McIntosh v. Hunt

157 P. 839, 29 Cal. App. 779, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 141
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1733.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 157 P. 839 (McIntosh v. Hunt) 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
McIntosh v. Hunt, 157 P. 839, 29 Cal. App. 779, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 141 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in plaintiffs’ favor in an action brought by them against the defendant, their father, to have a trust declared in respect to certain real estate conveyed by their mother to him a short time before her death.

The principal contention of the appellant is that the evi- ■ dence is insufficient to sustain the findings- and judgment of the trial court. The record is voluminous, but there are certain facts of vital importance to the determination of this issue concerning which there is no dispute, and which may be briefly set forth as follows: The defendant Clarence M. Hunt and his wife were married about thirty-seven years before the latter’s death. Their life together had been happy, congenial, and mutually confidential during the whole of this period, and no differences or quarrels of any kind had ever arisen between them. Two children had been bom of this marriage—the plaintiffs herein; and these had grown up in the home of their parents, and had in due time married and established themselves in homes of their own, the plaintiff Pearl M. having wedded C. H. McIntosh, a lawyer residing and practicing his profession in the state of Nevada, and the plaintiff Reuben H. having elected the profession of physician, with his residence and practice in San Francisco. During the earlier years of his married life the defendant Clarence M. Hunt had been engaged in various occupations, working generally upon a salary, and had been enabled thereby not only to support his family comfortably, but to give to each of his two children the benefit of an excellent education, including for his daughter a course in the University of California, and for his son a degree from a local medical college. He had also laid aside some property of his *781 own. A few years before the death of his wife, Hattie Gr. Hunt, which occurred in 1910, she received the sum' of thirty-one thousand dollars as an inheritance from her parents’ estate, which money was turned over to her husband for investment, and which was invested by him in several pieces of real estate in San Francisco and in Alameda County, the deeds to which being in each instance taken in the name of his wife. About this time the defendant gave up his other occupations, and thereafter devoted himself to the management of these investments and of his own properties. He attended to all of the details of purchasing his wife’s property, arranging for the mortgages and insurance which were to be placed and carried thereon, caring for and renting the property, collecting the rents, and paying the interest and other charges. The income from the property of his wife and of himself was commingled in a common fund, from which the expenses of the family were taken, and from which also each received such money as either required, no account being ever had between them. In the summer of 1909 a small lump was found to be growing upon the breast of the wife which occasioned some fainily alarm, but which did not seem to affect her general health, nor operate to interfere with her intention of taking a trip north to visit the Seattle Exposition. On the eighth day of July, 1909, just before she started upon said trip, she made, executed, and delivered to the defendant, her husband, three deeds, absolute in form, with an expressed consideration in each of $10, to the several pieces of real estate theretofore standing in her name and involved in this litigation. These deeds were acknowledged and delivered before and in the presence of Addie L. Ballou, a notary public of the city and county of San Francisco, who was a witness in the case and who testified that no conversation relating to the creation of a trust or other limitation upon these conveyances occurred in her presence between the parties at the time of the delivery of the deeds. These deeds were retained by the defendant until some time in the month of November, 1910, when they were presented for record in the respective counties where the property was located. A few days after their recordation the insurance policies upon these properties were transferred from the name of Hattie Gr. Hunt to that of Clarence M. Hunt, his wife signing the necessary papers for such transfer in the form of which it *782 was recited, “ownership of the property herein insured having actually passed to Clarence M. Hunt, for value received J hereby transfer and assign to him all my title and interest in-this policy. ’ ’ In the meantime the lump which had been observed on the breast of Mrs. Hunt continued to grow until it was at length diagnosed as cancer, and two operations were undertaken for its removal. These proved unavailing, and after the second operation in August, 1910, she had failed rapidly until it became apparent that she was soon to die. In the month of December, 1910, the members of her family were collected at her home in anticipation of her near dissolution. On the twenty-second day of December they were all gathered in her room, the defendant and the trained nurse also being present, at which time the dying woman was engaged in distributing among them such trinkets and personal effects as she wished each to have.

Up to this point there is no disagreement as to the facts of the case; but from this moment forward the testimony of the plaintiffs and the defendant is in sharp and irreconcilable conflict. According to the testimony of the plaintiffs, of O. H. McIntosh, of Mrs. E. H. Hunt, and of Luella Walden, the trained nurse, the following statement of the conversation and conduct of the respective parties present may be fairly collated: After the gifts of her personal effects and property as above stated, Mrs. Hunt, speaking to her son-in-law and to the defendant, and referring to the real estate in question, said, “I have deeded this property to Clarence, but with the understanding that he is to have a life income and that the property was to go to the children. I have always trusted ‘Gome’ [her pet name for her husband], but people change, and he may change or may get married again. That property belongs to me; it is my own property, came to me from my father. It was understood that it was to go to the children, and that Gorrie was to have the use and income of it during his lifetime to provide himself with what he needed and make himself comfortable; but people, as I say, change; he may get married again. I do not want any mistakes as to the understanding that was had between us with reference to the ownership of this property. I do not want some outside person, same stranger whom he might marry, to be in a position to claim or obtain any part of my property that it was intended and agreed belonged to my children. I want this *783 in writing [speaking to her husband]—not that I don’t trust you, but you might change.” Mr. Hunt replied, "‘Yes, Mamma”; and then he and McIntosh.retired from the room into the hallway, where, according to the latter, the following-conversation occurred: “I said to him, ‘Well, Gorrie, how is this thing to be arranged?’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I don’t know just how it had best be fixed up.’ ‘Well,’ I said, ‘Gorrie, I can tell Mother—she is waiting for some disposition of it— I can tell her that you have executed a declaration of trust, and then the matter can be fixed up in that way later. ’ He said ‘All right; tell her that, and we will fix it up later.’ ” They then returned to the bedroom, when, according to Mr. McIntosh, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
157 P. 839, 29 Cal. App. 779, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintosh-v-hunt-calctapp-1916.