Davis v. Stulman

164 P.2d 787, 72 Cal. App. 2d 255, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1005
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 1945
DocketCiv. 14820
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 164 P.2d 787 (Davis v. Stulman) 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. Stulman, 164 P.2d 787, 72 Cal. App. 2d 255, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1005 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

FOX, J. pro tem.

This is an appeal by defendant Jennie Miller Stulman from an adverse judgment in an action for declaratory relief.

The contract in question, dated November 19, 1941, was executed by plaintiff D. A. Davis as the first party, defendant Stulman as the second party, defendant Nathaniel A. Davis as the third party, and defendant Estelle Davis as the fourth party. Plaintiff D. A. Davis is the father of defendant Nathaniel A. Davis, and will therefore be referred to herein as the elder Davis while Nathaniel will be designated as the younger Davis. The Hollywood State Bank, which became a party to the transaction through the escrow, will be referred to as the bank.

The subject matter of the contract was certain resort property located in Riverside County which the elder Davis was undertaking to acquire. The major portion of this property was formerly owned by the Stulman Hot Springs Corporation, which later went into bankruptcy. There was a trust deed against the property which secured two promissory notes dated February 17, 1939. One of these notes was in favor of Meyer Katz for $11,750 and the other in favor of the younger Davis for $10,316.47. The trust deed was foreclosed and at the sale in January, 1940, the younger Davis acquired *259 10/22nds undivided interest in the property and the bank the remaining 12/22nds interest. Pending the foreclosure sale the bank agreed to sell its interest to the younger Davis for $9,000: $2,000 in cash and the balance of $7,000 represented by a note on which there was an unpaid balance of $6,000 at the time the contract of November 19, 1941, was executed. Then on August 27, 1940, the younger Davis and Mrs. Stulman entered into a partnership agreement by which it was agreed, among other things, that a one-hálf interest in the said property and business would be conveyed to her. She was to assume one-half of the balance due on his note to the bank; they were to be equal partners. Mrs. Stulman went into possession. A dispute then arose and ultimately the younger Davis went into possession. The net result was that Mrs. Stulman filed a suit in Riverside County for an accounting, dissolution of the partnership and partition of its assets. Before trial, however, the parties entered into a written compromise contract, dated July 2, 1941. This contract was also joined in by Estelle Davis, a sister of the younger Davis who owned an adjacent piece of land, referred to therein as parcel B, on which a hot water well was located. This contract called for the formation of a corporation to which the Hot Springs property, designated as parcel A, said parcel B and an easement and right of way over a third parcel, designated as parcel C, were to be transferred. However, title to these properties never became vested in the corporation. Then on August 1, 1941, the younger Davis assigned to his father, the plaintiff herein, his interest in the contract of July 2, 1941. This latter contract was attached to the contract of November 19, 1941, and the contract of August 27, 1940, was in turn attached to and made a part of the contract of July 2, 1941.

These latter contracts must therefore be considered in determining the rights and duties of the parties under the contract of November 19, 1941, which was made for the purpose of buying out Mrs. Stulman and vesting full ownership of the property in the elder Davis subject only to certain specified encumbrances. The important provisions of that contract are: (1) The elder Davis was to pay Mrs. Stulman $18,400, evidenced by a promissory note secured by a trust deed, for “all of her right, title and interest in and to the real and personal property, the subject matter of said agreement of *260 July 2, 1941”; (2) the trust deed to be received by Mrs. Stulman was “to be a first encumbrance upon the easement on parcel C and a second encumbrance upon the real property described as parcel A in the agreement of July 2, 1941, subject only to an obligation in the principal sum of not more than $6,000 to the Hollywood State Bank, secured by a first trust deed and which the second party (the elder Davis) assumes and agrees to pay, and to tax sales and taxes for 1941-42”; (3) “immediately upon the execution hereof an escrow shall be commenced for the purpose of vesting title in and to the property described as parcel A and the easement across parcel C” in the elder Davis, and “said escrow shall be expeditiously aided by each party hereto so that the transaction may be closed, if possible, by the 25th of November, 1941”; (4) upon the closing of the escrow the contract of July 2, 1941, was to be at an end except as otherwise provided; (5) Mrs. Stulman and the younger Davis were to deliver in the escrow “a grant deed” to parcel A; (6) a complete accounting between Mrs. Stulman and the younger Davis was acknowledged up to November 18, 1941; (7) upon receipt by Mrs. Stulman of said note of $18,400 “secured by said deed of trust” all of her claims in and to the assets and business are fully at an end and determined, except such rights as are evidenced by the deed of trust and the provisions of the contract of November 19, 1941; (8) Mrs. Stulman agreed to dismiss with prejudice her action in Riverside County; and (9) the sellers declared that so far as they knew there were no obligations, claims, or charges against the Hot Springs business or premises other than those which were set forth in an attached schedule. This schedule contained two items of taxes, one for $250 and the other for $385.

In keeping with the provisions of the contract of November 19, 1941, the escrow was opened in the bank that same day. As the bank was the record owner of an undivided 12/22nds interest in the property and was to receive from the elder Davis a note for $6,000 secured by a first trust deed on the entire premises, it became a party to the escrow. Its instruction, dated November 19, 1941, provided that the grant deed it was depositing in the escrow conveying its 12/22nds interest to the elder Davis could be used only when the escrow could cause to be issued “a Beneficiary’s Policy of Title Insurance” showing the deed of trust for $6,000 to be “a first record lien on said property,” except certain taxes. In ac *261 cordance with said instruction the bank deposited in said escrow such a grant deed and the elder Davis and wife deposited therein their $6,000 note and trust deed dated November 19, 1941. The Davises and Stulmans signed their escrow instructions on November 24, 1941. These instructions provided that the deed and other documents from the Stulmans and the younger Davis could be used only when the escrow-holder could “cause to be issued a Joint Protection Policy of Title Insurance” showing title vested in the elder Davis and his wife, “free of encumbrances” except certain taxes, conditions, etc., and a first trust deed securing a note for $6,000 and a second trust deed securing the promissory note of the elder Davis in favor of Mrs. Stulman for $18,400. The grant deed deposited in the escrow by the younger Davis and the Stulmans was in accordance with this instruction and contained practically identical exceptions with those found in the deed that the bank deposited in the escrow.

The preliminary report of the title company dated December 5, 1941, disclosed ten items which constituted defects in or clouds upon the title to various parcels of the property to be conveyed.

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Bluebook (online)
164 P.2d 787, 72 Cal. App. 2d 255, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-stulman-calctapp-1945.