London v. McConkey

92 P.2d 456, 33 Cal. App. 2d 554, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 269
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1939
DocketCiv. No. 2274
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 456 (London v. McConkey) 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
London v. McConkey, 92 P.2d 456, 33 Cal. App. 2d 554, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 269 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment decreeing that six lots on Orange Street in the city of Redlands were the property of Walter D. McConkey (also known as W. D. McConkey, W. McConkey and Walter J. McConkey) at the time of bis death and are part of his estate; that deeds [556]*556purporting to convey those lots to Norman McConkey (Walter Norman McConkey) were void; requiring Norman McConkey to account to the' estate for the rents, issues and profits of the property.

Walter D. McConkey died testate on January 19, 1936, at the age of almost eighty-two years. He left surviving him, as heirs at law and devisees, Norman McConkey, his son, and Dorothy McConkey London, his daughter, who were appointed executor and executrix of his last will and testament. He left his property in equal shares to Norman and Dorothy.

Norman assumed active charge of the administration of the estate. He returned an inventory and appraisement which did not include the Orange Street property. Dorothy filed a petition in which she alleged Norman was wrongfully claiming title to that property under two deeds from their father which were void because of lack of delivery to him and because of the mental incompetency and unsoundness of mind of their father at the time of the purported delivery; that the property belonged, subject to administration, to Norman and herself in equal shares; that Norman had wrongfully appropriated the rents, issues and profits of the property to himself under claim that they belonged to him and had refused to account for any of them. An order to show cause was issued and served. In so far as the record shows no answer was filed to this petition.

The trial court found to be true all facts alleged in the petition and rendered judgment accordingly.

As grounds for reversal of the judgment Norman urges that several of the findings of fact are not supported by the evidence and are contrary to all of the evidence. These questioned findings may be summarized as follows: (1) That Walter D. McConkey never delivered the two deeds, or either of them, to a third person in escrow to be delivered to Norman. (2) That Walter D. McConkey never delivered either of the two deeds to Norman and never intended to divest himself of title nor .to invest Norman with title to any of the property described in the deeds. (3) That Norman, surreptitiously and without the knowledge or consent of his father, obtained possession of the two deeds and recorded them. (4) That Walter D. McConkey, from December 26, 1.933, until his death, was mentally incompetent and of unsound mind.

[557]*557As the sufficiency of the evidence to support these findings is challenged,. we . will summarize such of the evidence as supports them and will disregard other evidence conflicting with it.

Walter D. McConkey retired from the grocery business in about 1921. Norman bought the business shortly thereafter. In 1922 Walter D. McConkey considered making arrangements for the final disposition of his property and consulted his attorney. He requested information as to how he could make disposition of his property without incurring probate costs. He was advised that he could have the property deeded in joint tenancy with right of survivorship to himself and the person to whom he desired it to go; that he could convey the property to such person, reserving a life estate in himself; that he could sign and acknowledge deeds and place them in escrow with a third person to be delivered at his death.

On March 6, 1922, Walter D. McConkey signed and acknowledged a grant deed conveying four of the six lots on Orange Street to Walter N. McConkey. On October 10, 1922, he signed and acknowledged a grant deed conveying the other two lots on Orange Street to Walter Norman McConkey. The records of the notary public who acknowledged these two deeds, show that on October 10, 1922, Walter D. Mc-Conkey acknowledged a third deed conveying property to Dorothy London. The notarial record fails to contain any description of the property described in this deed. The deed itself disappeared.

A few years after the preparation of these deeds, probably around the year 1928, Walter D. McConkey delivered a sealed envelope to T. J. Hammett, a friend, who returned this envelope unopened to Walter D. McConkey in the latter part of 1934. If any instructions were given Mr. Hammett he did not remember them. The evidence did not disclose the contents of this envelope.

The health of Walter D. McConkey began to fail in 1929. Shortly thereafter he turned over all his business affairs to Norman. He spent some time in the Loma Linda Sanitarium in 1930. He was again admitted to that institution on September 7, 1932. The records of the hospital show that he was then suffering from senile dementia. On December 26, 1933, he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage which affected his mind and body and from which he never recovered.

[558]*558He was confined to his bed until about June, 1934. For several months after that date he made a slow physical, if not mental, recovery until about August 1, 1935, when he was moved to a rest home in Loma Linda. From that date until his death he was confined to his bed and only sat up in it twice.

His condition from December 26, 1933, to about June, 1934, is described in considerable detail by several witnesses. His right .side was completely paralyzed. He was physically helpless. He had no control over the functions of his body. The paralysis affected the muscles controlling his speech so that he could only mumble words. Only those who were frequently with him could interpret what he tried to say, partly from the sounds he uttered and partly through reading his lips. He thought that his wife, who had been dead eighteen years, was alive and he wanted to see her. He thought he was still in the grocery business (from which he had retired in 1921) and that he had been in his store. A permanent characteristic of these delusions was that he had seen his wife about two weeks before, and that he had been to the grocery store about two weeks before each time he expressed either of these ideas. He had other delusions. "When attempting to express himself he was unable to keep to any subject. His mind would wander.

Between June 1, 1934, and August 1, 1935, his physical condition improved to such a degree that his nurse could get him out of bed and into a chair. This improvement continued until he could take a few steps with his attendant always present to keep him from falling. His ability to enunciate also improved but his mind remained “cloudy” or “foggy”, as one witness described it. It would stay on one subject but a very short time. He insisted on subscribing for a daily newspaper but often had it upside down when attempting to read it. His delusions continued.

The nurse who attended him from December 26, 1933, to August 1, 1935, thought him mentally unsound and mentally incompetent to transact any business. The physician who attended him over the same period pronounced him of unsound mind. The superintendent of the rest home who cared for him from August 1, 1935, to January 19, 1936, expressed the following opinion: “Well, I took Mr. McConkey as a— just practically a physical and mental wreck. I mean by [559]*559that that he was a bed patient, and he had lost all his power of control, both physically and mentally. ’ ’

The sole evidence of the manual delivery of the two deeds by Walter D. McConkey to his son Norman is found in the testimony of the latter.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 456, 33 Cal. App. 2d 554, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/london-v-mcconkey-calctapp-1939.