amendment is not set forth in the briefs of appellant. Notwithstanding, we have gone carefully over the entire record and we find nothing to indicate that there was presented to the trial court any definite motion to amend: True, there seems to have been some discussion, noted in the record only as “argument of counsel”, but what the argument was we must infer. To repeat, the record completely fails in showing in what respects appellant desired to amend and therefore we cannot say that the court erred in refusing its permission.

In any event, the rule of law regarding a so-called “one man corporation” or as sometimes called a “corporate alter ego” is now definitely announced. The law is well settled that, in order to cast aside the legal fiction of a distinct corporate existence, it must appear that the corporation is the business conduit and alter ego of its stockholders, and that to recognize it as a separate entity would aid in the consummation of a wrong. In other words, not only must *675 it appear that one man or two men own the stock and control the policies, but it must also be shown that there is such a unity of interest and ownership that the individuality of such corporation and such person or persons has ceased; and it must further appear from the facts that the observance of the fiction of separate existence would, under the circumstances, sanction a fraud or promote injustice. (Wood Estate v. Chanslor, 209 Cal. 241 [286 Pac. 1001]; Erkenbrecher v. Grant, 187 Cal. 7 [200 Pac. 641]; Continental etc. Co. v. Rawson, 208 Cal. 228 [280 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 514, 120 Cal. App. 670, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-perry-calctapp-1932.