Dreifus v. Marx

104 P.2d 1080, 40 Cal. App. 2d 461, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 131
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 19, 1940
DocketCiv. 12662
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 P.2d 1080 (Dreifus v. Marx) 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
Dreifus v. Marx, 104 P.2d 1080, 40 Cal. App. 2d 461, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 131 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

Prom a judgment in favor of plaintiff, cancelling certain agreements, quieting her title to certain properties, erasing from the records a deed of trust which evidenced a lien upon plaintiff’s Long Beach property, and adjudging her to be entitled to the possession of certain moneys, the defendant Hessey takes this appeal.

The action included as defendant, one Marx, who was the primary factor of plaintiff’s misfortune. Said defendant had induced plaintiff to convey to him certain valuable properties in Long Beach and San Pedro. Notice by plaintiff of rescission of her transactions with defendants had been served and recorded. It was after the recording of her notice of rescission that appellant made his loan upon the property described in said notice. Summons having been served upon both defendants, Marx defaulted.

On July 21, 1936, plaintiff was 77 years of age, physically infirm and mentally unequipped to engage in the transaction of matters involving valuable properties without the advice of counsel. She was the owner of lot 11, block G, Bay View Heights, in Long Beach, and other properties in San Pedro. *463 On said date, Marx caused plaintiff to enter into an exchange agreement whereby he should convey to plaintiff the title to a parcel o£ land in Palm Springs, Riverside County, in exchange for lot 11 and the sum of $400. On the 24th day of July, 1936, plaintiff and Marx executed another agreement by the terms of which Marx agreed to procure a building site in Palm Springs and vest the title thereto in plaintiff, and to construct thereon a five-room bungalow in exchange for her San Pedro lots. Plaintiff conveyed her lots in Long Beach and San Pedro to Marx and paid him the sum of $400 for which he gave her nothing in return.

Her anxieties having stimulated her to action, plaintiff then employed counsel to advise her with respect to her dealings with Marx. Acting upon the advice of her counsel, a notice of rescission of all agreements and conveyances theretofore made by plaintiff upon the grounds of fraud, undue influence and want of consideration was served on Marx, July 28, 1936. This notice described the real property involved; it was signed and acknowledged by plaintiff. On the following day the notice was recorded in the office of the county recorder of Los Angeles County, the situs of the properties. At the same time, plaintiff’s attorney advised Marx that all dealings thereafter to be transacted between Marx and plaintiff should be in the presence of said attorney. But Marx was not to be throttled by the advice of plaintiff’s counsel. On July 31, 1936, he caused plaintiff to visit his office where he stated that he was washing his hands of the whole affair and was returning plaintiff’s property to her. Believing and retying upon the statements of Marx, and at his request, plaintiff signed papers presented to her by Marx without reading them. It developed that plaintiff had unwittingly signed a writing by the terms of which it was provided that Marx was to convey to her the San Pedro properties and a lot in Palm Springs and that he should retain the Long Beach lot and the $400. At the same time and in equal ignorance, she signed a writing by the terms of which she reaffirmed the conveyance of lot 11 under date of July 21st, as a valid transfer. Also, in like manner, she signed a letter by the terms of which she discharged her said attorney and declared that her differences with Marx had been settled and that her property had been returned to her. Marx did, in fact, reconvey to plaintiff her San Pedro prop *464 erty but retained title to the Long Beach lot, which is the only property here involved.

Within a week after plaintiff recorded her notice of rescission on July 29th, appellant commenced negotiations with Marx with a view of lending him the sum of $2,200. In order to procure, this loan, Marx offered as security the Long Beach lot. On the 5th day of August, 1936, an escrow was opened in the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Long Beach in which appellant deposited the sum of $2,200 while Marx placed with the same escrowee his promissory note for $2,200, and a deed of trust conveying lot 11 in Long Beach to the Farmers and Merchants Trust Company as the trustee with appellant as beneficiary. Following instructions, the bank ordered a policy of title insurance from the National Title Insurance Company which soon discovered and reported the presence upon the deed records of the notice of rescission dated July 29th. This discovery was disclosed by the title company to both Marx and the appellant and thereupon this title company declined to issue a policy of title insurance and so advised the escrowee.

After appellant had been informed by the title company of its refusal to issue its policy “because there was some discrepancy over the deed or something” Marx and appellant instructed the bank to order the policy from an altogether different title company. In due season a policy showing no defects in the title of lot 11 was issued by the last-mentioned title company and delivered to said bank. The events heretofore narrated were brought to the knowledge of appellant but subsequent developments were withheld from him.

On August 11th plaintiff served another notice of rescission upon Marx, demanding a rescission of all prior transactions upon the grounds of fraud, undue influence, duress and failure of consideration. This second notice was not recorded and was never brought to the attention of appellant.

One of the assignments of error made by appellant is his lack of knowledge of the last-mentioned notice of rescission. At the time of the closing of the escrow and of the recording of the deed of trust on the 18th day of August, 1936, not only was the notice of rescission unknown to appellant but on said day plaintiff’s declaration of July 31, 1936, reaffirming the validity of her said conveyance to Marx under date of July 21st was, itself of record. Appellant’s lack of knowl *465 edge of the existence of the one instrument and his iteration of his knowledge of the existence of the other have apparently afforded him much comfort in his enthusiastic rehearsal of the events preceding the recording of the trust deed.

On August 19, 1936, this action was instituted and a notice of lis pendens was filed in the office of the county recorder.

In order that one item of the judgment may be understood, we must observe that the bank paid $2,000 of the escrow fund to Marx and retained $200 thereof, in pursuance of its said escrow instructions, for the purpose of effectuating repairs upon the Long Beach property. In concluding the judgment, the trial court decreed that ‘ ‘ all moneys now being held by the defendant Farmers and Merchants Trust Company of Long Beach, under the hereinbefore described deed of trust be paid over to the plaintiff”. Clearly, the court intended to refer to the said $200 retained by said bank out of said escrow.

Inasmuch as the failure of Marx to deny or answer the complaint was to admit all of its material allegations essential to the judgment (Strong v. Shatto, 201 Cal. 555 [258 Pac. 71]) there is no question that the judgment against Marx is amply supported by the evidence, as appears from the positive findings of the court upon all of the material allegations of the complaint in favor of plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
104 P.2d 1080, 40 Cal. App. 2d 461, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreifus-v-marx-calctapp-1940.