Lyon v. Lyon

233 P. 988, 70 Cal. App. 607, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 14, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2859.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 233 P. 988 (Lyon v. Lyon) 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
Lyon v. Lyon, 233 P. 988, 70 Cal. App. 607, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 11 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The complaint in this action is in the ordinary form in a suit to quiet title. The defendants were given judgment and the plaintiff appeals. The plaintiff and the defendant Ida B. Lyon are and at all times mentioned herein were husband and wife. During the same time J. R. Broughton was president of the defendant bank.-

The property in dispute is block 31 of “what is known as Maze Addition to the City of Modesto.” The answer of defendants Geo. Cressey, J. J. McMahon and The Modesto Bank denies the plaintiff’s title and alleges that on the eighth day of November, 1897, the land was conveyed to defendant Ida B. Lyon as her separate property; that on the tenth day of February, 1913, the plaintiff executed and delivered to Ida B. Lyon a conveyance of the land; that on the twenty-eighth day of October, 1916, he conveyed to Ida B. Lyon, by quitclaim deed, all of his interest in the land; that on the twelfth day of January, 1921, Ida B. Lyon executed and delivered to “Geo A. Cressey and J. J. McMahon, as parties of the second part, and The Modesto Bank, a corporation, party of the third part,” her deed of trust conveying the land to secure an indebtedness to the bank of $3,227.60, evidenced by her promissory note of even date for that sum; that the indebtedness is unpaid and that the *609 promissory note and deed of trust “are now in full force and effect”; and prays “that said promissory note be declared valid, and that said trust deed be declared to be a valid lien on said land.” The answer of defendant Ida B. Lyon denies plaintiff’s title; alleges “that each of said defendants have some right, title, estate, or interest in or to the said land or premises, and the whole thereof,” that she is and ever since the eighth day of November, 1897, has been “the sole owner of the said land and premises, and is entitled to have the same quieted against each and every one of the other parties to this suit”; and prays for a decree adjudging that plaintiff has no interest in the land and that her codefendants have no lien thereon. After the commencement of the action, and after lis pendens had been recorded therein, the land was sold, pursuant to the terms of the trust deed, to satisfy the indebtedness secured thereby.

The land was purchased in the year 1897 with community funds and the conveyance thereof made to Ida B. Lyon by direction of the plaintiff. He testified that it was not intended as a gift to his wife. She testified that at the time of the purchase the plaintiff “was getting ready to go to Alaska in the spring . . . and when he bought this property in the fall he put it in my name, saying that if he never returned I would not have any trouble over the property”; that nothing was said about making her a gift of the property. Broughton acted for plaintiff in the purchase of the property, prepared the deed and, as notary public, took the grantor’s acknowledgment of the execution thereof. Broughton testified that “possibly” he knew at the time of the purchase that it was made with community funds but that the plaintiff never made any claim to the witness that he had any interest in the property but “always maintained it belonged to” Mrs. Lyon. Plaintiff testified that he never told Broughton that the property belonged to Mrs. Lyon. Several times after the purchase the plaintiff and his wife executed mortgages and trust deeds of the property to the defendant bank to secure the payment of their indebtedness to it. Thereafter, on January 16, 1912, they- executed a trust deed to secure an indebtedness of $970 to the bank.

On the 10th of Pebuary, 1913, the plaintiff signed a printed form of deed and left it with Broughton. The latter testified: “He was going away, and I told him his wife was *610 talking about selling the property for a school site, and some people was particular about having their husband sign a deed whether he had any interest in it or not. . . . And so I suggested he sign this deed and, not knowing who she might sell to, that she could sign the same deed afterwards and it would probably answer. . . . And I told him at the time if she didn’t sell it, I could insert her name later and then she surely would have no trouble in selling it. Q. Yes. And that was done with an understanding with him? A. Yes, sir, said he didn’t want h'er to have any trouble selling it.” Broughton later wrote the description of the property in the blank form of deed and inserted the wife’s name as grantee. The deed purports to convey the property to Mrs. Lyon expressly “as her separate property.”

For about three years prior to the execution of the quitclaim deed the plaintiff had not been living with his wife, but was working in another part of the state. She caused his arrest for failure to provide her with necessaries and he was imprisoned in the county jail to await his preliminary examination. Broughton called on plaintiff in the jail and “talked to him about” the execution of a quitclaim deed to Mrs. Lyon. Plaintiff testified that at his preliminary examination “the district attorney says to me, ‘Will you give Mrs. Lyon a quitclaim deed to this property?’ I thought for a moment and I could easily see that if I hadn’t done so that possibly I might have been held over to the superior court, and I says, ‘Yes,’ and then he speaks to Mr. Bice and says, ‘Have you got a deed there to be signed—made out?’ And he looked and he says, ‘No.’ And Mr. Rice rang up the hank and conversed with the bank for a few moments and then he told me that I could go down to the bank and sign it.” It does not appear whether Mr. Rice was connected with any of the parties. Plain tiff was discharged and thereafter called at the bank and executed the quitclaim deed. Broughton testified: “Mrs. Lyon told me she had legal advice that the first deed was not any good on account of it not being filled out at the time her husband had signed it. . . . So the first time I saw him after she told me that, or a few days afterwards, I prepared another one . . . and asked him to sign it and he said, ‘All right,’ if the other one wasn’t good he wanted to make it good. ... He signed it. . . . Paid me the money to record it.” Mrs, Lyon testi *611 fied that Broughton told her that “he had made Mr. Lyon sign the quitclaim deed.” Broughton testified that he never at any time told anybody that he made Mr. Lyon sign any deed.

On the 9th of November, 1916, Mrs. Lyon executed a trust deed of the property to secure an indebtedness to the bank of $2,137.70. January 12, 1921, she executed the trust deed alleged in the answer of Lressey, McMahon and the bank. There is no dispute as to the amount of the indebtedness to the bank.

The appellant contends that the land in controversy is community property, that the bank had knowledge of that fact through its president, J. R. Broughton; that the deed of February 10, 1913', is “void for the reason that it was signed in blank by plaintiff, and wrongfully filled in by J. R. Broughton, officer of the Modesto Bank, against the express instructions of the grantor”; that the quitclaim deed is “void by reason of menace and duress exercised upon plaintiff by the Modesto Bank through its president, J. R. Broughton”; that there was no delivery of the quitclaim deed. The other points made are included in the foregoing.

At the time of the conveyance of the land to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
233 P. 988, 70 Cal. App. 607, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-lyon-calctapp-1925.