Helmer v. Helmer

197 P.2d 558, 87 Cal. App. 2d 682, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1377
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 22, 1948
DocketCiv. 3728
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 P.2d 558 (Helmer v. Helmer) 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
Helmer v. Helmer, 197 P.2d 558, 87 Cal. App. 2d 682, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1377 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, Acting P. J.

Plaintiff Raymond Ronald Helmer, adopted son of defendant, and his wife, instituted this action alleging generally that on November 4, 1941, they purchased certain described real property in Fresno and paid the purchase price “out of their own money solely,’’ but took title thereto in the names of defendant and her husband, now deceased, as joint tenants; that defendant holds title to the property in trust for them; that although they are in possession of the property, defendant repudiated the said trust and demanded that plaintiffs pay rent for the use and occupancy thereof or deliver possession thereto. Plaintiffs prayed that they be adjudged the owners thereof; that defendant be required to execute a proper deed of conveyance and for other equitable relief.

Defendant answered, denied the allegations made by plaintiffs and ^alleged that she and her husband purchased the property and took title in their names as joint tenants and that the sum of $2,500 was paid by the answering defendant for the property; that she is now the owner thereof and entitled to its possession. By way of cross-complaint defendant asks that her title be quieted and that plaintiffs pay unpaid rent in the sum of $905, since January 1st, 1942, at the rate of $15 per month during the time plaintiffs occupied the premises, and for treble rents and costs.

It appears from the evidence that plaintiffs and their children were having a financial struggle and that defendant *684 had been giving them financial assistance off and on. Plaintiff, Georgine Helmer, the daughter-in-law, testified that defendant lived in Merced and she wrote to her to come there; that defendant said: “ ‘I want to get you folks a home, you children . . . you go back to Fresno and find you a piece of property that has got a home on it,’ priced around $2500 and ‘then you let me know’ and ‘I will buy it for you. I will put the money in the bank in Fresno and you buy the property. ’ She asked me to put it in joint tenancy . . . for the reason . . . my father-in-law . . . knew nothing about this whole proceeding”; and “ ‘For the reason that you children would probably mortgage it and lose it, and I don’t want you to lose it. I want you to have it as your home’; and she said: ‘I will get you a home, and then, ... I don’t expect you to have to depend on me for any more help’ ”; that she immediately notified defendant and defendant went to the bank at Merced and had her money transferred to the Fresno bank “and on this check, as near as I can remember, it was a check. It might have been a certified bank check or what, I can’t tell you that. On the left-hand corner was marked ‘a gift.’ ” It was deposited in the Security-First National Bank of Fresno to a joint account with Mrs. Helmer. On November 3, 1941, Georgine drew a check on the joint account for $50 in favor of the real estate agent. She later drew a $2,500 check on that account and deposited it with the escrow company. The deeds and insurance policies were mailed to defendant. Plaintiffs moved onto the property. Georgine then testified that about a year after that time defendant phoned her and stated that she was afraid that her husband would find out that she had given plaintiffs the property and that she was going to send them a copy of a rent bill; to pay no attention to it because she was only doing it to show her husband that they were paying rent. A copy of a rent bill was received in evidence and was a statement for rent from January 1, 1942, to March 1, 1942, totaling $30, less a credit of $10 for laundry done for defendant. She then testified that she never paid any rent and no demand for further rent was ever made; that plaintiffs improved the property by installation of a pressure system pump at a cost of $375, and also built a pump house, barn, chicken house and made other similar improvements to the place; that defendant told her when she wrote out the checks for the place and moved in that “whatever you put onto this place is yours. It is your home. I want to leave it this way. As soon as Papa passes away I will deed it to you but I can’t do it *685 now because he will find it out, and there will be trouble”; that plaintiffs never paid taxes or insurance on the property excepting one payment of $6.75; that Ronald asked defendant to place title in his name so he could claim his service tax exemption but she refused.

Ronald testified that his mother looked at the property here involved prior to its purchase and she told him that she was buying the home for plaintiffs; that he wanted to improve the place and she said: “You go ahead . . . improve this place, do anything you want with it, because it is yours, and yours to have and to keep ’ ’; that he later went into the service and when he came out he asked her to put the property in his name on account of the tax exemption; that she refused because she was afraid he would mortgage it and be out of a home; that he had nothing to do with the checking or escrow transaction and that he did not see or talk to his mother from December, 1942, until July 24, 1945.

Defendant testified generally that she was the mother of two adopted boys; that Ronald made continuous demands on her for money; that that displeased his father, who was in poor health; that when Ronald’s wife approached her, telling her that she and her two children were being evicted from the home which they were renting, she said she wished “she had a place of her own”; that she told her that she (defendant) would try to get one for her but not to ask for money; that she could live there and pay a little rent and the taxes; that she had a little money in the Merced bank remaining from her father’s estate and she had it transferred to a bank in Fresno to an account carried in the names of herself and plaintiff Georgine, as joint tenants “so she could draw her money”; that after Georgine found a place she transferred $2,600 to that account; that she received a receipt from that bank showing the transfer. This receipt is in evidence dated December 3, 1941, and shows a deposit to the account of Arabella H. Helmer.

The evidence is confusing as to whether defendant had a personal account with the Fresno bank prior to the time the joint account was established.

Defendant testified that she did establish a joint account with Georgine about that time, either before or just after the transfer; that Georgine opened the joint account and sent the card to her for her signature; that Georgine drew on the joint account to pay for the property and the additional *686 escrow charges; that plaintiffs were sent bills each month for rent then due and the request to pay it. Plaintiffs denied receiving such bills. Copies of these claimed bills thus sent were received in evidence. It was stipulated that defendant paid all taxes on the property excepting $6.75, and also all insurance. Witnesses were produced by defendant indicating that bills were received by plaintiffs from defendant and that plaintiffs referred to the fact that they received a bill for rent “from the old lady.” On January 7, 1943, while Eonald was in the service, he wrote a very discourteous letter to his mother indicating great bitterness on his part and denoting some jealousy between himself and his adopted brother regarding money matters and pertaining to defendant’s claim for rent. He therein stated: ‘1 The place was ours . . .

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Bluebook (online)
197 P.2d 558, 87 Cal. App. 2d 682, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helmer-v-helmer-calctapp-1948.