MacKay v. Darusmont

115 P.2d 221, 46 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1352
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 1941
DocketCiv. 2762
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 P.2d 221 (MacKay v. Darusmont) 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
MacKay v. Darusmont, 115 P.2d 221, 46 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1352 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an action to set aside a deed on the ground that it conveyed community real property and that the wife had not joined therein. From a judgment in favor of the defendants the plaintiff has appealed.

There is no dispute as to the material facts. The appellant was employed by Doctor T. A. MacKay in his dental office for some eighteen months prior to February 20, 1937. On that date they went through a marriage ceremony in Yuma, Arizona. MacKay’s former wife had obtained an interlocutory decree of divorce in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County on February 19, 1936. A final decree in that action was not entered until February 23, 1937. On April 20, 1939, after an answer had been filed in this action *23 raising the question as to whether this appellant was legally married to MacKay, another final decree was entered in the divorce action nunc pro tunc as of February 20, 1937.

On April 24, 1937, an escrow was opened with a bank by MacKay as buyer and one Nelson as seller, through which MacKay purchased the property here in question. MacKay’s instructions provided that the money he placed in escrow was to be used provided a policy of title insurance was procured showing title vested in him, a married man, as his separate property. The appellant placed in this escrow a quitclaim deed to this property which she had signed under date of April 24, 1937, and acknowledged May 1, 1937, which quit-claimed the property to “Tim Adolph MacKay, a married man, as his separate property. ’ ’ She also handed the escrow bank a letter dated April 24, 1937, in which she stated: “I herewith hand you a quitclaim deed executed by Gwendolen MacKay to Tim Adolph MacKay, a married man, as his separate property describing (here follows description of property) which you are authorized to use upon the order of Tim Adolph MacKay without collection for my account, as I have received full consideration therefor outside of escrow. ’ ’ In closing this escrow this quitclaim deed and a deed from the Nelsons conveying the property to ‘ ‘ Tim Adolph MacKay as his separate property” were recorded on May 13, 1937. It appears, without conflict, that the full consideration for this lot, $5787.50, was paid in cash out of funds belonging to MacKay as his separate property.

On June 22, 1937, MacKay borrowed $7000 from the respondent bank, securing the loan by a deed of trust on this property, in the execution of which the appellant did not join. The proceeds of this loan were used to build a combined dental office and residence upon the lot. MacKay and the appellant moved into the building on October 20, 1937, and lived there until May 11, 1938, when they surrendered possession to the respondents Darusmont.

The respondents Darusmont, who had not previously known the MacKays, purchased the property through a real estate agent with whom MacKay had placed it for sale, paying $20,000 for it, a part of this being obtained through a new loan made by the respondent bank after cancellation of the prior trust deed given to this bank by MacKay. The negotiations for the sale to Darusmont which began in February, *24 3938, were delayed some weeks while a change in zoning regulations was obtained. The escrow in this connection was closed on April 23, 1938, and about six months later MacKay deserted the appellant. Thereafter, and within a year from the conveyance of the property to the respondents Darusmont, this action was brought.

The appellant testified that she talked to MacKay about the purchase of this lot and the manner in which it was to be paid for before he bought it and that she knew that it was to be paid for with his separate funds. With respect to the sale of the property to the respondents Darusmont she testified that she had talked to MacKay about selling the property; that MacKay said he wanted to give up his practice and get away; that MacKay then talked to the real estate man in her presence, saying “my price is going to be Twenty Thousand”; that respondents Darusmont then came to the property and she was introduced to them as the wife of MacKay; that she showed them over the building; that she talked to them a number of times before the deal was closed; that she did not ask any questions or say anything to them about the payment of the consideration; and that after the deal was closed “I had to get myself organized and get out of the house so they could take possession on the 15th of May, 1938.”

While this property was originally purchased with separate funds belonging to MacKay appellant’s contention that it was transmuted into community property is based upon evidence of certain oral statements claimed to have been made by MacKay. The appellant testified in this connection that MacKay had promised to build a home “on the Palisades” and that she need not work after their marriage; that shortly after their marriage MacKay took her to see the lot in question and told her that if she continued to work in his office and give up the idea of building a home on the Palisades “he would build very lovely new offices, including a residence”; that she asked MacKay how they could build this building if they could not build a home; that he replied that he would use his money to buy the lot and that “I will throw it into the jack pot providing you will work with me and we will work together. You will continue with the office. We will work together, clean up the debts which we will have to borrow from the bank; and if you will do that with me, then we will have this debt cleaned up very quickly”; and that she agreed to do this and thereafter worked in the office when she *25 was able. There was also evidence that on several occasions while they were living on the property MacKay had spoken of it to others as being the property of himself and the appellant.

With respect to the merits of the appeal the appellant argues that it conclusively appears that this was community property; that her quitclaim deed passed only such interest in the property as she possessed at the time of its execution but not the interest she later acquired when the escrow was closed and the property was acquired by MacKay; that he then acquired it as community property, although the record title was in his name; and that the respondents Darusmont could not be bona fide purchasers because they knew she was Mac-Kay’s wife and, under section 172a of the Civil Code, there is no presumption of the validity of a deed given under such circumstances.

We think it does not conclusively, or at all, appear that this property became the community property of Mac-Kay and the appellant. Without question it was purchased by separate funds. MacKay’s statement that he would put his money into the jack pot providing the appellant would work with him and that they would work together and soon pay off the money borrowed to erect the building, with his subsequent statements to others to the effect that he and his wife owned the property, constitutes rather weak evidence of an agreement to transmute separate property into community property. He did not do any such thing but in his escrow instructions provided that his money was to be used to secure a conveyance of the lot to him as his separate property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 P.2d 221, 46 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackay-v-darusmont-calctapp-1941.