De Arellanes v. Arellanes

90 P. 1059, 151 Cal. 443, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 447
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1907
DocketL.A. No. 1929.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 90 P. 1059 (De Arellanes v. Arellanes) 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
De Arellanes v. Arellanes, 90 P. 1059, 151 Cal. 443, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 447 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This action was commenced on March 23, 1903, to obtain a decree setting aside a deed made by plaintiff to defendant on March 21, 1881, adjudging plaintiff to be the owner of the land described in such deed, and requiring defendant to account for the rents, issues, and profits thereof which had come into his hands. Judgment went for the de *445 fendant, and plaintiff appeals therefrom and from an order denying her motion for a new trial.

The land involved in this action is a tract known as subdivision 12 of the Rancho Punta de la Laguna, in Santa Barbara County, containing 2,042.45 acres, or thereabouts. On March 21, 1881, plaintiff owned this land as her separate property, and had been such owner for several years. Its value was then about twenty thousand five hundred dollars. Her husband, Luis Arellanes, owned subdivision 11 of the same rancho, which contained 2,554.59 acres, and was of about the same value. The only other property owned by plaintiff was some live stock, consisting of about twenty-five head of cattle, and the undivided one half of a lot in Santa Barbara worth from eight hundred to one thousand dollars. At that time there were six living children of plaintiff and said Luis, four married daughters and two grown sons, one being the defendant. Plaintiff was then about sixty-four years of age, and was unable to read, write, or understand the English language. Defendant was the only child remaining with his parents, who lived on one of the two tracts above named. Plaintiff reposed implicit trust and confidence in defendant, and had several years before given him a general power of attorney, which was not revoked until shortly before the commencement of this action. On March 21,1881, Luis Arellanes, in consideration of three thousand dollars to be paid, conveyed subdivision 11 of said rancho to the defendant, and at the same time plaintiff executed a grant, bargain, and sale deed purporting to convey to defendant, for the express consideration of one dollar, subdivision 12 of said rancho. This deed was recorded in the county recorder’s office of Santa Barbara County on March 23, 1881. In the year 1884 Luis Arellanes died, having first conveyed to plaintiff the remaining one half of the Santa Barbara lot. Since that time plaintiff has resided in the city of Santa Barbara on said lot, and defendant has been in possession of the land here involved, residing thereon with his family. The defendant kept his mother’s stock on the ranch for her, and managed such stock for her as he had been doing for years 1 before the execution of the deed. The theory of plaintiff’s ease, as disclosed by the amended complaint upon which the action was tried, was that defendant procured the execution of the deed by her by falsely and fraudulently representing *446 to her that the same was the conveyance from Luis Arellanes of his portion of the rancho, which it was necessary for her to sign as the wife of said Luis, and that she did not discover the contrary until about February 20, 1903, when she was informed thereof by one Quintero in the city of Santa Barbara.

Defendant by his answer denied the allegation of said complaint in this behalf, alleging that by such deed plaintiff intended to give, grant, and convey her said property to him. Various questions relating to the issue thus made were submitted to an advisory jury. Although the jury found that the plaintiff understood what land she owned in the rancho, and that the attorney who drew the deed and witnessed its execution translated and explained the contents thereof to plaintiff before it was signed, it answered the other questions favorably to plaintiff’s contention. The trial court refused to adopt these findings of the jury, and found explicitly that defendant had never taken advantage of the trust and confidence reposed in him by plaintiff, had never made any such representation as was alleged, or any false or fraudulent representation, or any request that plaintiff sign any paper as the wife of Luis Arellanes; that plaintiff, after consultation with her husband regarding his proposed conveyance, voluntarily offered to give her portion of the rancho to defendant, and requested him to consult with an attorney regarding the making of the transfer ; that it was upon the advice of said attorney that the nominal consideration of one dollar was stated in plaintiff’s deed; that said attorney, having prepared the respective deeds for the plaintiff and her husband to execute, plaintiff, her husband, and defendant went to the office of the attorney, whereupon the two deeds were fully translated and explained to both plaintiff and .her husband; that the husband alone executed the deed to his portion, and that thereupon the plaintiff, with full knowledge of its contents, signed, executed, and delivered to defendant the deed oí her portion, having, prior to delivery, duly acknowledged such execution before a notary public. It was further found that the plaintiff well knew and understood that she was executing to defendant a deed conveying her portion of the ranch, and intended thereby to give, grant, and convey to him all her interest therein, and that defendant thereupon entered into possession of the same under said deed, and has ever since continued in such possession, claiming to *447 own the same under the deed, paying all taxes thereon and exercising all the ordinary acts of ownership. There was no intimation in the complaint of any undue influence exerted by defendant in the matter of the execution of the deed, plaintiff’s case being based upon the alleged false representations and lack of knowledge as to the nature of the instrument executed by her.

We take the findings as establishing an absolute gift of this land by plaintiff to her son, made freely and voluntarily in the execution of a purpose conceived by her to so dispose of the property, without the exercise of any fraud on the part of the son, and with full understanding on her part of all the facts and the effect of such a transfer. It is unnecessary to cite authorities to the proposition that such a gift so made cannot be set aside at the instance of the donor, and we do not understand counsel for plaintiff to claim otherwise. Their claim necessarily is that the findings in this respect are not sustained by the evidence.

As appears from the opinion of the trial court, filed in rendering the decision in this case, the learned judge in his consideration of the evidence was guided by the views declared in Soberanes v. Soberanes, 97 Cal. 140, [31 Pac. 910], in the following language: “Transactions like the one under consideration are watched by courts of equity with the most scrutinizing jealousy, and are generally held to be presumptively void. They will be set aside upon the discovery of the least fraud, and every presumption ought to be indulged against them. The person who makes the donation and bestows the confidence is not bound to show that any imposition has been practiced upon him. It is sufficient for him to establish intimate and confidential relations with the donee. . . . Where the parent is of great age, or is enfeebled by disease, and conveys his entire estate to one child, to the exclusion of other children dependent upon his bounty, the burden is unquestionably upon the donee to show that the gift was made freely and voluntarily, and with full knowledge of all the facts, and with perfect understanding of the effect of the transfer.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 P. 1059, 151 Cal. 443, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-arellanes-v-arellanes-cal-1907.