Linforth v. Montgomery

231 P. 735, 195 Cal. 49, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 191
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1924
DocketDocket No. S.F. 10632.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 231 P. 735 (Linforth v. Montgomery) 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
Linforth v. Montgomery, 231 P. 735, 195 Cal. 49, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 191 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This appeal is from a judgment in the plaintiff’s favor in an action to quiet his title to certain real estate and to enjoin a sale thereof under a certain writ of execution which the plaintiff asserted to be void. Many of the facts which- exist as a background to the present litigation have been set forth by this court in its decision in the case of Montgomery v. Meyerstein et al., 186 Cal. 459 [199 Pac. 800], and in a later phase of the same case, this day decided (Montgomery v. Meyerstein et al., ante, p. 37 [231 Pac. 730]). The additional facts upon which the plaintiff herein predicates his right to maintain the present action may be briefly summarized as follows: On or about August 9, 1921, Alfred L. Meyerstein, the trustee named in a certain deed of trust executed to him by one Otto A. *51 Brown to secure an indebtedness due by said Brown to the Forest Hill Realty Company, declared said Brown to be in default of his obligation under said instrument and directed and conducted a sale of the real estate described therein as securing said indebtedness, at which sale of said property, held on October 15, 1921, the plaintiff herein became the purchaser. Basing his title thereto upon such sale this plaintiff commenced the present action, and upon October 11, 1922, filed his amended and supplemental complaint herein, wherein after averring in general terms his ownership of the said real estate he proceeded to allege that the defendant herein, May Montgomery, claimed to have a lien upon said property which she was threatening to assert through a purported writ of execution and by virtue of which her codefendant, Thomas F. Finn, sheriff of the city and county of San Francisco, was threatening to sell said real estate; and which said asserted lien had theretofore been extinguished by the sale of said property under said trust deed to said plaintiff. To this amended and supplemental complaint the said defendant May Montgomery made answer denying the plaintiff’s title or ownership in said property and alleging that she was the owner and holder of a first lien upon the same based upon that certain judgment in the case of May Montgomery v. Alfred L. Meyerstein et al., which is fully referred to in our previous decisions, and which she sets forth in full in her said answer. She further proceeds to allege that the indebtedness between Otto A. Brown and Forest Hill Realty Company, which the said deed of trust to Alfred L. Meyerstein had been given to secure, had been fully paid and discharged on or prior to the seventh day of March, 1921. The said defendant further alleged that on the twentieth day of July, 1916, the said Otto A. Brown executed and delivered to said Alfred L. Meyerstein a deed of all of his legal title and interest in said real estate and that by virtue thereof and by the agreement of the parties thereto the said indebtedness of said Otto A. Brown to Forest Hill Realty Company was paid in full and the said deed of trust canceled; that thereafter, and on October 13, 1918, the said Forest Hill Realty Company executed and delivered to said Alfred L. Meyerstein its deed of all its right, title, and interest in the premises in question. That thereafter, and on March 7, 1921, the said Alfred L. Meyerstein *52 executed and delivered to William H. Levings and wife his deed of all of his right, title, and interest in said real estate. That each and all of the aforesaid transactions on the part of the said Alfred L. Meyerstein antedated the date of his attempted sale of the said premises under the aforesaid deed of trust from which the plaintiff derived his asserted title to said property, and operated to extinguish the lien of said deed of trust prior to his attempted sale of the property thereunder to the plaintiff herein, all of which was fully known to said plaintiff at the time he became the purchaser of said property at said trustee’s sale thereof. The said defendant further pleaded the statute of limitations in several forms and prayed judgment that the plaintiff take nothing by this action and that she be declared to have a first lien upon the premises in dispute. The court proceeded to trial upon the issues thus framed and upon the submission of the ease made its findings and rendered and entered its judgment in the plaintiff’s favor.

The first contention made by the appellants upon this appeal is that in six specified particulars the evidence is not sufficient to support the findings of the court. An examination of these several specifications and of the argument offered in support of each of them would seem to show that they rest in the main upon the appellants’ claim that by virtue of the conveyance of the legal title to the property in question made to Alfred L. Meyerstein by Otto A. Brown on July 20, 1916, and also by the conveyance of all of its right, title, and interest in said property made by the Forest Hill Realty Company on October 13, 1918, and while said Meyerstein was the holder of the equitable title thereto as trustee under the trust deed, which was given to him to secure the indebtedness of said Brown to the said Forest Hill Realty Company, a merger of the legal and equitable title occurred whereby the equitable estate existing by reason of said trust deed was extinguished; thus leaving in Meyer-stein no interest or equity which could be conveyed to the plaintiff herein through a sale of said premises under the terms of said trust deed. The appellants make the further claim that subsequent to the date when according to her contention said merger occurred the said Meyerstein conveyed his entire interest in said premises by grant deed to *53 William H. Levings and wife he thus further divested himself of all of his interest in said premises, both legal and equitable, prior to the sale thereof under said trust deed to the plaintiff herein. It will thus be seen that according to the appellants’ theory of this case the primary issue before the trial court was as to whether there was a merger of the equitable title held by said Meyerstein as trustee under the said deed from Brown in the legal title conveyed to him by the conveyances from said Brown and the Forest Hill Bealty Company prior to the attempted sale of said property under said trust deed to the plaintiff herein. If the appellants’ theory of this case is correct it brings us immediately to her second contention upon this appeal, which is that the trial court committed prejudicial error in excluding certain evidence offered by said appellants- pertaining to the issue as to such merger. If the appellants’ contention in this latter regard should be held to be correct it would compel a reversal of this ease since the evidence which the appellants offered and the trial court rejected went, if admissible, to the issue as to the merger of the legal and equitable interest in said property in Meyerstein prior to the sale thereof to plaintiff under said trust deed. During the trial of the cause defendant offered in evidence an affidavit made by Otto A. Brown which counsel for appellant stated had been made in lieu of taking his deposition and which it was stipulated might be admitted in evidence as the testimony of said Brown, subject to any objection as to its relevancy. The evidence thus tendered was offered for the purpose, as appellants’ counsel stated, of showing that the amount secured by said trust deed of Brown to Meyerstein had been fully paid prior to the sale of the premises thereunder to the plaintiff herein.

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Bluebook (online)
231 P. 735, 195 Cal. 49, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linforth-v-montgomery-cal-1924.