Hibberd v. Smith

4 P. 473, 67 Cal. 547, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 695
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1885
DocketNo. 7275
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 4 P. 473 (Hibberd v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hibberd v. Smith, 4 P. 473, 67 Cal. 547, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 695 (Cal. 1885).

Opinion

The Court.

The opinion heretofore delivered in the above case is hereby approved and adopted by the.court on rehearing, with the addition thereto of the following authorities: Welsh v. Sackett et al. 12 Wis. 243; Kingsbury v. Burnside, 58 Ill. 310; Comme v. Jackson, 10 Bush, 424; Budd v. Hays, 11 Ky. 34; Palmelee v. Simpson, 5 Wall. 81.)

Judgment and order affirmed;

McKee, J., expressed no opinion; Sharpstein, J., being disqualified, did not participate in the decision.

The following opinion above referred, to was delivered in Bank on the 30th of July, 1884:—

Thornton, J. This action in our ordina ry legal nomenclature is ejectment, to recover possession of a parcel of land situated in Alameda County. Judgment went for plaintiffs. Motion for a new trial by defendants was by order denied, and the defendants appealed from the judgment and order. •

The main question discussed on the argument iu this court relates to the delivery of a written instrument under seal bearing date 6th of January, 1855, purporting, to have been made by William W. Chipman to Edward S. Chipman, and to convey the land in controversy.

As to this point the court below found the following facts:—

“ That on the 6th day of January, 1855, said William ,W. Chipman signed and sealed a paper purporting to be a deed of grant, Bargain, and sale to his brother,.Edward S. Chipman, thereby purporting to convey the land described in the complaint in this action, and on the same day last named acknowledged the same in due form of law before William Hamilton, a justice of the peace of said county, and thereupon left said deed with said justice of the peace, until the same was handed to Gideon Aughinbaugli. The consideration mentioned in said deed was $5,000, and other valuable considerations; but in fact nothing was paid by said Edward S. Chipman to said William W. Chipman as the consideration for said conveyance, but said William W. Chipman was, at the time of making said deed, indebted to said Edward S. Chipman.
“At the time of making and depositing said d.eed with said. [550]*550justice, the grantee therein named, Edward S. Chipman, was a resident of Holmes County, in the State of Ohio, and had been such resident there for six months previously, and had no knowledge of the making of such conveyance to him until after the 30th of June, 1855.
“Nor was the same ever delivered before that time to any person authorized or empowered by him to -receive it. Nor did he ever before that time assent to the said conveyance to him. Said Aughinbaugh, at the time he received said deed from said 'justice, had no authority or power from said Edward S. Chipman to receive the delivery thereof for him, nor had he ever any such authority or power.
“That afterward, and prior to February 22,1855, Edward S. Chipman, the grantee in said deed, then being in the State of Ohio, said grantor, Wm. W. Chipman, requested the said Gideon Aughinbaugh, who was an acquaintance and friend of said Edward S. Chipman, to go to the office of said justice of the peace, Wm. Hamilton, and to get the said deed, and to hold the same for Edward S. Chipman, at the same time stating to said Aughinbaugh that the law required that the said deed should be delivered to somebody for the grantee to make it a valid conveyance, as he, the grantee, ivas absent.
“ In pursuance of such request the said Gideon Aughinbaugh called at the office of said justice, asked for and received said deed from him prior to February 22, 1855, and held the same in his possession for Edward S. Chipman, but without the knowledge or authority of said Edward S. Chipman.
“About two weeks afterward, said grantor, William W. Chipman, called upon said Aughinbaugh for said deed, asking that he might take it to get it recorded, which he accordingly did, and the same ivas duly recorded at the request of said William W. Chipman, in the county recorder’s office of Alameda, County, on the 15th day of March, 1855.
“Said deed ivas délivered by the said William W. Chipman to the said Aughinbaugh, and ivas thereby intended by the grantor, William W. Chipman, as a delivery to and for the use and benefit of Edward S. Chipman, without condition or qualification.
•“That afterward, June 30,1855,the said EdwardS.Chipman [551]*551returned from the State of Ohio to California, and shortly afterward took said deed into his own possession, and made several conveyances of parcels of the land described therein to other parties for full value, as elsewhere in these findings stated.”

Other facts found by the court which bear on this question of delivery are as follows: That, on the 1st day of March, 1855, the plaintiff Hibberd recovered in the District Court for ■Alameda County a judgment for the possession of a tract of land in the county of Alameda against W. W. Chipman and Gideon Aughinbaugh, and damages for withholding this land, amounting to $8,600, and $536.55 costs of suit, which judgment was duly entered of record and docketed in said court on the 1st day of March, 1855. On appeal, this, judgment was affirmed with costs, at the April Term, 1856, and the remittitur was filed in the District Court last above named on the 27th of March, 1856. The plaintiffs claim the land in suit under an execution sale on this judgment, having been the highest bidders for the same, for the sum of $1,200.

It will thus be seen that both parties claim under W. W. Chipman, the plaintiffs under the judgment, execution sale, and sheriff’s deed above mentioned, and the defendants under the alleged deed to E. S. Chipman.

The court also found as a conclusion of law that the paper purporting to be a deed just above stated was, under the circumstances set forth in the foregoing findings of fact, void for want of a valid delivery, as against the title acquired by plaintiffs under the judgment above mentioned by sheriff’s sale, “as set forth in said findings of fact.” The reference here is to the findings above stated.

The act solemn and authentic, done in writing in form apt for the conveyance of land, with signature and seal, does not take effect as a deed until delivery with intent that it shall so operate. The elements going to make up such a paper all constitute an act factum or deed, but not complete until the paper has been delivered with the intent above mentioned. The intent with, which it is delivered is all important. This restricts or enlarges the effect of the instrument.. It may be delivered to another person as a mere custodian, or to such person to be kept by him. and delivered to a third person on a condition performed, or the, [552]*552happening of a certain event, or it may be delivered that it may have full operation as the deed of the party delivering it. This may be done in various modes. It is impossible to state a priori in exact terms what shall or shall not constitute a delivery, that the paper may have its full operation as a deed. It is to a great extent a matter of fact depending upon intent, and under such circumstances the intent as evidencing what the maker o.f the instrument meant to do, must be found from the circumstances of the transaction, the res gestae,

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Bluebook (online)
4 P. 473, 67 Cal. 547, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hibberd-v-smith-cal-1885.