Keyes v. Meyers

82 P. 304, 147 Cal. 702, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 457
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1905
DocketSac. No. 1137.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 82 P. 304 (Keyes v. Meyers) 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
Keyes v. Meyers, 82 P. 304, 147 Cal. 702, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 457 (Cal. 1905).

Opinions

The plaintiff Mary A. Keyes sued the defendant to annul a deed executed to defendant by John M. Lindsay, purporting to convey to him certain real property, and to quiet her title thereto. W.B. Keyes is joined as plaintiff solely because he is the husband of his co-plaintiff. Defendant in his answer prayed that he be adjudged the owner of the property. The court made its findings and gave judgment for the defendant. Plaintiffs appeal, and present the evidence by a bill of exceptions, the appeal having been taken within sixty days after the rendition of the judgment. The case presents the question whether or not the deed of Lindsay to the defendant was ever effectively delivered to him.

In substance, the facts as found by the court are as follows: On January 15, 1895, Lindsay, being the owner of the real property, and being indebted to Meyers, in consideration of *Page 703 said indebtedness made, signed, and duly acknowledged the execution of a deed purporting to convey to Meyers the said property, and deposited said deed with W.H. Steffler, with verbal instructions from both Lindsay and Meyers, made at the time, that Steffler should not deliver the same to either party during their lifetime, without an order from the other, and that after the death of Lindsay he should deliver it to Meyers. Afterwards, on January 21, 1895, the two parties made and executed the following written agreement: —

"This agreement, made this 21st day of January, 1895, between John B. Meyers, of Angels Camp, Calaveras County, state of California, and John Lindsay, of the same place, witnesseth:

"That whereas, the said John Lindsay has executed a deed, now in escrow, and deposited January 15th, 1895, in the hands of William Steffler, county treasurer of Calaveras County, to one third of that certain quartz mine situated in the Angels Mining District, Calaveras County, state of California:

"Now, therefore, the said J.B. Meyers hereby agrees to provide food, clothing and proper medical attendance and medicine in case of sickness, and in case of death to pay all funeral expenses, caused by the death of said John Lindsay, and to pay all the necessary expenses the said Lindsay may incur as long as he, the said John Lindsay, may live.

"Provided, however, that upon the payment of all legal claims held by the said John B. Meyers against him, he, the said John Lindsay, shall have the right to demand and repossess the said deed above referred to from William Steffler, without any costs whatever.

"It is further agreed that payment of all demands in favor of John B. Meyers may be paid either to him or to Mrs. J.B. Meyers, his wife."

On September 25, 1898, Lindsay wrote to Steffler a letter, which Steffler received, which was as follows: —

"That deed that is placed in your hands in escrow between J.B. Meyers and J.M. Lindsay, of Angels Camp, I will ask you as a friend to hold it and not to allow it to be opened by Meyers or any one, without my consent. As it is a life contract I feel safer with it in your hands than any man I know of in Calaveras County.

"(Signed) J.M. LINDSAY." *Page 704

On November 12, 1900, the day of his death, Lindsay executed a deed purporting to convey the same property to the plaintiff, Mary A. Keyes, for the consideration of fifty dollars. On November 13, 1900, Steffler delivered to Meyers the deed deposited with him by Lindsay and Meyers on January 15, 1895. Meyers did not pay the funeral expenses of Lindsay, nor has he been asked or requested to do so, but he has been always ready to do so, upon being informed of the amount. He furnished goods and supplies for the maintenance and support of Lindsay, and paid his living expenses at all times when called upon or requested to do so. On October 19, 1897, Lindsay had become indebted to Meyers, apparently on this account, in the sum of one thousand dollars, which he never paid.

We think there was no legal or effectual delivery of the deed. The essential requisites of a valid delivery in cases of the class here presented were carefully considered and settled by this court in Bury v. Young, 98 Cal. 446, [35 Am. St. Rep. 186, 33 P. 338], and Kenney v. Parks, 125 Cal. 146, [57 P. 772]. In Bury v. Young it was held that where the owner of land signs and acknowledges a deed and delivers it to a third person, with instructions not to record it, but to deliver it to the grantees upon the grantor's death, the grantor thereupon parting with all dominion over the deed, and reserving no right to recall it or alter its provisions, or to have any further interest in the property, except to hold the use until his death, the delivery by such third person after the grantor's death is valid, and that such conveyance passes the title upon the first delivery, subject to the grantor's life estate. The court, distinguishing the case from others of contrary import, says: "In every case where the deed has been declared invalid by reason of failure of delivery, it will be found that the grantor reserved some rights over the instrument; that he failed to part with all control and dominion over it; that upon the happening of some event, or contingency, or condition, he had the right, if so disposed, to reach out and take it from the possession of the depositary. . . . The essential requisite to the validity of a deed transferred under circumstances as indicated in this case, is that when it is placed in the hands of the third party, it has passed beyond the control of the grantor for all time. That question *Page 705 is determined by the grantor's intention in the matter, and his intention in making the delivery is a question of fact, to be solved by the light of all the circumstances surrounding the transaction." In Kenney v. Parks the deed was held invalid. A husband and wife each owned separate real property, and each executed to the other a deed of his and her property respectively, and delivered the same simultaneously to a third person, with directions that upon the death of either, leaving the other surviving, the deed executed by the deceased spouse should be duly recorded for the benefit of the survivor, and with the understanding that the deed of the survivor should thereupon become ineffectual and should be returned to the grantor therein. The husband died and the wife claimed his property under the deed executed by him. The court held that the deeds, though designated by the parties as escrows, were in no legal sense escrows, there being nothing to be performed by either grantee as a condition precedent to the delivery and taking effect of the deed (Civ. Code, sec. 1057), but that they were either direct grants or no deeds whatever, and that "The all-controlling fact in this case, which defeats plaintiff's claim, is that when the deeds were made and delivered to the cashier of the bank the respective grantors did not absolutely part with all future dominion and control over them, but, upon the contrary, the actual intention and understanding of each grantor was that upon the death of the other the survivor should take back his own deed, and that no title should vest under it." (p. 150.) (See, further, Wittenbrock v. Cass, 110 Cal. 6, [42 P. 300]; Howlin v. Castro, 136 Cal. 610, [69 P. 432]; Canale v. Copello, 137 Cal. 24, [69 P. 698].)

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Bluebook (online)
82 P. 304, 147 Cal. 702, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyes-v-meyers-cal-1905.