Hotaling v. Hotaling

203 P. 745, 187 Cal. 695, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 493
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1922
DocketS. F. No. 9461.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 203 P. 745 (Hotaling v. Hotaling) 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
Hotaling v. Hotaling, 203 P. 745, 187 Cal. 695, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 493 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, Lavinia J. Hotaling, to declare a trust in her favor and have restored to her 2,499 shares of the capital stock of the Hotaling Estate Company, a corporation, which stock at the time suit was begun stood on the books of the corporation in the name of the defendant, Richard M. Hotaling.

*698 The fact is undisputed that these shares of stock, with one additional share, had originally been issued to and belonged to the plaintiff as her interest in a family estate represented by the above-named corporation. The remaining stock was held in blocks of two thousand five hundred shares each by her son, Richard M. Hotaling, the defendant, another son, Fred Hotaling, and a daughter-in-law, Ella Hotaling, the widow of a deceased son of plaintiff. The plaintiff was the president, of this corporation and she and her sons and daughter-in-law constituted its board of directors. The certificate representing these shares in plaintiff’s name had been subsequently indorsed by the plaintiff, and canceled, and a new certificate signed by the plaintiff as president of the corporation was issued in the name of Richard M. Hotaling.

On the face of the corporation records the shares in controversy had been transferred from the plaintiff, Lavinia J. Hotaling, to the defendant, Richard M. Hotaling.

The plaintiff and Richard M. Hotaling, as already stated, are mother and son. The whole controversy in the case centers about the claim of the latter that his mother made him a gift of this stock on the 2d of September, 1913, the date of the transfer on the stock books, and some five and a half years before this action was begun.

Richard testifies circumstantially to this transaction, and represents that it was unsolicited on his part, and was made on his mother’s own initiative, and that she came to the office of the corporation, of which she was president and of which he was an officer and director, and that the transfer was then and there made by delivering to him the indorsed certificate and issuing the new certificate over his mother’s ■ signature as president.

Mrs. Hotaling admits the genuineness of her signature upon written evidences of the transfer, but denies the gift, and disclaims any remembrance of the transaction which resulted in the transfer. There is no other direct evidence as to the transaction than that of the documents and the corporate records above referred to and the testimony of these two principals.

All the other voluminous record in the case, comprising in all over one thousand typewritten pages, is directed to evidence on collateral matters and events tending more or less *699 strongly to corroborate one or the other of the parties as to the main issue.

The trial court found for the plaintiff on all thjfe material issues presented, and it is from the judgment on these findings that the defendants have taken this appeal.

The grounds of error relied on are insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings and the exclusion on the trial of certain evidence offered in behalf of defendants.

The one controlling fact in this case is in the finding of the court that the plaintiff, Lavinia J. Hotaling, did not make a gift of these shares to the defendant, Richard M. Hotaling.

As stated by the trial judge in reviewing the evidence: “This issue is the pivotal point and vital issue in this case. The plaintiff swears that she never made it; the defendant swears that she did, and, as no other person was present at either of the alleged conversations relating thereto, or upon the occasion when it is claimed the gift was made, the issue of veracity lies directly between mother and son, and this issue must be resolved by a consideration of the actual conduct, writings, declarations, motives, and relations of the parties; the amount and value of the gift; the financial condition of the donor after such gift, and her ability to make it.”

In passing upon this point the.function of this court is much less complicated than was that of the trial court.

The trial judge was called upon to delicately adjust the balance so as to determine upon which side, in this great mass of conflicting evidence and inference, the preponderance might lie, while upon this appeal our only duty is to ascertain if there was any substantial showing in behalf of the court’s finding to give rational support to the conclusion reached.

[1] It may be conceded that the defendant’s evidence made a prima facie case in his behalf.

The fact was shown that there had been a legal transfer of this stock from Lavinia J. Hotaling to Richard M. Hotaling on the corporate records. It is conceded that the mere fact of the existence of the relationship of parent and child between them does not create that confidential relation which raises a presumption of fraud in a voluntary transfer of property from the parent to the child.

*700 The plaintiff was therefore confronted with a transfer of this stock, regular on its face, which cast the burden upon her to show, in order to avoid the transaction, either that the transfer never operated to invest the ownership of the shares in the defendant, or that if the gift was actually made it was voidable on the ground of fraud or undue influence.

[2] The plaintiff here testified that she never gave this stock to her son, or knowingly transferred her title thereto. If there is any weight to be given to this testimony it will not be disputed under the established rules of law in this state that a finding of the court in accordance with such testimony cannot be disturbed, whatever the views of the appellate court as to the comparative strength of the testimony to the contrary.

It is appellants’ contention, however, that the plaintiff’s testimony in this connection was so meager, vague, and equivocal, and so inherently improbable as not to be entitled to consideration, and, indeed, did not constitute a denial of the transaction as claimed by defendants. The following is the testimony by question and answer as given by Mrs. Hotaling on this point:

“Q. (Mr. McNab.) Mrs. Hotaling, I show you a certificate dated December 2, 1913, purporting to be a certificate for 2,499 shares, certificate No. 15 in the Hotaling Estate Company, and your signature, in favor of E. M. Hotaling, is this your signature? (Exhibiting signature to the witness.)
“A. Yes, that is my signature all right.
“Q. Do you have any memory, have you any recollection?
“A. Of signing that?
“Q. Have you any recollection of ever signing this certificate?
“A. None whatever.
“Q. Did you ever, at any time, give 2,499 shares of your stock in the Hotaling Estate Company, or any other number of shares, to Richard M. Hotaling, your son, or to anybody else ?
“A. Not that I know of—of the Hotaling Estate?

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 745, 187 Cal. 695, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotaling-v-hotaling-cal-1922.