Forman v. Goldberg

108 P.2d 983, 42 Cal. App. 2d 308, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1254
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
DocketCiv. 6379
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 108 P.2d 983 (Forman v. Goldberg) 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
Forman v. Goldberg, 108 P.2d 983, 42 Cal. App. 2d 308, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1254 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiff brought this suit against her parents to declare a voluntary trust in property belonging to her. It was alleged and found that the defendant, Max Goldberg, obtained possession of the property by means of fraud; that he holds it in trust for his daughter and that he refused to account for or deliver the property to her. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the recovery of the property or the value thereof. From that judgment the defendants have appealed.

The defendants are husband and wife. The plaintiff is their daughter. She was married and has two children. Her husband died as the result of a cancer in April, 1930. After his death, she lived with her parents who reside in Los Angeles. A relationship of confidence and trust existed between the plaintiff and her parents. The plaintiff owned two trust deeds which were executed in her name. One of them secured a loan for $4,000 and the other was for the sum of $2,000. She also owned an automobile, a house and lot in *312 Los Angeles which was sold for $3,700, and an additional sum of money which is involved in this suit. She maintained a separate savings account in a New York bank, and she rented a safe-deposit box in a Los Angeles bank jointly with her father, in which she kept her bank books, her trust deeds and other valuable documents and jewelry. Her father was engaged in the real estate business.

The plaintiff’s husband was a painter and paper-hanger. About a month before the husband’s death, Max Goldberg persuaded his daughter to assign to him her two deeds of trust with the agreement that he would hold in trust and invest her property for her benefit and return it to her upon demand. The deeds were assigned March 21, 1930. At the same time their Willys Knight automobile was transferred to Mr. Goldberg pursuant to the same agreement. After the death of her husband, the plaintiff’s house and lot at Number 315 North St. Louis Street, Los Angeles, was sold by Mr. Goldberg at her request for $3,700, and the proceeds were also retained by him under the same agreement. The plaintiff received from the Painters’ Union, to which her husband belonged, as life insurance on account of his death, the sum of $1149.79, which, together with the further sum of $700 in cash, she entrusted to her father under the same agreement.

With respect to the creation of the voluntary trust in said property belonging to the plaintiff, she testified that her father said to her, just prior to the assignment of the trust deeds:

“Dora, you are going to be left alone with two kids and you have got here this money and property, why don’t you transfer it to me? I will take care of it; I am in the real estate business; I can handle it for you. ... You know I will never take your money away; you can trust me; we will have to live together; and, furthermore, you don’t know much about business transactions, and I will handle it; and any profit, you and your children will profit. . . . Let’s go to the bank and we will take care of the transaction. ’ ’

The plaintiff agreed to transfer to her father and to entrust him with her property under that agreement. It appears that a written document acknowledging the trust was executed by the defendant, Max Goldberg. The plaintiff testified in that regard:

*313 “Q. Now, had your father . . . executed a written paper of some sort? A. Tes, he had. Q. Now when did he execute this paper, before you signed the mortgage, or after? A. After. Q. How long after ? A. About two months; . . . He says: ‘I am going to protect you and the children with this hare paper in case anything happens to me, it would be yours and nobody will be able to get it. ’ ”

This document was placed in plaintiff’s joint safe-deposit box in the bank with other papers of value. Subsequently, Mr. Goldberg procured from the plaintiff her key to the box, and secured a separate safe-deposit box to which he transferred the documents, and to which the plaintiff did not have access. None of the money or property was ever returned to the plaintiff except the sum of $300. On Labor Day, 1936, the plaintiff demanded of her father the return of her money and property, which he refused.

This suit was commenced to establish in the defendants a voluntary trust of the money and property for the benefit of the plaintiff, which property, it was alleged, was procured by the defendant, Max Goldberg, by means of fraud and misrepresentation. No demurrer to the complaint was filed. The defendants denied the material allegations' of the complaint and affirmatively alleged that the two trust deeds and the money secured thereby originally belonged to them and that the instruments were merely executed in the name of the plaintiff as an accommodation to them during the time they were absent on a journey to Europe.

Findings were adopted favorable to the plaintiff on all material issues. The court determined that all of the money and property in question belongs to the plaintiff and that it was delivered to the defendant, Max Goldberg, as a voluntary trust for the benefit of the plaintiff, with an agreement to restore it to her upon request; that upon demand the defendants refused to restore the property, with the exception of the sum of $300, which was paid to her, and that the possession and control of the money and property were procured by means of fraud exercised by Max Goldberg. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the aggregate sum of the proceeds of the two trust deeds amounting to $6,000, and for the proceeds of the sale of the Los Angeles house and lot in the amount of $3,700, and for the life insurance benefits amounting to $1149.79, together with $700 in addition thereto, *314 less said sum of $300 which was subsequently paid to plaintiff. The court also directed the return of the Willys Knight automobile. Interest on said sums was also allowed plaintiff from the respective dates of the receipt thereof at the rate of 7% per annum. From that judgment the defendants have appealed.

The appellants contend that the findings and judgment are not supported by the evidence; that this suit is barred by the statute of limitations; that the court erred in receiving testimony of the plaintiff’s ownership of the money and property, and in failing to appoint an interpreter to translate the questions and answers of the defendants at the trial, who, it is asserted, possessed an inadequate knowledge of the English language.

It is also asserted the court erred in refusing to grant a new trial, for the reason that the affidavits, which were filed by the defendants on that motion, on the ground of newly-discovered evidence, were unanswered by the plaintiff.

The findings and judgment are adequately supported by the evidence, in spite of a serious conflict of testimony. Under the circumstances of this case there is satisfactory evidence that a confidential relationship existed between the plaintiff and her father and that he procured by fraud the transfer of all her money and property to him in trust for her benefit. A close bond of friendship and confidence existed between them.

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Bluebook (online)
108 P.2d 983, 42 Cal. App. 2d 308, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forman-v-goldberg-calctapp-1941.