Hoover v. Wasson

105 P. 945, 11 Cal. App. 589, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 27, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 613.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 P. 945 (Hoover v. Wasson) 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
Hoover v. Wasson, 105 P. 945, 11 Cal. App. 589, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 106 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is a suit to quiet title to certain timber land situate in Mariposa county to which plaintiff claims title under and by virtue of a sheriff’s deed, said land having been sold by that officer to plaintiff at a pretended sale under an execution issued upon a judgment for the sum of $1,676.88, rendered and entered by the superior court of Tulare county in favor of said plaintiff and against the defendant, Joseph Wasson.

The defendant, John L. Wasson, answered the complaint herein, specifically denying the material averments thereof, and particularly that Joseph L. Wasson was, at the time of the levy of said execution and the sale thereunder, the owner of the land as to which title is sought to be quieted, and alleging title to, and ownership of, said land in himself.

Joseph Wasson made no reply to the complaint and, as to him, judgment by default was entered.

The court below awarded judgment to John L. Wasson that he is the owner of the land described in the complaint and that the plaintiff “has no right, title or interest in or to said land,” etc.

The appeal here is by the plaintiff from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The appellant contends that the evidence does not support certain findings of fact, and upon this contention insists that the judgment and order should be reversed.

It appears from the evidence that, on the fifteenth day of January, 1902, a written agreement was executed by the plaintiff and the defendant, Joseph Wasson, whereby the first- *591 named agreed to sell and said Wasson agreed to purchase, for the sum of $8,000, a certain tract of land situated in the county of Tulare. The agreement stipulated that Wasson was to pay the principal sum in installments as follows: Fifteen hundred dollars on the day on which the agreement was executed; $500 on or before the first day of January, 1905, and $1,000 on each succeeding first day of January until the principal, together with interest on the deferred payments, at the rate of seven per cent per annum, was fully paid. The title to the land was to remain in plaintiff until the principal and all interest accruing thereon was paid.

The land described in the agreement was devoted by Was-son to orange growing, to which, it is admitted, it is peculiarly adapted.

Joseph Wasson was, at the time of the making of said contract, the owner of the land involved in this litigation. On the thirtieth day of April, 1904, Joseph Wasson conveyed, by deed, said land to his brother, the respondent herein, and said deed was recorded in the office of the county recorder of Mariposa county on the second day of May, 1904. The plaintiff, in the year 1905, instituted an action against the defendant, Joseph Wasson, for the purpose of recovering the sum of $500, the first installment of principal due on the contract between himself and said Joseph for the sale and purchase of the orange land, together with unpaid interest. In this action, plaintiff obtained a judgment, on the twelfth day of June, 1905, for the sum of $1,676.88. As before stated, execution was issued on said judgment and the same sought to be levied on the land in dispute here, which, as seen, had been conveyed in the year 1904 by Joseph Wasson to his brother, the respondent. The land was, as seen, sold under said execution and purchased at said sale by the plaintiff himself.

The good faith of the transaction between the Wassons by which the respondent became the owner of the land in controversy is challenged by the complaint. It is therein alleged that the conveyance of the land by Joseph to his brother, the respondent, resulted from a transaction conceived in fraud and .was executed by said Joseph “with a view to conceal his said property from plaintiff and to hinder, delay and defraud plaintiff in his collection of his said demand now included in the judgment heretofore described.” But we observe no *592 reason for doubting that the evidence sufficiently supports the finding of the trial court against that claim.

In the first place, it may be noted, the conveyance of the land concerned here was executed in the year 1904, approximately a year before there was anything due the plaintiff from Joseph Wasson under the terms of their contract.

It appears that, at the time of the execution of said deed by Joseph, the note which was the consideration moving Joseph to so convey said property was “outlawed,” or, in other words, action thereon was barred by the statute of limitations. It further appears that in the year 1904 Joseph Was-son sold the orange crop gathered from the land which constituted the subject of the contract between himself and plaintiff for the sum of $1,000. In the month of December of that year plaintiff went to the “orange ranch” and made a demand on Joseph for the money then due under their contract. After some discussion of the matter, in the course of which Wasson declared that he desired to make some improvements on the land, the plaintiff was accompanied by Wasson to the Porterville Bank, where plaintiff was paid by Wasson on account of their contract the sum of $150. The bulk of the money remaining of the $1,000 received for the orange crop was used by Joseph, with the consent of plaintiff, in constructing flumes on and otherwise improving the land for orange growing purposes. The plaintiff testified: “A short time after the improvements were completed, I then sued him [Joseph] for the moneys that became due on the first day of January, 1905. I afterward received possession of all the orange land with the improvements thereon and have since sold the same.”

Plaintiff admitted that the first time he ever talked with the respondent, John L. Wasson, about the land in controversy was during the harvest time of the year 1905—more than a year after the deed had been made by Joseph Wasson to John L. Wasson, conveying to the last named said land.

The respondent explained the transaction by which his brother conveyed to him the land in controversy as follows: “When he let go of the ranch down there, which I sold him, the man who bought the place assumed the mortgage on the ranch and gave this timber land in payment. After I came back from Los Angeles a few years later, Joe told me that *593 when he sold the timber land he would pay me the balance ■due. We talked over either buying the ranch and his selling to get my money out of it, at different times. In the fall of 1903 I was talking about buying the timber land from him, and so Joe and I and my boy drove from where we lived in Delano up into Mariposa county, distance of two hundred miles or so, to look at the timber land. After we looked the timber land over, I at that time told him I would take the timber land for what he owed me, and he said that he would deed it to me when he got back. It was agreed between us then that he was to go before some attorney or notary when he got back and make out a deed to me. That was in the fall of 1903 and ran along then until April 30, 1904, when Joe had this deed made out and had the same sent over and recorded, as he had agreed with ine to do. ... I did not tell him [plaintiff] to go to my brother Joe and tell Joe that I said for him to sign the deed and that I would sign it afterward. ...

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Bluebook (online)
105 P. 945, 11 Cal. App. 589, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-wasson-calctapp-1909.