Faivre v. Daley

29 P. 256, 93 Cal. 664, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 623
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1892
DocketNo. 14400
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 29 P. 256 (Faivre v. Daley) 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
Faivre v. Daley, 29 P. 256, 93 Cal. 664, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 623 (Cal. 1892).

Opinion

Paterson, J.

George D. Carleton, a married man, became the owner of the property referred to in the complaint on January 11, 1868, and on July 7, 1868, he filed a homestead thereon. On April 8, 1870, Carleton executed and delivered to A. E. Horton a deed of con[666]*666veyance of the property, and thereafter Horton’s interest, if he acquired any, passed through mesne conveyances to S. S. Clark. The trustees of Clark’s estate executed and delivered a deed of the land — grant, bargain, and sale in form — to plaintiff, on June 22, 1885, the considation named being $7,087. On July 8, 1885, Carleton and wife executed and delivered to plaintiff and Pauly a quitclaim deed of the property. On March 1, 1886, plaintiff and Pauly executed and delivered to the Clark trustees a grant, bargain, and sale deed of the land, but the deed contained the following clause: “This conveyance is intended to reconvey and release only such title as the parties of the first part obtained to said premises by virtue of a deed from the parties of the second part to the parties of the first part.” On March 18, 1886, plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement, by the terms of which, it is alleged and found, defendant was to “sell and dispose of any part or all of the interest of the plaintiff in and to said lands and premises, and if necessary, at Ms own cost and expense, to bring suits in law or equity to recover any part or all of said interest which said plaintiff had in the said lands, .... and to do and cause to be done whatever be, the said Thomas J. Daley, should deem just and proper for the purpose of selling or disposing of said interest of plaintiff as aforesaid, . . . . the said defendant to pay all costs and expenses which might be incurred in or about the recovery, sale, or disposal of said lands,” and was to receive one half of all moneys obtained from the sale, the other half to be paid to plaintiff. Notwithstanding the conveyance to plaintiff and Pauly of July 8th, Carleton and wife executed and delivered a grant, bargain, and sale deed of the premises to the defendant, on June 30, 1886. On October 5, 1886, the Clark trustees also executed and delivered a deed of the land to one Hensley. Hensley afterwards conveyed certain interests to Platt, Morrill, Bates, and Parrish. The defendant, on February 7, 1877, quitclaimed the larger part of the land to Platt, who took the conveyance, however, for the benefit of [667]*667himself and the other persons last named. On April 2, 1887, defendant conveyed another portion of the land to McLaren. The remaining portion he sold to Wilde and Frink.

This action was commenced on April 30, 1888, to recover one half of the sums of money received by defendant,—$5,450. Although the evidence is undisputed that defendant received from Platt the sum of ten thousand dollars for the deed of February 7th, and four hundred dollars for the deed to McLaren of April 2d, the court found that the defendant had sold plaintiff’s interest in that portion of the land purchased by Platt for the sum of five thousand dollars, and his interest in that portion sold to McLaren for the sum of four hundred dollars. It is a singular fact, too, that although the court found defendant was “ at his own cost and expense to bring suits, .... and to pay all costs and expenses which might be incurred in or about the recovery, sale, or disposal of said lands,” and that all money obtained from the sale was to be equally divided between plaintiff and defendant, $562.50 was allowed the defendant as costs incurred by him in making the sale and conveyance. Plaintiff was given judgment for only $2,418.75 (that being one half of the balance remaining after deducting $562.50 from $5,400), and interest at seven per cent from August 2,1887.

Defendant moved for a new trial, and the motion was denied. From this order and the judgment he has appealed.

The court made no finding as to the interest purchased by Wilde and Frink, but the evidence shows that the plaintiff had parted with his interest in the land sold to them before he made the deed to defendant.

It is claimed by appellant that plaintiff acquired no interest in the land through the quitclaim deed received from Carleton and wife, and if he did, such interest was conveyed by him to the Clark trustees by the deed of March 1, 1886, and therefore the defendant took nothing by the plaintiff’s deed of March 18, 1886.

[668]*668Conceding that the defendant, although his contract with plaintiff has not been rescinded, is not estopped from setting up these defenses, we think there is no merit in either contention.

Section 12'43 of the Civil Code, upon which appellant relies, provides that a homestead can be abandoned only by a declaration of abandonment, or a grant thereof, executed and acknowledged by the husband and wife, but the word “grant ” is here used in its generic, not its technical, sense, and as so used, is a term applicable to all transfers of real estate. Section 1053 of the Civil Code says that “ a transfer in writing is called a grant, or conveyance, or bill of sale.” Washburn says that “though the word ‘ grant ’ was orignally made use of in treating of conveyances of interests in lands, to denote a transfer by deed of that which could not be passed by livery, and of course was applied only to incorporeal hereditaments, it has now become a generic term, applicable to the transfers of all classes of real property, and will be used in that broad sense in speaking of the formal transfer of titles to lands.....Wood, in his treatise on Conveyancing, says: ‘The word “grant,” taken largely, is where anything is granted or passed from one to another; and in this sense it comprehends feoffments, bargains and sales, gifts, leases in writing or by deed, and sometimes by word without writing.’ ” (3 Washburn on Deal Property, _5th ed., 193, 375.) A statute of New Jersey provided that it should be lawful for any married female to receive, “ by gift, grant, devise, or bequest, and hold to her sole and separate use as if she were a single female, real and personal property ”; and the court held that the legislature did not intend to use the terms “gift” and “grant” in their technical sense, but to embrace within the meaning of the terms used all the modes of acquiring property, except, perhaps, by descent. The court said: “ The Vermont statute provides that any rights in real estate which a feme covert may acquire by gift, grant, devise, or inheritance, during coverture, shall not be liable for the debts of the lius[669]*669band. These words, ‘gift’ or ‘grant,’ came up for construction in the case of Peck v. Walter, 26 Vt. 85, wherein Redfield, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says: ‘It.is very apparent that the statute was intended to embrace all rights in real estate which the wife shall acquire during coverture. It would be a very nice, and as it appears to me a very unintelligible, construction of this statute to limit the word “ grant ” to its narrowest technical import. It evidently was intended to apply to all conveyances by deed which were not gifts.' In our statute, by the term ‘ grant,’ the legislature intended all the ordinary modes of acquiring property by deed, whether operating by force of the statute of uses or not, that by long usage such had become not only the popular but also the technical meaning of the term.” (Ross v. Adams, 28 N. J. L. 165.) In Durant v. Ritchie, 3 Mason, 69, the court said: “ The word ‘ grant ’ is nomen generalissimum.

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Bluebook (online)
29 P. 256, 93 Cal. 664, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faivre-v-daley-cal-1892.