Marlenee v. Brown

134 P.2d 770, 21 Cal. 2d 668, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 297
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1943
DocketL. A. 17765
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 134 P.2d 770 (Marlenee v. Brown) 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
Marlenee v. Brown, 134 P.2d 770, 21 Cal. 2d 668, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 297 (Cal. 1943).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

— The appellant, as executrix of the estate of her deceased husband, conveyed real property which the respondents later purchased from a successor in interest of the grantee. By this action she is seeking to set aside the order of the probate court affirming the sale, to have her deed and other conveyances by which title has been vested *671 in the respondents declared void, and to quiet the title of the estate in the property.

Shortly after the death of Charles Lee Marlenee in 1931, letters testamentary were issued to the appellant. The estate is still in course of administration. In 1935, there was presented to the probate court a return of sale of the property in controversy to William Gaston. This return, signed "and verified by the appellant, included a request that the sale be confirmed.

Upon a hearing, after due notice, the court made an order confirming the reported sale and directing that a conveyance be made accordingly. On July 1, 1935, the appellant, as executrix, signed and acknowledged such a deed, but it was not recorded until June 2, 1936, when there was also placed of record one purporting to be signed and acknowledged by Gaston conveying the same property to Taylor 0. Taylor, the appellant’s attorney. The respondents acquired title from Taylor in 1937. He died the following year.

According to the appellant’s complaint, the land described in the return of sale is improved with buildings containing nine rental units. Taylor falsely represented to her that Gaston had purchased this property. Taylor then caused a return of a purported and pretended sale of it, together with a petition for confirmation, to be filed in the probate court. At the hearing on the return he “introduced testimony in support thereof, although he then well knew, and it is a fact, that no sale had in fact been made.” Other allegations are that the appellant, at Taylor’s request, and in compliance with the court’s order of confirmation, signed and acknowledged a deed. This deed she placed in the custody of Roger S. Page, who had succeeded Taylor as attorney of record for her as executrix, with instructions to deliver it to Gaston for $10,000, less the amount of encumbrances of record. Neither she nor the estate has received any consideration for the deed and it was never delivered to Gaston. The deed to Gaston which appears of record purporting to have been signed and acknowledged by her was not signed, acknowledged or delivered by her as executrix, or otherwise or at all, nor was it ever delivered by or with her authority, and she had no knowledge of its existence until the latter part of 1938.

In a second cause of action the appellant alleges that if *672 the deed of record to Gaston “does bear her signature and acknowledgment as such Executrix, then such signature and acknowledgment were, and each was, obtained without her knowledge or consent and by means of a fraudulent trick and device of . . . Taylor” and as a part of a scheme to defraud her and deceive the probate court. Also, any deed to Gaston was executed in violation of the court’s order authorizing a conveyance to the executrix on receipt of a stated consideration and she did not “cause said or any deed . . . to be delivered to . . . Gaston or to anyone for him.”

By their answer, the respondents assert, among other defenses that, so far as they are concerned, the appellant is estopped to claim that the sale to Gaston was a purported or pretended one. They say that the appellant, and not Taylor, made the return of sale, and they have relied upon the order of confirmation, which is valid and regular on its face. Furthermore, the deed to Gaston which was recorded on June 2, 1936, was executed and acknowledged by the appellant and is the only deed to him which she signed. The same defense is pleaded by way of answer to the second cause of action. Twelve separate defenses follow.

Upon trial, the appellant testified that she signed the return of sale, that she was in court at the time it came on for hearing, and that Taylor testified in support of its allegations. She was positive that she signed no deed to Gaston except an unrecorded one, acknowledged before Perry F. Backus as notary public, which was produced by Page. He testified that it had been in his possession since July 9, 1935, the date it was acknowledged. But Mrs. Marlenee also said that she understood Taylor had sold the property to the respondents “on the deed that I signed to Mr. Gaston.” And she admitted that although she managed the property during ,the administration of the estate, collecting the income directly from the tenants or through an agent, she received no rent after March 1, 1937.

In the course of her testimony, Mrs. Marlenee identified her signature on an affidavit dated July 7, 1937, which includes a recital of the services rendered by Taylor, as her attorney, during the administration of her husband’s estate. According to this affidavit, on March 1, 1935, the probate court ordered her to sell all of the property belonging to the estate, and the property in controversy was sold to William *673 Gaston for $5,670 net, subject to liens and encumbrances of record. “But Gaston couldn’t raise the $5,670 and We couldn’t get another offer from anyone. In order to avoid the expense of a second probate sale, enable us to hold the property for a better market, and enable me, in the meantime, to receive the rents thereof, I arranged with T. 0. Taylor to take the title in his own name, through Gaston, hold it as long as he could, sell it for the best price obtainable, apply the net proceeds on my indebtedness to him, and meanwhile take care of all my litigation.”

The same explanation of the transfer of title to Gaston and Taylor appears in another affidavit, dated August 16, 1937, which the appellant admitted that she signed and verified. And she also identified her signature to a writing dated March 30, 1937, addressed to the tenants of the property in controversy, directing them to pay all future rents to the respondent James B. Brown.

The appellant, in her testimony, insisted that certain parts of the affidavit dated July 7, 1937, “were not on there” when she signed it, and that she did not swear to the truth of any part of it. As to the second affidavit, she said that none of the writing above her signature was on the paper when she signed it; she wrote her name, at Taylor’s direction, on the blank page. She also declared that she was visiting in San Diego on August 16, 1937, the date of verification. But her statement in that regard was contradicted by Mary B. Warren, a notary public, who testified that the document was signed by the appellant in her presence as stated in the jurat.

William Gaston testified that he did not offer to buy the property described in the appellant’s deed to him, and never had a deed to it in his possession. Asked if he signed and acknowledged a deed conveying the property to Taylor, he replied, “not knowingly.” But he admitted that he signed “some document” in the office of Freda R. Paulson, a notary public, and that “it may have been” a deed. Miss Paulson, in support of her certificate of acknowledgment on the deed from Gaston to Taylor, said that she signed it when the two men came to her office and Gaston acknowledged his execution of the document.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 P.2d 770, 21 Cal. 2d 668, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marlenee-v-brown-cal-1943.