Heney v. Heney

251 P. 841, 80 Cal. App. 301, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 60
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1926
DocketDocket No. 5449.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 251 P. 841 (Heney v. Heney) 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
Heney v. Heney, 251 P. 841, 80 Cal. App. 301, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 60 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

Appellants herein, Mary A. Heney and Edwin A. Heney, prosecute this appeal from an adverse judgment in an action in ejectment brought by respondent to obtain possession of a tract of land in the Santa Clara Valley, and for the mesne profits thereof and damages on account of waste alleged to have been committed thereon.

Appellants are the widow and surviving son, respectively, of Richard J. Heney, Jr., deceased, a half-brother to respondent. The land in question, containing 100 acres planted mostly to vineyard, was owned by Richard J. Heney, Jr., and operated by him for the production of wine from 1882 until the date of his death in 1919, at which time his surviving wife, the said Mary A. Heney, succeeded to his interests, and thereafter and until the date of the entry of judgment herein the property was managed by the said Edwin A. Heney.

*303 Respondent purchased the property on August 9, 1922, for the sum of $37,496.39 at a trustee’s sale conducted under the terms of a deed of trust held by R. M. Wright, as executor, to secure payment of a loan amounting to more than $35,000, respondent at the time of sale being the owner and holder of a junior deed of trust given to secure the payment to him of the sum of $61,119.91 and interest, upon which there was due upward of $80,000. Respondent purchased the property with funds obtained from the First Federal Trust Company of San Francisco, through the medium of a loan made to him in the sum of $40,000, payment thereof being secured by the property about to be purchased. A few days subsequent to the foreclosure sale respondent consented to resell the property to Mrs. Heney, and on November 23, 1922, gave a written option to that effect, but afterward revoked the option and commenced this action.

Appellants denied respondent’s asserted title as owner, and by answer and cross-complaint set up equitable defenses charging respondent with having acquired the property through actual fraud growing out of an alleged trust relationship, the substance of the allegations relating thereto being that when the foreclosure of the Wright deed of trust became evident, respondent, a lawyer of prominence and experience, sustaining toward Richard, during his lifetime, and after his death toward the members of his family, fiduciary relations founded upon mutual confidence and an affectionate family association of many years’ standing, lulled appellants into the security that with the aid of a personal friend, Mr. Rudolph Spreckels, a banker connected with the First Federal Trust Company, he would prevent a loss of the property to Mrs. Heney at trustee’s sale by obtaining a bank loan for her; and that, furthermore, on June 12, 1922, due to the trust and confidence reposed in him by Mrs. Heney, obtained from her a power of attorney, authorizing him to sell a large quantity of bonded wine which had been produced on the property, and shown by the evidence to be of the estimated worth of $40,000, one-half of which was subject to a chattel mortgage given for the principal sum of $5,000 to one Steinfeld, and with the proceeds of the sale to pay the Steinfeld and Wright indebtednesses, and any excess to Mrs. Heney; that *304 shortly prior to the date of the foreclosure sale respondent falsely represented that owing to a question of title the hank required as a condition to granting said loan that the loan transaction be consummated with him personally, and that he take title at the sale in his name; but that respondent further represented that in doing so he would still be acting in the interests of Mrs. Heney with no intention of acquiring the property for himself and would convey the same to her on demand; that Mrs. Heney, being thus lulled into security, made no independent effort to obtain funds to avert a loss of the property, but, on the contrary, assisted respondent in obtaining said loan, and permitted him to purchase said property in his own name as sole bidder therefor, being unaware of his intention to permanently deprive her of the property until October 22, 1922. Appellants therefore claimed that respondent’s title was merely that of a trustee, which gave appellants the right to continue in possession and also the right to redeem.

Respondent denied the accusations of fraud and the existence of confidential relations at the time of the impending sale. He also denied that he had practiced any deception or concealment whatever as to his intentions to acquire the property in his own interests, but alleged that, on the contrary, he had repeatedly warned appellants over a period of several months that if the Wright loan was not taken care of by them and a foreclosure sale resulted, he would be compelled, in order to protect his own rights under the second deed of trust, to borrow the money personally and bid in the property, in which event he would retain title and take possession. Regarding said power of attorney, respondent alleged that the debt secured by the Steinfeld chattel mortgage was about due and its payment was guaranteed by him; that since appellants had been unable to sell said wine his object in obtaining said power of attorney was to dispose of the same, if possible, prior to the foreclosure sale, with the hope of securing enough money to extinguish the Steinfeld and Wright indebtednesses, thereby giving his junior deed of trust priority as a first and superior lien; but being unable to sell the wine, he so notified appellants on July 22, 1922, and thereafter borrowed the money on his own account to bid in the property.

*305 The equitable issues thus presented were tried by the court sitting without a jury, and findings were made absolving respondent as to all charges of fraud, the court in its decision having followed substantially the denials and the allegations of the answer to the cross-complaint. Thereupon a jury trial was had of the legal issues, but claims for waste and mesne profits having been abandoned, a directed verdict was rendered in favor of respondent for the possession of the premises, and judgment was entered in accordance with said findings and verdict.

Appellants concede that in so far as the question of actual fraud is concerned, the decision of the trial court is conclusive, the findings exonerating respondent as to the allegations of specific misrepresentations being based upon conflicting evidence and therefore unassailable on appeal; but they now seek to segregate the transaction involving the execution of said power of attorney from the charge of actual fraud as pleaded by them, and again urge said transaction as the basis of a charge of constructive fraud, contending that the sole purpose of granting said power of attorney was to prevent a" loss of the property to Mrs. Heney at foreclosure sale and that therefore the effect of the execution of said instrument was to create an agency which by implication of law imposed upon respondent as agent the duty of protecting Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 841, 80 Cal. App. 301, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heney-v-heney-calctapp-1926.