Lynch v. Lynch

135 P. 1101, 22 Cal. App. 653, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 94
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1108.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 135 P. 1101 (Lynch v. Lynch) 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
Lynch v. Lynch, 135 P. 1101, 22 Cal. App. 653, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 94 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HART, J.

The purpose of this action is to secure a decree declaring and adjudging that a certain deed, executed by one James Lynch, and purporting to convey absolutely to the defendant, J. K. Lynch, a certain tract of land situated in the county of San Luis Obispo, to be and to have been in fact intended by the parties thereto to operate as a mortgage only.

The complaint sets out in detail the facts attending the transaction which resulted in the execution and delivery of the deed in question by James Lynch to James K. Lynch, the grantor and grantee being, respectively, father and son, and, by appropriate averments, declares that said instrument was intended to have the effect of a mortgage only, and that such was understood to be its sole purpose by both the grantor and the defendants (both sons of James Lynch) at the time of its execution and delivery.

The issues tendered by the complaint were met by the defendants by answer, wherein, by way of admissions of certain averments of the complaint, they assert that the deed in question was intended as an absolute conveyance of the property.

The evidence was submitted to a jury, sitting in an advisory capacity, and to them the court submitted two particular questions of fact which involved a statement, interrogatively, of the ultimate issue of fact tendered by the pleadings. These questions and the answers returned thereto by the jury are as follows: 1. “Was it intended by said James Lynch, the father, and these defendants, by said conveyance, to convey the absolute ownership of and legal title to said lands?” Answer: “Yes.” 2. “Was it intended by the father, James Lynch, and these defendants that the payment of said sum of $3,243.00 to the San Francisco Savings Union constituted a loan which said J ames Lynch was under legal obligation to repay?” Answer: “No.”

The court adopted the answers so returned and found that the deed purporting to convey the land in dispute to James K. Lynch was not intended by the grantor, James Lynch, father of James K., as a mortgage to secure the repayment of said moneys advanced by said James K. and his brothers, *656 Henry W. and Prank Lynch, to their father, but “that it was intended by said James Lynch and the defendants, James K. and Henry W., that title to all of said 579 acre tract in fee simple should pass to defendant, James K. Lynch, by said deed; for himself and said Henry W. Lynch and Prank Lynch, however, in the proportions in which they contributed to the purchase price thereof, to wit: James K. Lynch, $2,000.00; Henry W. Lynch, $621.50, and Prank Lynch, $621.50. That it was verbally agreed between said James Lynch and his said three sons at the time of the execution of said deed that said James Lynch and Alice M. Lynch (father and mother of the defendants) should have the use and occupation of said lands during their lifetime and the lifetime of each of them.”

This appeal is brought here by the plaintiff from the judgment entered upon the findings of the court, the record having been made up under sections 953a, 953b, and 953c of the Code of Civil Procedure.

It is claimed for a reversal of the judgment that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings upon which it is planted and that the court committed a number of prejudicial errors in its rulings upon the evidence.

The evidence from which the court made its findings, and which we are convinced amply supports them, discloses the following facts: James Lynch and Alice M. Lynch were husband and wife and were the parents of the plaintiff, two other daughters, the defendants and Prank Lynch. On December 6, 1909, James Lynch died testate, in the county of San Luis Obispo, of which for many years he had been a resident and in which he left estate consisting of real and personal property. By his last testament, he left all his estate to his wife and made her the executrix of his will. On the tenth day of March, 1911, his widow, Alice M. Lynch, died testate in the city of San Praneisco, leaving estate in the county of San Luis Obispo, of which she was a resident at the time of her death. In her will she named the plaintiff as the executrix thereof, and the latter in due time was regularly and legally invested with the powers and duties of that office.

During his lifetime, James Lynch was the owner of a large body of land stiuated in the county of San Luis Obispo, and it appears that, previously to the beginning of the transac *657 tion concerned in this litigation, he had borrowed from the San Francisco Savings Union, a banking concern in the city of San Francisco, a large sum of money, to secure the repayment of which he executed to and in favor of said bank a mortgage upon all said land. This land he used for agricultural and stock raising purposes. Having met with reverses in the management of his business as a farmer and stock raiser after negotiating the loan above mentioned, .the year 1892 found his affairs in such condition that he was unable to meet the interest obligations which had accrued upon his indebtedness and his financial embarrassment consequent thereupon so discouraged him that he finally concluded to allow the bank to sell his land upon which it had the mortgage and thus realize the sum total of his indebtedness to it. The defendants, James K. and Henry W. Lynch, discussed the situation with him and endeavored to persuade him to make an effort to meet his obligations, so far as the interest was concerned, and so prevent his extensive holdings from being sacrificed through a forced sale thereof.

James Lynch and his wife then resided on a tract of one hundred and sixty acres of land. This was known as the “home place,” and upon it the wife of James had filed a homestead. Adjoining the “home place” is the tract of land involved in this controversy.

In the year 1892, the defendant, Henry W. Lynch, went to San Francisco, where the defendant, James K. Lynch, was then connected in an official capacity with the First National Bank, and held a conversation with the latter concerning their father’s financial condition and embarrassment, the object thereof being, if possible, to devise some means whereby some part at least of the mortgaged lands of James could be saved from the effect of a sale thereof to satisfy the mortgage indebtedness. “He” (referring to Henry W.) “asked me,” testified James K., “if I could raise the money to redeem from the mortgage or from the trust deed the land in the valley which adjoined the home place, the 160 acres; he said that he felt if father gave up all the land but 160 acres which mother had homesteaded and which had not been mortgaged that it would be impossible for him to make a living; he would have no room in which he could run his stock and he wouldn’t have any land practically on which he could raise grain or *658 any other produce, and I said to my brother that I thought it very doubtful if I could raise enough money to do it. He suggested that we find out how much it would take, so he and I together went do the San Francisco Savings Union and saw Mr. Lovell White, who was the cashier of the bank, and asked him what sum he would take to release this land from the trust-deed.

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Bluebook (online)
135 P. 1101, 22 Cal. App. 653, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-lynch-calctapp-1913.