McMinn v. Whelan

27 Cal. 300
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 27 Cal. 300 (McMinn v. Whelan) 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
McMinn v. Whelan, 27 Cal. 300 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court, Currey, J.

This is an action of ejectment commenced on the twenty-third of September, 1863, for the recovery of a lot of land on the corner of Folsom, and Tenth streets, in San Francisco, and for damages for withholding it from plaintiff. By the answers, the defendants denied the material averments of the complaint, and then pleaded the Statute of Limitations, and also an equitable defense on which they prayed affirmative relief. The cause was tried by a jury, without first disposing of the equitable defense, and a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the recovery of the possession of the premises, and one hundred and eighty dollars damages. On this verdict judgment was entered. The defendants moved for a new trial, which was denied.

Much evidence was given at the trial respecting the possession of the premises by Mathew Maume and his tenants existing in the year 1854, and thence continuing to the time of the defendants’ entry thereon, which was in 1861. That Maume had the prior possession of the premises was determined by the jury in the affirmative, and as there was evidence authorizing the verdict in this respect, no just complaint can be made, because it was not more ample.

The plaintiff claimed title to the premises by a deed of con[309]*309veyance produced in evidence, bearing date the tenth of May, 1861, purporting to have been executed by Mathew Maume, by his attorney in fact, Michael Dundon.

To prove that Dundon had authority as attorney for Maume to execute in his name the deed of conveyance to the plaintiff, the plaintiff offered in evidence an instrument in writing under seal, purporting to be a power of attorney executed on the thirty-first of January, 1859, by Mathew Maume, then a resident of Limerick, in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to Michael Dundon, of Brookville, in the County of Clare, Ireland, appointing and constituting the said Dundon the attorney for the said Maume, and granting to him power to sell and convey, for and in the name of the constituent, the premises in controversy. This power of attorney appears upon its face to have been executed in the presence of one Thomas O’Farrell, and when it was offered in evidence it was objected to by defendants on the ground that it was not proved to have been executed by Mathew Maume. The plaintiff then introduced evidence to the Court for the purpose of laying a foundation for the introduction of secondary evidence of the execution of the instrument by Maume. The plaintiff himself was sworn and examined respecting the efforts he had made, preparatory for the trial, to discover the attesting witness, if within the jurisdiction of the Court. His testimony showed that he had exercised great diligence for the purpose of finding the witness, and also to discover some one by whom his handwriting could be proved. After this evidence was admitted, the plaintiff proved the handwriting of Mathew Maume by a person who knew it, and then submitted the power of attorney to the Court for inspection, and at the same time offered it in evidence as proved. The defendants objected that the absence of the subscribing witness was not sufficiently accounted for, and also that his handwriting was not proved; and accompanying this objection they proposed to prove by exhibiting the City Directory that a number of persons were residing in San Francisco by the name of O’Farrell, and insisted that they were the proper persons of whom to inquire [310]*310for the witness. The Court overruled the objections and the instrument was read in evidence to the jury. To this ruling the defendants excepted.

In the case of McMinn v. O’ Connor and Others, ante, 238, we have declared, on the authority of Landers and Wife against Bolton, 26 Cal. 409, and the authorities cited in that case, that an instrument in writing, executed and attested by a sub-' scribing witness in a foreign country or at a place beyond the jurisdiction of the Court, could be proved by producing evidence of the handwriting of the party who executed it. The presumption in the case is, that the attesting witness, who was in Ireland when he signed the document as a subscribing witness, remained there, and consequently was beyond the 'jurisdiction of the Court at the time of the trial.' (Valentine v. Piper, 22 Pick. 89, 90.)

The defendants, for the purpose of showing that the title of Mathew Maume had passed to one of them, offered and gave in evidence a judgment obtained by Timothy Gleason against Mathew Maume on the twenty-seventh of October, 1860, and also the judgment roll and the proceedings in the case. The plaintiff objected to the evidence offered controverting the validity of the judgement, and maintaining that it was coram non judice and void.

On the second of November, 1859, Gleason commenced an action by filing a complaint in the District Court of the Twelfth Judicial District against Mathew Maume, Samuel Adamson and Mary E. Maume, the object of which was to recover from Mathew Maume seven thousand dollars, alleged to be due from him on a contract set forth in the complaint, and to obtain a decree against the defendants Adamson and Mary E. Maume, setting aside as fraudulent certain mortgages on real property, executed and delivered to them by Mathew Maume, and a decree against Mathew Maume, compelling him to execute a mortgage on the same real property as security for the payment of the debt sought to be recovered, in pursuance of an alleged agreement that he would so secure the same. A summons was issued on the day the complaint was filed, and on [311]*311the same day the attorney for the plaintiff therein made an affidavit that the defendants were absent from the State, two of them residing in Ireland and the other in England. Whereupon the Court made an order that the service of the summons be made by publication in a certain newspaper specified in the order, for at least once a week for three months. On the fifth of December, 1859, the plaintiff Gleason filed a supplemental complaint in the action against the same persons and also against Michael Dundon, Michael Maume and Johanna Maume as defendants. This supplemental complaint embodied, by direct averments and reference, the same matters contained in the original complaint, and further alleged and charged that Mathew Maume, with intent to cheat and defraud the plaintiff Gleason out of the debt due him, entered into an agreement with Michael Dundon, in Ireland, to come to California for the purpose of covering up, concealing and disposing of his property so as to cheat and defraud the plaintiff and other of his creditors out of their debts; and fraudulently agreed with Dundon to convey to him certain real property in the City of San Francisco, for the fraudulent purpose of cheating and defrauding his creditors.

The supplemental complaint is replete with charges of acts of the defendants by which they designed to defraud and had defrauded the creditors of Mathew Maume, and that the defendant Dundon had thus acquired title to a portion of his property, and others of the defendants had obtained from him mortgages on other portions of his property, all of which transactions were fictitious, and intended to cheat and defraud the creditors of Mathew Maume. In conclusion, the plaintiff Gleason, in addition to the relief which he sought in his original complaint, prayed that the conveyance from Mathew Maume to Dundon might be declared fraudulent and void, and that the same might be decreed to’be delivered up to be cancelled.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Cal. 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcminn-v-whelan-cal-1865.