Jackson v. Gorham

276 P. 391, 98 Cal. App. 112, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 12
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1929
DocketDocket No. 3509.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 276 P. 391 (Jackson v. Gorham) 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
Jackson v. Gorham, 276 P. 391, 98 Cal. App. 112, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 12 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

Plaintiffs had judgment in an action to quiet title, from which judgment the defendant appeals. The action was instituted by the plaintiffs to quiet their title to lot 26, in block 53, of the city of Long Beach, as that lot is described in a map recorded in book 19, at page 91 et seq., miscellaneous records of the county of Los Angeles. The facts, as gleaned from the record, are as follows:

Upon the premises described there is situate one single house and one double house. For a long time prior to any of the transactions referred to herein, J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, his wife, occupied the single house; that for about two years prior to December, 1921, the plaintiffs had occupied one section of the double house as tenants of J. W, Harris and his wife; that during the month of December, 1921, J. W. Harris and Mary Harris executed and delivered to G. N. Jackson and Della Jackson, a deed of conveyance transferring all of said property to the plaintiffs in this action; that at the time of the delivery of said conveyance, the plaintiffs in this action executed and delivered to J, W, *114 Harris and Mary Harris, an instrument conveying to said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris a life estate in the premises referred to, and also a mortgage thereon in the sum of $3,000, payable ten years after date without interest; thereafter, and on or about the sixteenth day of January, 1922, an agreement was entered into between the plaintiffs in this action and the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, whereby the section of the double house therefore occupied by the plaintiffs was leased by the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris to the plaintiffs in this action, for and during the term of the lives of the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, and for the life of the survivor of them, the lessees yielding and paying to the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, or to the survivor of them, the sum of $15 per month as rental for said premises, and also agreeing to care for and attend to said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, and the survivor of them, during the remainder of their lives, and the life of the survivor, for which services compensation was also to be paid. At the time of the execution of this agreement, and of the instruments herein referred to, the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris were of the age of eighty years, or thereabouts. It appears from the record that the plaintiffs did look after and care for the said Harrises until the month of February, 1923, when both J. W. Harris and Mary Harris died.

The defendant is an adopted son of Mary Harris, deceased, and if the conveyance of the property referred to, made by the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, his wife, to the plaintiffs in this action, were set aside, would succeed to the whole of said property. In addition' to his answer to the plaintiff’s complaint, the defendant filed a cross-complaint in which he sought to have the conveyance first referred to herein, set aside on the grounds of fraud and incompeteney of the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, his wife, and also on the further ground that the conveyance made to the plaintiffs was the result of undue influence. The court found the facts contrary to the allegations of the defendant’s cross-complaint. The findings are too long to be set out herein, but in substance they are to the effect that while the Harrises were advanced in years, they were not mentally incompetent; that they were not acting under any undue influence of any person whomso *115 ever; that the transactions referred to herein were brought about by their own free will and upon their own inauguration. The court also found that the allegations in the cross-complaint that the deed referred to was made without consideration were not true. Finding number eight of the trial court is in these words and figures: “That the said J. W. Harris and Mary Harris, and each of, them, were at all times prior to December 3rd, 1921, and were on the 3rd day of December, 1921, and were subsequent thereto, to the date of their respective deaths, at all times of sound mind and memory capable of transacting any and all business matters pertaining to their estate and affairs and that at no time were they acting under undue influence, duress, fraud or menace from any person, or persons whatsoever.”

Upon this appeal the appellant confines himself to the presentation of the following points as grounds for reversal: First, “Inadequacy of consideration, and, second, the relations between the parties being of trust and confidence, respondents were charged with the duty, in the lower court, of proving (a) that the transaction was a fair transaction; (b) that the Harrises received independent advice.”

As to the consideration, the appellant argues that the records show the property to be of the value of a trifle more than $7,000. Respondents make no contention whatever as to the value of the property, but content themselves with citations from the testimony and the findings of the court to the effect that the Harrises had independent advice; that the proposition was one of their own originating; that there were no confidential relations, as those words are used in law, existing between the Harrises and the plaintiffs in this action. The question of inadequacy of consideration really appears to be foreclosed in this -action for, as stated in 9 California Jurisprudence, 140: “Mere inadequacy of consideration is never of itself sufficient ground for setting aside a deed, and the amount of consideration, in the absence of any imputation of fraud, is immaterial to the question.” (Citing a number of authorities.) If there were any imputation of fraud or any testimony whatsoever showing undue influence, or any testimony whatsoever from which the inference of undue influence might be drawn, then the question of inadequacy of consideration might be considered. It stands alone, however, in this case. Our *116 attention has not been called to a word in the testimony indicating that any undue' influence, or any influence whatsoever was exercised by the plaintiffs over the Harrises to induce them to propose and bring about the consummation of the execution of the instruments to which we have referred. The record does show that the plaintiffs had lived upon the premises referred to, as tenants of the Harrises for about two years prior to December, 1921; that during said time the plaintiffs had been very kind and attentive to the Harrises; had looked after their personal wants; but there is no testimony in the record that the plaintiffs in this action had anything to do with the business affairs of the Harrises or ever transacted any business for them whatsoever, or given any advice in relation thereto. It follows as a necessary conclusion that there is nothing upon which to base constructive fraud, by reason of the relationship in this case. Friendly relations or even intimacy of relationship presents an entirely different question from what is understood as a confidential relation in law. One may have confidence in another’s integrity and honesty of purpose, and likewise believe that he will live up to any of his contracts, without having any confidential relations - with such person that would void any agreements or transactions entered into between them, on the theory of constructive fraud or undue influence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 P. 391, 98 Cal. App. 112, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-gorham-calctapp-1929.