Kellogg v. Huffman

30 P.2d 593, 137 Cal. App. 278, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 833
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 9, 1934
DocketDocket No. 1298.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 30 P.2d 593 (Kellogg v. Huffman) 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
Kellogg v. Huffman, 30 P.2d 593, 137 Cal. App. 278, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 833 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an .action to quiet title to 160 acres of land in Kettleman Hills in Fresno County. The land in question was owned in 1914 by the British Californian Oil Company, Ltd., a California corporation. This corporation owned several properties located near Los Angeles, and also this piece of land in Fresno County which was then regarded as of little value. 'This property was rough and arid and was situated in what was, until about 1929, a sparsely settled country used only for grazing purposes.

In April or May, 1914, one of the plaintiffs, J. Foster Kell, a resident of London, representing about 450,000 shares of stock in this corporation, came to California for the purpose of attempting to wind up the affairs of the company and to get what he could for the English stockholders. He was elected to the board of directors and succeeded in selling all of the properties owned by the corporation with the exception of this piece of land. After all the other properties had been sold, and under date of June 3, 1914, the corporation executed and delivered a grant deed conveying this property to him. This deed recites that it was given in pursuance of a resolution passed by the board of directors, and sets forth a copy of the resolution which contains a recital to the effect that the hid of J. Foster Kell of $10 for the land had been accepted, and goes on to authorize the execution of a deed in his favor. ' This deed was acknowledged, and was recorded on June 13, 1914. Under the same date as the deed, June 3, 1914, J. Foster Kell executed an instrument which recited that this land had been conveyed to him and that he held the same upon the following trusts: 1. That he would pay the taxes on the land until the same was sold. 2. That at any time within ten- years, upon request, he would convey the land to any person named by the other directors at a price fixed by them. 3. That from the proceeds of the sale he would deduct the amounts paid by him for taxes, a reasonable fee for his services, and pay the balance to the stockholders of the corporation in proportion to their holdings or *281 as mutually agreed by the directors. 4. That if a sale was not effected within ten years, he would continue to act as trustee on the same terms or convey the land to such person as should be agreed upon by the directors. 5. That in the event of his death, the record of this declaration of trust should operate as a conveyance of the land to the other directors or their survivors, who should then hold the land in trust in like manner. This instrument was not recorded until February 5, 1931, after this action was commenced. Until about the time this action was filed none of the defendants had any information or notice, express or implied, that any such instrument had been executed or that any of tire plaintiffs or interveners claimed any interest in the property.

This land was assessed for taxes in 1914 at $240 and was sold to the state on June 23, 1915, for $6.55. On June 28, 1920, it was sold at a tax sale for $650 to the defendant M. D. Huffman, who thereafter conveyed a one-quarter interest therein to the defendant Hardie. A correction deed was executed by the tax collector to the defendant Huffman on September 22, 1930, and another correction deed on October 2, 1930. All of these deeds were recorded. When the tax deed was ixssued in 1920, the defendant Huffman redeemed the land from all unpaid taxes and, thereafter, the defendants paid all taxes assessed from year to year, to and including the year 1931. Shortly after receiving the tax deed, the defendant Huffman went to the land for the purpose of taking possession. He found that two brothers, Ed Bourdieu and Jean Bourdieu, who lived near the land, had been pasturing their sheep upon the same. He informed them that he had bought the land, wanted to locate and take possession of it and, at his request, one of the brothers went to the land wdth him and, pointed out to him the boundaries thereof. After walking over the land and locating its boundaries, the defendant Huffman agreed to lease the land to the- two Bourdieus for sheep grazing for $20 a year. On a similar arrangement, year by year, these parties leased the land from the defendants and grazed sheep upon it during all of the time that feed was available, and during all of the time the same could be used for pasturage purposes, each year thereafter up to and including the year 1929.

*282 On December 2, 1925, the plaintiff Shearer wrote to the tax collector of Fresno County inquiring whether the taxes on the land had been paid. In reply he received a letter dated December 5, 1925, inclosing a tax statement and informing him that a portion of the taxes for the- current year had been paid. On December 7, 1925, he wrote to the county recorder asking for a record of the property involved, stating that he was one of the holders of a deed of trust, and asking what transfers had been made since the recording of a deed of trust dated June 3, 1914. He received from the county recorder a reply dated December 9, 1925, listing the deed from the British Californian Oil Company, Ltd., to J. Foster Kell, tax sales for the years 1914 to 1919, inclusive, the tax deed to Huffman, the deed from Huffman to Hardie for a one-quarter interest, with the information that the title to the property stood in Huffman as to three-fourths interest and in Hardie as to one-fourth interest, and that the recorder was unable to find any record of the trust deed he mentioned. Shearer testified that he made no further inquiries, that he never paid any taxes on this property, and that he then considered the matter closed.

On June 18, 1927, the defendants executed and delivered to the Superior Oil Company an oil lease covering the property in question. On August 17, 1927, the defendants commenced a suit in the Superior Court of Fresno County against J. Foster Kell and his wife, asking that their title to the property in question be quieted. A notice of lis pendens was filed and on December 3, 1927, a judgment was entered quieting their title in the property as against said Kell and his wife. On September 20, 1929, the Superior Oil Company commenced operations in connection with drilling a well under the lease above mentioned, and the first well was brought in on September 4, 1930. Up to the time this action was commenced, the Superior Oil Company had spent practically a million dollars on this property, under the terms of the lease referred to. On March 4, 1916, the charter of the British Californian Oil Company, Ltd., was forfeited to the state for nonpayment of its license tax. The term of the original charter expired by limitation on May 28, 1926, and the same was never renewed.

*283 This action was begun on October 3, 1930, by the plaintiffs as the former directors and the statutory trustees of the British Californian Oil Company, Ltd. A complaint in intervention was filed by certain of the stockholders in this company for and on behalf of all of the stockholders. Appropriate pleadings were filed by the defendants and after a trial on the merits the court found in all respects in their favor and entered a judgment to the effect that neither the plaintiffs nor the interveners had any right, title or interest in or to the "property in question or any part thereof, and quieting title thereto in the defendants. Prom this judgment the plaintiffs and interveners have appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 593, 137 Cal. App. 278, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellogg-v-huffman-calctapp-1934.