Knaugh v. Baender

257 P. 606, 84 Cal. App. 142, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 272
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5453.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 257 P. 606 (Knaugh v. Baender) 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
Knaugh v. Baender, 257 P. 606, 84 Cal. App. 142, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 272 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a decree quieting title to certain real property in an action brought by respondent against appellant and others. Appellant in her answer denies the title of respondent and by way of cross-complaint alleges title in herself and has brought in under an order of court the parties herein designated as cross-defendants.

The property involved was originally the community property of one Charles L. Baender and defendant and cross-complainant Lillie Baender, and the same was acquired previous to the year 1917. On August 24, 1919, a writ of execution was issued out of the superior court of Alameda County in the case of Arthur T. Johns v. Charles L. Baender and Lillie M. Baender et al., and at such execution sale on November 18, 1919, one F. B. Schuyler purchased the property. On November 10, 1919, Charles L. Baender and Lillie M. Baender and others conveyed the property to F. B. Schuyler. On November 20, 1919, Schuyler conveyed the property to G. F. Gillellen; November 22, 1921, G. F. Gillellen and Ada M. Gillellen conveyed the property to Charles Baumann; December 12, 1921, Charles Baumann and Elsie Baumann, his wife, conveyed the property to Laura M. Knaugh, and on February 17, 1922, Laura M. ICnaugh conveyed the property to Cora B. Dermott. Such is the claim of title as shown by the records. On August 17, 1921, ■ a decree was entered granting Lillie Baender an interlocutory decree of divorce from Charles L. Baender, and by such decree the court set aside the property in controversy to Lillie Baender for life. An appeal “was taken from the interlocutory decree of divorce; the appeal was subsequently dismissed and the remittitur was sent down to the trial court on July 7, 1922.

On the date of the execution sale by the sheriff in August, 1919, and just previous to the bid of Schuyler for the property one Niels Gostave, who at the time had the record title to the property, but which was owned by Charles L. Baender and Lillie M. Baender as community property, *145 together with Charles L. Baender and Lillie M. Baender and other persons by grant, bargain, and sale deed conveyed said property to F. B. Schuyler. The facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of this deed and the bid of Schuyler at the execution sale as appears from the evidence were as follows: Charles L. Baender and F. B. Schuyler were dealing together concerning the purchase by Schuyler of an invention made by Baender. During such negotiations the execution sale referred to was advertised, and Baender requested Schuyler to come to his rescue. Baender raised $275, which was all the money he could raise to purchase the property at the execution sale, and Schuyler advanced the remaining $500 necessary to bid the amount of the judgment and costs, and the property was purchased in the name of Schuyler. Previous to the execution sale Charles L. Baender and appellant Lillie Baender for reasons of their own carried the record title to the property in the name of one Niels Gostave, but this fact having been discovered by plaintiff in the action of Johns v. Baender et al., the execution sale was proceeded with regardless of the record title in Niels Gostave, and under the judgment in that case holding the conveyance to Niels Gostave void. Schuyler was brought into the transaction and instead of making a loan to Baender on a mortgage took a deed absolute on its face, which the court in its findings found to be a mortgage. Against this finding of the court the appellant urges the objection that it is not supported by the evidence. We are of the opinion that the evidence supports the finding of the trial court in this respect. The record discloses that Baender and Schuyler at the time of the transaction, in order to make it appear that Schuyler was an actual purchaser, arranged the transaction as follows: an additional sum of $2,000 was apparently paid over by Schuyler to Baender at the office of the Alameda County Title Insurance Company, but which sum was immediately and as soon as Baender and Schuyler went outside the Title Company’s office paid back to Schuyler by Baender by agreement previously arranged between them. So far as the transaction appeared on its face, Schuyler was the purchaser at the execution sale for the sum of $775 and a purchaser of the equity under a deed from Niels Gostave, Charles L. Baender, appellant Lillie Baender, *146 and others for the sum of $2,000. Such, however, was not the fact. Baender himself paid $275 of the $775 bid at the sale, and Schuyler advanced the difference. On November 18, 1921, over two years later, Schuyler received a sheriff’s deed to the property. Baender and Schuyler both testified that the $500, being the money Schuyler actually advanced, was a loan and the deed was taken as security.

The following, quoting from the testimony of Schuyler and Baender, is sufficient to support the finding of the trial court that the deed was intended as a mortgage. Schuyler testified: “Q. Didn’t you tell me last night that the deed was merely taken as a bond, that if the patent was not issued, that you would be safe in your money? A. That is what I told you now: if the patent issued I would have the property with the money that I put up. But if the patent—that is, if the patent did not issue. But if the patent did issue, I was to buy it back with the property. Q. You were to reconvey the property if the patent issued? A. Yes, sir. Q. And the property itself was merely taken as security that the patent would issue? A. No, taken as security for the money that I advanced. Q. It was taken as security for your money. A. Sure. When you put up any money you get property as security, don’t you?” Baender testified: “Q. Now, you say this $2,000 and the Twentieth-street property were turned over to you by Mr. Schuyler in payment for one-half interest in this invention; is that true? A. In order to make clear, I think I can explain a little more fully. Mr. Schuyler advanced on the invention $500, which he paid to the sheriff for this property, and he took that property as security for the $500 that he advanced as part payment ... Q. Was there any understanding or agreement between you and Mr. Schuyler to the effect if letters patent did not issue, you were to give him back the money or property ? A. No, sir, there was not anything in writing to that effect. There was a verbal agreement if the patent did not issue I would give him back the $2,000. Q. Or the property; is that it? A. Either one.”

The testimony, together with the inferences logically to be drawn from the circumstances surrounding the transaction considered most favorable from appellant’s viewpoint, creates merely a conflict in the evidence. If the evidence *147 offered by respondent taken by itself was sufficiently clear, satisfactory, and convincing to satisfy the trial court that the deed was in fact a mortgage, such finding will not be disturbed on appeal. (Couts v. Winston, 153 Cal. 686 [96 Pac. 357]; Hillwig v. Boyer, 81 Cal. App. 763 [254 Pac. 662].)

Baender and Schuyler continued to deal with each other concerning Baender’s invention and the sale thereof to Schuyler.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P. 606, 84 Cal. App. 142, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knaugh-v-baender-calctapp-1927.