Hitchcock v. Rooney

152 P. 913, 171 Cal. 285, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 624
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1915
DocketS. F. No. 7234.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 152 P. 913 (Hitchcock v. Rooney) 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
Hitchcock v. Rooney, 152 P. 913, 171 Cal. 285, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 624 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Plaintiff appeals from an order granting the motion of defendant Rooney for a new trial.

The action was one by which the plaintiff sought to quiet his title to a certain parcel of land in the city and county of San Francisco.

Defendant Rooney answered admitting that she asserted an interest in the property by reason of an unsatisfied attachment levied thereon and judgment liens against said land in an action upon a promissory note in which K. T. Rooney was the plaintiff and Marvie B. Hitchcock, wife of Lewis D. Hitchcock, was the defendant. There was a cross-complaint involving the sale of another parcel of land and the alleged fraudulent disposition of the proceeds for the purpose of defeating the claim of K. T. Rooney against Marvie B. Hitchcock, but we do not find it necessary to discuss that branch of the case.

The following undisputed facts were proven or stipulated at the trial and found by the court: The realty in dispute, called throughout the trial the “Clayton Street property,” was conveyed on July 13, 1909, by deed from E. E. and Grace Kelly to Marvie B. Hitchcock, wife of plaintiff. This deed was duly recorded in the following month. On February 28,1912, Marvie B. Hitchcock executed to F. S. Mayer, the wife of S. D. Mayer, her note for $2,350, payable one year after date without interest. On March 17, 1913, Mrs. Mayer assigned and transferred the note to K. T. Rooney, who promptly *287 brought suit thereon and caused an attachment to be levied on the interest of Mrs. Hitchcock in the Clayton Street property. Judgment was entered in respondent’s favor in said action in April, 1913. This judgment has been only partially-satisfied. The attachment is still in force. On January 2, 1913, Lewis D. Hitchcock and Marvie B. Hitchcock executed a deed of conveyance of the Clayton Street property to John W. Green, and on May 22, 1913, John W. Green and R. H. Green, his wife, conveyed the said property to Lewis D. Hitchcock, plaintiff herein.

Without setting forth in detail the issues involved in the various pleadings, it is sufficient to say that the controversy turned upon the question whether or not the land had been the community property of plaintiff and Marvie B. Hitchcock at the time when K. T. Rooney’s attachment was levied. The court found that plaintiff was, and at all times since the deed from the Kellys had been, in possession of the property in question; that he and Marvie B. Hitchcock were, and long had been, husband and wife; that plaintiff had purchased said land with money which was the community property of Lewis D. and Marvie B. Hitchcock; that Mrs. Hitchcock had been named as grantee in the deed from the Kellys for no purpose except as the result of habit, custom, and convenience; that plaintiff did not intend said property to be conveyed to his wife by way of gift, but that it was the purpose and intention of both of them that Marvie B. Hitchcock should hold the record title for the benefit of the community; that Marvie B. Hitchcock had never been in possession of, nor the owner in fee of, the Clayton Street property; that the land in question was, and had been since July 13, 1909, the community property of the Hitchcocks; that their deed to Green was not made for any fraudulent purpose; “but it was without consideration and pursuant to and in furtherance of a plan for the transfer of the record title out of the name of Marvie B. Hitchcock and into the name of plaintiff, and made to prevent the property involved therein from being applied to satisfy said notes of Marvie B. Hitchcock.”

The motion for a new trial was granted, after due argument and submission to the court on the ground that, “the evidence submitted was and is insufficient to support the finding that the property which is the subject matter of this action was *288 and is the community property of the plaintiff Lewis D. Hitchcock and his wife.”

Appellant concedes that the granting or refusing of a new trial rests very largely in the discretion of the trial court, but he insists that the court in reality granted the motion purely upon a question of law which was erroneously determined; that there was no material conflict in the testimony; and that no conclusion save one favorable to plaintiff’s contention was possible under the evidence.

As we have seen, the case really turned upon the question whether or not the plaintiff had established the character of the property standing in his wife’s name as community property. Appellant’s counsel are of the opinion that the finding to the effect that the land was community property at all times after the delivery of the deed from the Kellys to Mrs. Hitchcock was not a finding of fact but a conclusion of law, and that the court’s order, quoted above, merely amounted to a declaration that the former judgment was against law— a statement, say counsel, totally at variance with the essential facts found by the court and based upon unconflicting testimony. In other words, counsel for appellant take the position that the trial court regarded the evidence sufficient to support all of the findings of fact necessary to the decision of the case, but considered it insufficient to uphold that which counsel call the “conclusion of law” that the land here involved was community property.

Undoubtedly, it is the rule that if upon undisputed facts found but one correct conclusion of law is possible and the superior court, mistaking the law, orders a new trial, this court will reverse such an order (Flood v. Petry, 165 Cal. 309, [46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 861, 132 Pac. 256] ; Schramm v. Southern Pacific Co., 87 Cal. 426, [25 Pac. 481]; 2 Hayne New Trial and Appeal [revised edition], p. 1623), but in this case there was a material conflict in the evidence, and, that being true, it makes no difference whether the court’s first determination with respect to the land as community property was a conclusion of law or a finding of fact, because the order granting a new trial was made “on the ground that the evidence submitted” was insufficient to support the so-called finding. It is settled, however, that the ownership of property may be pleaded, proved, and found as an ultimate fact, based upon the probative facts adduced from the evidence. (Gavin v. *289 Swain, 113 Cal. 324, [45 Pac. 677]; Dam v. Zink, 112 Cal. 91, [44 Pac. 331]; Daly v. Sorocco, 80 Cal. 367, [22 Pac. 211].) The court’s conclusion that the evidence" was insufficient to support the ultimate fact may have rested upon a belief that plaintiff had failed to overcome with credible testimony the presumption of a gift to his wife arising under the statute, or may have been due to the conviction that sufficient force had not originally been accorded to the presumption, or that defendant’s evidence supported the inference that a gift was intended. The court was not required to specify which of the probative facts previously found had been without sufficient support from the evidence. If the order granting the new trial may be supported upon any ground, that will be presumed to be the one upon which the court founded its action. (In re Martin’s Estate, 113 Cal. 481, [45 Pac. 813]; Drathman v. Cohen,

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Bluebook (online)
152 P. 913, 171 Cal. 285, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hitchcock-v-rooney-cal-1915.