Fuller v. Montafi

203 P. 406, 55 Cal. App. 314, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 33
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 23, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3947.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 203 P. 406 (Fuller v. Montafi) 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
Fuller v. Montafi, 203 P. 406, 55 Cal. App. 314, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 33 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action brought by her to enjoin the defendants Montafi, Giudici, and Donati from committing waste, consisting in the cutting by them of tan-oak timber upon certain lands and premises of which the plaintiff was the owner of an undivided interest as a tenant in common with one Kneeland L. Fuller, her son, who owned the other *315 undivided interest therein. The said plaintiff did not join her said son as a party plaintiff in the action but the defendants undertook to make him a party thereto through the filing of a cross-complaint in which he was named as a cross-defendant. In their answer herein the defendants denied generally and specifically the averments of the plaintiff’s complaint as to her ownership of the premises in question and as to any damage caused by their acts in cutting the tan-oak timber upon the same. In their cross-complaint the said defendants set forth affirmatively that they had gone into the possession of said premises, and had cut and carried away certain tan-oak bark under and by virtue of a contract in writing between themselves and said Kneeland L. Fuller giving them the right so to. do; and they further averred that having entered upon said premises in pursuance of said contract and partly performed the same they were prevented from further proceeding with the performance of said contract through the fraudulent coercion of said plaintiff with said Kneeland L. Fuller, to their damage in a large sum. They asked that said Kneeland L. Fuller be made a cross-defendant in the action, and they prayed that the plaintiff take nothing by her complaint but that the defendants have judgment against her and against said cross-defendant for damages in the sum of $1,460.

Upon the trial and submission of the cause the trial court made and filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and in so doing found that the plaintiff was and for several years prior to June 20, 1918, had been the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the premises described in her complaint; that upon said twentieth day of June, 1918, there were standing and growing thereon certain tan-oak timber of the value of about $2,000, and that on or about said last-named date said defendants, without permission or authority from said plaintiff and in violation of her rights and interests in said premises and without her will, wish, or consent, entered upon said premises and proceeded to cut the said tan-oak timber thereon; that between said date and the first day of September, 1918, they cut and removed from said property some twenty-seven cords of tanbark of the value of $810, and in so cutting and removing said tan-bark they also cut and destroyed many young *316 second-growth tan-oak trees, to the great damage of said plaintiff. The court further found that on March 1, 1919, the said defendants again entered upon said premises and resumed the cutting of tan-oak timber thereon, and were proceeding with their unauthorized activities in so doing, to the plaintiff’s irreparable damage, when this action was instituted by her.

The court then proceeded to make findings upon the issues presented by defendants’ cross-complaint, and in so doing found that the .cross-defendant Kneeland L. Fuller had for some years prior to May 28, 1918, been and was on said date the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the premises described in the plaintiff’s complaint; that on said date he entered into the following contract with the defendants Montafi, Giudici, and Donati, namely:

“Know all men by these presents that I, K. L. Fuller has this day sold to P. Montafi, Sperindio Giudici and N. Donati, all the tan bark and wood belonging thereto on what is known as the C. E. Fuller ranch in Bodega township, County of Sonoma, Cal., for and in consideration of the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, and ten cords of tan bark wood, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged as paid. I, the party of the first part hereby agree to extend the time for a period of three years to the said party of the second part as named above in which to cut and peel the wood and tan bark above referred to.
“We, the party of the second part, viz., P. Montafi, Sperindio Giudici and N. Donati hereby agree to all the conditions and terms of this contract above set forth.”

The court further found that the tan-bark and wood referred to in said contract was the tan-bark and wood growing upon the premises described in the plaintiff’s complaint; that the sum of $150 named in said contract as a part consideration therefor was paid at the date thereof to the cross-defendant, but that no portion of the tan-bark wood constituting the remaining portion of said consideration had been delivered; that said defendants had suffered no damage by reason of any fraudulent collusion of said cross-defendant with the plaintiff, his mother, in refusing to permit said defendants to remove any more tan-bark or wood from said premises or to continue cutting the same, and that *317 said cross-defendant and his said mother had not been guilty of any fraud or collusion in the premises.

As a conclusion of law from said findings of fact the trial court found that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief prayed for in her complaint, and that the defendants were entitled to no relief upon their cross-complaint.

The defendants have appealed from such judgment and urge the following points upon said appeal: First, that' the evidence is insufficient to justify the findings of the trial court upon the plaintiff’s' alleged cause of action; and, second, that the defendants were entitled to a judgment for damages against the cross-defendant Kneeland L. Fuller upon the undisputed evidence in the ease.

[1] As to the first of these points we are satisfied from a careful review of the evidence in the case that the appellants’ contention cannot be sustained for the reason that the evidence is undisputed that the plaintiff was at all times the owner of an undivided one-half of the premises in question as a tenant in common with her son, Kneeland L. Fuller; and is also undisputed that she did not sign or execute the contract made with the defendants by her said cotenant: she could not therefore be bound by said contract, nor could her rights in the substance of said real estate be invaded through the making of the same with her cotenant, unless it could be shown that she had by her acts and conduct ratified and confirmed said contract and was thus estopped to maintain this action. The evidence on this branch of the case is sharply and substantially in conflict. The plaintiff herself testified that she never acceded to the making of said contract nor accepted the same nor any of the fruits thereof, but had always disapproved the same, and that she had informed the defendants of her said disapproval and warned them off the premises. She is supported by other witnesses in so testifying; and -the trial court evidently believed her story and made its findings in her favor upon this branch of the case accordingly. In this state of the record we shall 'not under the well-settled rule disturb the findings and judgment of the trial court upon this branch of the case.

[2]

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 406, 55 Cal. App. 314, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-montafi-calctapp-1921.