Holcomb v. Nunes

283 P.2d 301, 132 Cal. App. 2d 776, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2256
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1955
DocketCiv. 4945
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 283 P.2d 301 (Holcomb v. Nunes) 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
Holcomb v. Nunes, 283 P.2d 301, 132 Cal. App. 2d 776, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2256 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

MUSSELL, J.

This is an action in which plaintiffs in their complaint and defendants in their cross-complaint seek to quiet title to 40 acres of ranch property in Fresno County. The ranch was purchased by F. S. Jacobsen, also known as S. P. Holt, on August 8, 1946, for the sum of $18,000, subject to a trust deed for $7,600. On March 19, 1947, said Holt deeded the property to defendants John F, Nunes and his wife and the deed was recorded on the same day. On October 22, 1951, the Fresno Irrigation District deeded the same property to defendant John F. Nunes and his wife, and that deed was recorded on February 20,1952. Nunes and his wife claim title by virtue of these two deeds and plaintiffs’ claim of *777 title is based on a sheriff’s deed to them dated July 23, 1951, executed pursuant to a sale under execution on a judgment which said plaintiffs obtained against Jacobsen for the sum of $3,100, and costs, on October 22, 1948.

It was the contention of plaintiffs at the trial that there was collusion between Jacobsen and Nunes for the purpose of enabling Jacobsen to evade liability arising out of a transaction about to be consummated between Jacobsen and the plaintiffs and that Jacobsen had voluntarily transferred title to the property to Nunes. The trial court entered an interlocutory judgment in favor of plaintiffs and defendants John F. Nunes and his wife appeal therefrom. Defendant Jacobsen defaulted in the action.

Plaintiff J. P. Holcomb testified that he became acquainted with Jacobsen in 1946; that there were some preliminary discussions relative to the buying of cattle by plaintiff and the feeding of them by Jacobsen; that Jacobsen had lots of pasture and two ranches but had no money; that he entered into definite discussions with Jacobsen relative to this matter in April, 1947; that along about February, 1947, plaintiff visited the property involved and had a discussion with Jacobsen about a business arrangement; that Jacobsen had some young stock on the ranch; that the said stock was mortgaged and Jacobsen said that if plaintiff would pay off the note, Jacobsen would bring the stock into “springing stage”; that plaintiff would sell them and they would split the profits; that plaintiff stated he would talk it over with his wife and the following day he told Jacobsen it was agreeable to his wife; that Jacobsen did not have any ready cash; that “all he had was pasture and hay and everything, feed”; that he had no written agreement with Jacobsen and that the first time he advanced any money to him was on April 7, .1947, at which time he gave Jacobsen $1,500 to pay off a note against some of his cattle; that Jacobsen gave him a bill of sale for this stock and agreed to feed them and furnish the labor; that it was agreed that plaintiff was to sell said stock, take his $1,500 out, and retain 50 per cent of the net profit; that on April 23, 1947, he gave Jacobsen $2,000 for a bill of sale for “another bunch of cows” to be fed and sold in the same manner; that on May 15, 1947, he gave Jacobsen a check for $462.50 to purchase four cows and four calves at an auction; that these animals were to be handled in the same manner as those previously purchased. Holcomb further testified that *778 Jacobsen told him that he owned a ranch in Riverbend containing some 600 to 650 acres.

Plaintiff Hazel K. Barcus (formerly Holcomb) testified substantially to the same facts as her former husband and there was no contradiction between them with respect to the dates when the money was paid to Jacobsen or as to the purposes for which funds were so advanced.

Plaintiffs filed suit against Jacobsen in the Superior Court of Fresno County and caused an attachment to be levied on the property here involved on May 29, 1947. Thereafter plaintiffs recovered judgment against Jacobsen for the sum of $3,100 and costs. The record does not disclose the items making up this judgment or the facts of that case. Execution was issued on the judgment, the property was sold, and a sheriff’s deed, upon which plaintiffs rely, was executed to them on July 23, 1951.

1 Defendant John F. Nunes testified and the record shows that Jacobsen gave him a deed to the property involved on March 19, 1947. He further testified that Jacobsen’s son was married to his (Nunes) daughter prior to 1947; that Jacobsen had a ranch on Teilman Place in Fresno County where he maintained a dairy; that he, Nunes, supplied all labor in connection with milking the cows on this dairy and supplied the hay to feed said cows prior to March 19, 1947; that prior to this date he had supplied Jacobsen with approximately 200 tons of hay which he, Nunes, had grown on his ranch on West Belmont in Fresno County; that he valued the hay at $20 per ton and that he had not been paid for it; that he had worked for Jacobsen for two years prior to March 19, 1947, milking cows, and that Jacobsen had promised to pay him $120 per month for these services; that Jacobsen had paid him only $200 during the entire two-year period; that he kept asking Jacobsen for money and that in 1947 Jacobsen said to him, “I ain’t got no money. The only way I can pay you is you take the property”; that the property involved was deeded to him on March 19, 1947, by Jacobsen in payment of Jacobsen’s past obligations to him; that at the time he took over the place there was a balance of $7,200 due on a deed of trust affecting the property, and that the water tax of approximately $100 was not paid; that his daughter and her husband occupied the premises from the time he acquired it from Jaeobsen and that they paid all the taxes and made substantial improvements to the property ; that he made the payments on the note secured by the *779 deed of trust at the rate of $200 every six months, together with accumulated interest at 5 per cent per annum, and that the balance of the principal due on said note had been reduced to $4,400 at the time of trial; that he had been in possession of the property since March 19, 1947, by having his daughter and son-in-law live on it.

The evidence also shows that the 1948 irrigation tax imposed for the Fresno Irrigation District had not been paid and that on September 20, 1951, the tax collector issued to the district a tax deed to the property; that said district conveyed it to the defendans John F. Nunes and Eva Nunes by deed dated October 22, 1951.

The trial court found that the conveyance of said real property from defendant Jacobsen, also known as Holt, to the defendant John F. Nunes and his wife was made without fair consideration; that the property remaining in the hands of said defendant Jacobsen, after the said conveyance, was an unreasonably small capital for the transaction in which said defendant was about to engage with plaintiffs; that the defendants Nunes and his wife accepted the said conveyance without fraudulent intent; that the amount of repayment for which said defendants are entitled to hold the property as security was not put in issue by the pleadings in the action and could not be ascertained from the evidence; that except for the right of the defendants John-F. Nunes and his wife to hold the said property as security for any amount to which they may be entitled to repayment on account of the purchase of said real property, the defendants have not, nor has either or any of them, any right, title or interest in or to said real property, and “that the allegations of the cross-complaint not expressly found herein to be true are found to be untrue.

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Bluebook (online)
283 P.2d 301, 132 Cal. App. 2d 776, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-v-nunes-calctapp-1955.