Henley v. Bursell

215 P. 114, 61 Cal. App. 511, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 493
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 2587.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 215 P. 114 (Henley v. Bursell) 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
Henley v. Bursell, 215 P. 114, 61 Cal. App. 511, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 493 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment of nonsuit. No brief has been filed by respondents and on the oral argument their learned counsel relied for affirmance of the judgment chiefly upon the point that appellant should not be heard because he had not printed fully in Ms brief the evidence as required by section 953c of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1919. In People v. Woods, 190 Cal. 513 [213 Pac. 951], however, it is said by the supreme court: “The statute requiring the printing in the briefs of the record and evidence relied upon on appeal (sec. 953c, Code Civ. Proc.), particularly since the amendment of 1919 (Stats. 1919, p. 261), must be regarded as one for the convenience of the appellate tribunals, and for that reason directory only, and should be disregarded by the court wherever substantial justice requires it to be done.”

Moreover, when the cause was pending in the supreme court respondents moved the court “to require appellant to print and serve upon respondents and file with said court, a supplement to his brief in which shall be set forth in full that portion of the record relied upon by such appellant, *513 including a copy of all of the evidence taken in the court below.” Thereafter a supplementary brief—so ordered by the supreme court, according to the admission of counsel at the oral argument herein—containing, as stated by appellant, “the parts of transcript relied upon by appellant” was filed, which he claims is sufficient to meet the requirement of the rule, but respondents seem to be of the opinion that it should contain all the evidence received at the trial. To understand the evidence therein set out we must bear in mind that the action was brought primarily to quiet title to certain real property and to have set aside and canceled certain deeds therefor, and it was alleged in the complaint that “ail the claim of said defendants, and each and every of them, is based upon a certain instrument purporting to be a deed dated the seventeenth day of February, 1911, and recorded March 10, 1911, . . . Tulare County Becords; that said instrument herein referred to if made and executed as herein indicated, was so made, executed and delivered while this plaintiff was ill and afflicted and incompetent to transact business, all of which was well known to each and every of said defendants; that shortly thereafter a guardian was duly appointed for this plaintiff, and plaintiff was committed to the State Hospital for the insane at Stockton, California, and plaintiff was discharged from the State Hospital at Stockton and his competency legally restored on the twenty-first day of September, 1916; that during plaintiff’s incompeteney, as aforesaid, defendant Laura M. Henley attempted to convey certain of said real property on the thirtieth day of November, 1912, to her sister, Anna M. Bursell, . . . and this plaintiff aEeges on information and belief that said conveyance was without any consideration whatever and was done for the purpose of defrauding this plaintiff out of the lands therein described and sought to be conveyed.

“That any and all persons claiming any interest whatever in or to said described premises owned by plaintiff as aforesaid, plaintiff aEeges on belief, base their claim wholly either upon the alleged instrument so procured from plaintiff during his incompeteney aforesaid, or from defendant Laura M. Henley, a party thereto, and during the incompeteney of this plaintiff and without adequate valuable consideration and without any consideration whatever to plaintiff.”

*514 It thus appears that the attack upon the deeds was based upon the vital facts, that plaintiff was at all times incompetent to transact business, that his incompetency was known to all the parties, and that both deeds were entirely without consideration. The complaint is undoubtedly subject to some criticism, but in the determination of this appeal we are not concerned with that question.

In said supplementary brief appellant, to show that there was evidence of a lack of consideration for the deed, quotes from the testimony of plaintiff as follows:

“Mr. Edwards: Q. Did you ever receive any money for any of this land or the water stock? A. No-, sir. Q. Have you ever received any rent, issues or profits of this real estate? A. No, sir. Q. Has anyone, to your knowledge, received any rent, issues or profits for you? A. Well, I don’t know who received it. It was rented. Q. So far as you know, you never received any benefits directly or indirectly from the rent, issues or profits since you returned from the asylum? A. No, sir.”

Also this appears from the deposition of Laura M. Henley:

“Q, On February 17, 1911, he deeded to you various real property in and near Porterville, California. What consideration was there for that deed, or for what purpose was it made? A. I don’t know. Q. State whether or not you afterward deeded this property away, and if so to whom? A. Tes, sir, I did deed it away to Annie Bursell and H. H. Bursell. Q. Mrs. Bursell never has paid you anything for that conveyance ? A. No, sir. Q. No one ever paid you any money for any of the Henley lands you conveyed, nor for any stock in the Pleasant Valley Ditch Company? A. No, sir.”

As indicative of the mental incapacity of plaintiff he exhibits the order of Honorable J. A. Allen, judge of the superior court of said county, dated October 14, 1912, “that said Stephen Edward Henley, because of old age, physical debility and mental infirmities is physically and mentally incompetent to manage his property and is incapable of taking care of himself and of managing his property,” also an order of commitment to the state hospital for the insane, dated April 28, 1915, concluding as follows:

*515 “It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that said Stephen Edward Henley is insane and that he be committed to and confined in the State Hospital at Stockton, California.”

Quotation is also made from the testimony of plaintiff to the effect that he did not remember conveying the property in question, that he first ascertained that he had conveyed it when he came back from the asylum and examined the records; from the testimony of his daughter, Mrs. Maud Wyer, that plaintiff was not of sound mind on February 17, 1911, that he threatened to kill the family with a knife, he was growing worse mentally from 1907 to 1911; the testimony of M. B. Gibson, an intimate acquaintance, that plaintiff was entirely “without understanding, didn’t know what he was doing” in 1911, that plaintiff was not competent to go about the streets alone, the witness assigning his reasons for the opinion. In addition, is the testimony of two physicians, based upon hypothetical questions, that the plaintiff was of unsound mind, and of plaintiff himself that he suffered for years with an enlargement of the prostate gland, which condition one of the physicians testified would be likely to produce “mental abnormalities often times bordering on actual insanity.”

The particular portion of said section 958c applicable herein is as follows:

“In filing briefs on said appeal the parties must, however, print in their briefs, or in a supplement appended thereto, such portions of the record as they desire to call to the attention of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
215 P. 114, 61 Cal. App. 511, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henley-v-bursell-calctapp-1923.