Lewis v. Brown

133 P. 331, 22 Cal. App. 38, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 61
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1056.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 133 P. 331 (Lewis v. Brown) 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
Lewis v. Brown, 133 P. 331, 22 Cal. App. 38, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 61 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

*39 HART, J.

This is an action to quiet title to certain real property, consisting of a lot and improvements, situated at Camp Meeker, in Sonoma County.

The suit was originally brought by one Clara Cook, daughter of George L. Lewis, the respondent, but the latter, for reasons which will subsequently be made to appear, was substituted as plaintiff in the place of said Clara Cook.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is, and for a long time prior to the institution of this action has been, in possession of the premises described therein and “claims title in fee to the said premises, and that said defendants claim an estate or interest therein adverse to the plaintiff; that the claim of said defendants is without any right whatever and that said defendants have no estate, right, title or interest whatever in said lands and premises, or any part thereof.”

The answer of the defendant, May Brown, denies that the plaintiff “is now, or ever has been the owner, or in the possession of the land and premises described in the complaint,” and admits that the defendant, May Brown, claims an estate and interest in said property. The answer further avers that the plaintiff, George L. Lewis, on the thirty-first day of October, 1908, being the owner in fee of the property in controversy, for a valuable consideration, conveyed by deed said property to the defendant, and that said deed was duly recorded in the office of the county recorder of Sonoma County on the eighth day of October, 1909; that, on September 27, 1909, the plaintiff, “for some reason unknown to defendant, and without her knowledge or consent, made a deed by which he pretended to convey the said lands to plaintiff, ’ ’ referring to the original plaintiff; that “the said deed was made without any money or valuable consideration and with the knowledge of all parties thereto that this defendant was the owner in fee of said lands, and held said deed previously made and delivered to her by said George L. Lewis, ’ ’ etc.

The defendant, May Brown, also filed a eross^eomplaint in which, after the manner of her answer, she sets out her title to the land in dispute and the circumstances under which she acquired title thereto, and prays for a decree quieting her title to said land.

The answer to the cross-complaint denies the averments of the last mentioned pleading, and further alleges that the plain *40 tiff, Lewis, is the father of the original plaintiff, Clara Cook, and that, because of the infirmities of old age and, therefore, of the uncertainty of the duration of his life, “and in order to avoid the expense of probate and to expedite matters concerning his said real estate,” he, on the twenty-seventh day of September, 1909, being “the absolute owner in fee of the lands described in the pleadings herein,” executed and delivered to his said daughter, Clara Cook, “for and in consideration of love and affection, a good and sufficient deed to the said lands . . . , reserving to himself a life estate therein. ’ ’

The court found that, on the thirty-first day of October, 1908, George L. Lewis ivas the owner in fee of the property in controversy, and that, on said day, “for a valuable consideration, he made, signed, acknowledged an instrument in due form of a grant, bargain and sale deed, wherein and whereby it was purported to convey the said premises, above described, and which were in said deed so described, to the defendant, May Brown”; that Lewis, upon said day, handed and delivered said deed to the said May Brown, but that such delivery was with the understanding and agreement that Lewis should have the rents, income, and profits of said premises during his lifetime, and that “he should retain and reserve a life estate unto himself in said premises and that the remainder in fee after said life estate was to be vested in the said May Brown, and upon the further express understanding and agreement between the said George L. Lewis and the said May Brown that the said deed was not to be recorded until after the death of said George L. Lewis.”

The judgment, following the findings, adjudges the fee in the property to be in the defendant, with a life estate therein to George L. Lewis, and enjoins the defendant and all persons “claiming or to claim under or through her” from asserting any right, title, interest, or claim in or to the said life estate or “from interfering with the possession of plaintiff therein.”

This appeal is prosecuted by the defendant from so much of the judgment as adjudges that Lewis has a life estate in the property and enjoining the defendant and all persons from asserting or claiming any interest in or title to such life es *41 tate and from interfering with Lewis’s enjoyment of the possession thereof.

It is very clear, from an examination of the record, that the finding that Lewis reserved to himself a life estate in the property in controversy is entirely without support from the evidence and that, therefore, that portion of the judgment from which this appeal is submitted cannot be upheld.

There is nowhere in the pleadings any averment nor any language even remotely indicating that Lewis reserved or intended to reserve to himself a life estate in the property, so far as the conveyance thereof to the defendant is concerned. The deed to May Brown is absolute upon its face and, therefore, purports to convey to May Brown, without qualification, condition, or limitation of any nature whatsoever, the absolute fee in the property. Nor does the record disclose any competent evidence affording any reason or ground for the slightest inference that Lewis reserved to himself, out of the fee conveyed to May Brown, a life or any estate or interest in the property. Indeed, at the trial the important question of fact which seems to have constituted the single and only bone of contention between the parties and as to which there appeared to have been any disagreement between Lewis and Brown as to the transaction involving the former’s conveyance of the property to the latter was whether he ever delivered the deed to her. That this was regarded as, and, indeed, virtually conceded to be, the single issue of fact before the court by plaintiff’s attorney, is plainly shown by a certain statement made by him at the trial. Answering an objection to certain questions propounded by him to Lewis and whose purpose was to bring out an oral understanding which it was claimed was had between the parties contemporaneously with the execution and delivery of the deed that Lewis was to have the rents and income from the property during his life, counsel said: “I wish to state that the deed is not denied; the point we raise is that there was never any delivery of the deed.”

It appears, however, that, over objection by connsel for the defendant, Lewis was permitted to testify that, when he executed the deed and apprised the defendant of its execution, he declared to her that it was his desire that she should not record the instrument until after his death, and in effect fur *42 ther said that an interest in the property should remain in him during the remainder of his life. It was undoubtedly upon this testimony that the court based its finding that Lewis reserved to himself, out of the fee of the. property granted by him to May Brown, a life estate therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 P. 331, 22 Cal. App. 38, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-brown-calctapp-1913.