Knudson v. Adams

30 P.2d 608, 137 Cal. App. 261, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 836
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1934
DocketDocket No. 1493.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 30 P.2d 608 (Knudson v. Adams) 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
Knudson v. Adams, 30 P.2d 608, 137 Cal. App. 261, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 836 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

This action was instituted by plaintiff, a judgment creditor of the defendant H. Z. Adams, for the purpose of securing a decree setting aside certain conveyances of real property made by the aforesaid defendant to the defendant Carrie A. Love, which were alleged to be fraudulent as to plaintiff. Upon the conclusion of the trial of the action judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants. Prom the judgment thus rendered plaintiff has appealed.

The record shows that the following facts were developed by the evidence which was produced during the trial: The defendants H. Z. Adams and Carrie A. Love are brother and sister and the former has for many years made his home with the latter. The father of these two defendants died intestate in 1891. His estate was probated in the Superior Court of Orange County. During the course of administration certain real property of the estate was sold to the defendant Carrie A. Love for the sum of $9,000 and said defendant received a deed therefor from the administrator of the estate. On July 25, 1923, Carrie A. Love executed three separate grant deeds whereby she conveyed five-sixths *264 of the property which she had purchased from her father’s estate to the grantees named in said deeds. These grantees were her brothers IT. Z. Adams and Leon H. Adams and her sister Lilla A. Camfield. The deed to H. Z. Adams conveyed to him an undivided one-half interest in said property and the deeds to Leon H. Adams and Lilla A. Camfield conveyed to each an undivided one-sixth interest in said property. No consideration was received by Carrie A. Love for these deeds. After the deeds were executed they were handed by the grantor to the defendant TI. Z. Adams with the request that he should not cause them to be recorded until after the grantor’s death. H. Z, Adams placed the three deeds in a safe deposit box which was under his control. Lilla A. Camfield died on March 19, 1929, leaving a will wherein she devised her interest in the above-mentioned real property to her brother, the defendant H. Z. Adams. During the time the estate of Lilla A. Cam-field was being administered it became necessary to refinance an encumbrance on the property the record title to which stood in the name of Carrie A. Love and because of the reference in the Camfield will to an interest of the testator in said property, the title company which was handling the escrow in connection with the renewal of the encumbrance objected to making a certificate of title upon said real property. With the knowledge and consent of the record owner, Carrie A. Love, the deeds theretofore executed by her on July 25, 1923, were recorded on July 24, 1930. Shortly thereafter H. Z. Adams individually and as executor of the will of Lilla A. Camfield, Leon H. Adams and Carrie A. Love joined in the execution of a new encumbrance which was placed upon the above-mentioned real property. On February 14, 1931, H. Z. Adams executed and delivered to Carrie A. Love a quitclaim deed whereby he conveyed to her all interest which he had in said property. This deed was recorded on the date of its execution. On May 25, 1931, II. Z. Adams executed and delivered to Carrie A. Love a grant deed whereby he conveyed to her an undivided one-sixth interest in said property. This deed was likewise recorded on the date of its execution. H. Z. Adams received no consideration for the execution of either of these deeds, which are the conveyances attacked by plaintiff as fraudulent. In the meantime, on April 2, 1926, a judgment *265 against H. Z. Adams was rendered in an action instituted by James A. Knudson against said H. Z. Adams for the purpose of foreclosing a mechanic's lien on other property owned by H. Z. Adams. On April 2, 1931, the sheriff of Orange County sold the property encumbered by the mechanic’s lien to the plaintiff Anne L. Knudson, administratrix of the estate of James A. Knudson, for the sum of $22.50 and a deficiency judgment for $20,500 against H. Z. Adams was docketed. Thereafter, on April 2, 1931, Anne L. Knudson, as administratrix of her husband’s estate, brought an action against H. Z. Adams on the aforesaid deficiency judgment and recovered judgment against H. Z. Adams for the sum of $20,500 and costs. A writ of execution was issued on the last-mentioned judgment and was returned wholly unsatisfied.

In her appeal from the judgment rendered against- her appellant attacks a number of findings made by the trial court on the familiar ground that the findings are lacking in evidentiary support. It is particularly urged that the court’s finding that there was no delivery of the grant deeds executed by respondent Carrie A. Love on July 25, 1923, to the grantees named in said deeds is vulnerable to attack on the above-mentioned ground. In this connection, it is contended that a specific finding that the deed to Lilla A. Camfield was “placed in the safety deposit box of the defendant Carrie A. Love” is entirely lacking in evidentiary support. The contention is correct. The evidence which was presented to the court established that the three deeds which were executed by Carrie A. Love on July 25, 1923, were given to H. Z. Adams by the grantor and that he deposited all of them in the same place, which was a safe deposit box under his control. In another finding the court-found that the three deeds which were executed by Carrie A. Love on July 25, 1923, “were placed in a safety deposit box used jointly by her and the defendant H. Z. Adams”. The only evidence which was presented to the court which tended to show that the place of deposit was used jointly by H. Z. Adams and Carrie A. Love consisted of the testimony of II. Z. Adams to the effect that he was quite sure that there were other papers of Carrie A. Love in the box. All other evidence respecting the safe deposit box indicated that it was the box of II. Z. Adams and under his exclusive *266 control. It is hardly necessary to observe that the situation might have been quite different if there had been presented to the trial court evidence which had indicated that the place of deposit was in fact used jointly by II. Z. Adams and his sister, Carrie A. Love. Suffice it to say, the present record entirely fails to show joint user and the court’s finding to that effect is not sustained by the record.

In connection with her attack upon the finding of nondelivery of the above-mentioned deeds, appellant points out that although the trial court expressly found that there was no delivery, it also found that “the only title which the defendant H. Z. Adams had in said real property during the time a record interest stood in his name, and being from the date of the recording of the grant deed from Carrie A. Love to H. Z. Adams in 1930, to the date the property was reconveyed by him to Carrie A. Love, was a naked legal title”. It is objected that the finding that respondent H. Z. Adams held bare legal title to the land by reason of the recordation of the deed is utterly inconsistent with the express finding that the deed was never delivered to him. The criticism is proper. If there was no delivery of the deed no title of any sort became vested in H. Z. Adams. It will be consistent with orderly procedure to give consideration first to appellant’s contention that the court’s finding of nondelivery of the deeds executed in favor of H. Z. Adams and Lilia A.

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Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 608, 137 Cal. App. 261, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knudson-v-adams-calctapp-1934.