McNulty v. Copp

205 P.2d 438, 91 Cal. App. 2d 484, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1252
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1949
DocketCiv. 13852
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 205 P.2d 438 (McNulty v. Copp) 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
McNulty v. Copp, 205 P.2d 438, 91 Cal. App. 2d 484, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1252 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

DOOLING, J.

Plaintiff and appellant appeals from a judgment denying her relief in a suit to reform a deed to certain real property in St. Francis Wood, San Francisco, hereinafter referred to as the home, annulling a deed to her from her deceased father of the home and a joint tenancy deed to another parcel of real property in San Francisco, hereinafter referred to as the Shipley Street property, quieting cross-complainant’s title to the home subject to administration and quieting title to the Shipley Street property in the executor of decedent’s will subject to distribution by the probate court.

Henry W. Copp died at the age of 79, January, 1945, survived by four children, Anita Copp McNulty, alias Anita Copp Ahern, plaintiff, cross-defendant and appellant herein; Olive Copp Eldridge, one of defendants, cross-complainant and a respondent; and two other children. By his last will Mr. Copp left his home known as 52 San Leandro Way in St. Francis Wood to respondent Mrs. Eldridge. The residence was on Lot 6 and the adjoining lot appurtenant thereto as a garden was Lot 5 of Block 9 of the subdivision.

A few hours after Mr. Copp’s death, appellant recorded a deed from her father dated and purportedly executed September 8, 1933, which deed covered Lot 5 and Lot 4 which was not owned by decedent. It did not cover Lot 6. Appellant asserted ownership of the residence and adjacent lot, *487 claiming that the deed was intended to cover both, and mistakenly recited Lots 4 and 5 instead of Lots 5 and 6. She brought this suit in equity against the executor and Mrs. Bldridge to reform the deed so as to include the residence and to quiet title thereto.

Mrs. Ahern’s original complaint alleged no consideration for this deed. After demurrer was sustained on the ground that equity will not reform a voluntary deed, she amended her complaint to allege that said deed was executed in consideration of her promise to live with and take care of her father. At the trial Mrs. Ahern gave different versions of the alleged agreement, one version being that she was to receive the entire estate to the exclusion of the other children.

Defendants and respondents defended on the grounds of nonexecution of the deed alleging lack of intent to transfer title, fraud, lack of consideration, unclean hands and the statute of limitations. Mrs. Bldridge also filed a cross-complaint charging fraud by Mrs. Ahern and an attorney M, who prepared the deed, in obtaining Mr. Copp’s signature to the deed sued on and in the same transaction obtaining his signature to a deed of the Shipley Street property to a third person who in turn executed a deed to appellant and her father as joint tenants. Under this latter deed appellant claimed the Shipley Street property after her father’s death as surviving joint tenant. The cross-complaint alleged and the trial court found that this transfer was never intended by Mr. Copp and that both deeds were obtained by fraud. There was evidence that in 1932, at the time of the death of his wife, Mr. Copp, then 68, was healthy and of sound mind, but his vision was greatly impaired and he was practically blind. He perhaps could read ordinary type with the aid of his jeweler’s glass although this was disputed.

Appellant moved into her father’s home with her young daughter in December, 1932, after her stepmother’s death. Mr. Copp had been supporting them, and continued to support them thereafter. No agreement 'between Mrs. Ahern and her father for the father’s care was mentioned to M, the attorney who prepared the deeds in 1933. No agreement was mentioned to Attorney John Lermen in 1939 when the deeds to the Shipley Street property came to light and were challenged by Mr. Copp as fraudulent. There was testimony that in October, 1933, Attorney M advised Mr. Copp of a defect in title to the Shipley Street property which necessitated the execution of certain deeds to correct. It was at this time *488 that the deeds here involved were signed by Mr. Copp. In an interview with Attorney Lermen, M and Mrs. Ahern stated that the Shipley Street joint tenancy deed was executed because Mr. Copp wanted to save taxes. In this interview M did not tell Lermen of the home property deed because, as he testified, he felt that it was confidential. This deed, was of course, then unrecorded. Numerous wills and codicils executed by Mr. Copp were introduced which consistently showed that the home property was never devised to Mrs. Ahern, but rather to Mrs. Bldridge or to Mrs. Bldridge and her sister. Mr. Lermen testified that Mr. Copp told him about signing the Shipley Street deed, that it was contrary to what he had intended, but he had taken care of the matter by devising the Shipley Street property to Mrs. Ahern in his will. Mrs. Bldridge who lived near her father in St. Francis Wood and usually spent some time each day with him, stated that her father told her that he had learned that Anita’s name was on the deed and it was a very serious thing that she had done in obtaining the joint tenancy deed of the Shipley Street property.

The evidence further showed that in 1939 decedent was advised by a real estate agent that the Shipley Street property was held in joint tenancy by appellant and himself and for that reason appellant should join as lessor in a proposed lease of the property, that decedent thereupon became indignant and told many people that he had not intended to create a joint tenancy but had signed the deed to the Shipley Street property under the belief induced by the representations of appellant and attorney M that this was necessary to correct a defect in title. Decedent thereafter executed the several wills leaving the Shipley Street property to appellant, saying that he did not want to make trouble with appellant and his will would cure what had been done without his knowledge. There is conflicting evidence as to declarations made over the years by decedent to various witnesses, some acknowledging and some denying' an intent to transfer title to appellant. The trial court’s findings resolved these conflicts against the appellant. The last will of decedent devised the home to respondent Mrs. Bldridge and the Shipley Street property to appellant. It contained a clause that in case of contest the contestant should take nothing and it appears that because of appellant’s prosecution of this litigation the claim has been advanced in the probate court that she has forfeited her rights under the will. Other evidence is hereafter referred *489 to, although much of the evidence favorable to appellant need not be stated because of the settled rule that on appeal we are to consider only the evidence most favorable to the judgment.

One of the issues in the case was whether the deeds to the two parcels in question were validly delivered by her father so as to vest title in appellant as joint tenant with her father in the Shipley Street property and in fee simple in the home. On the question of delivery and intent evidence of the subsequent declarations and conduct of the deceased, even if self-serving, was admissible. (Williams v. Kidd, 170 Cal. 631, 648 et seq. [151 P. 1, Ann.Cas. 1916E 703]; Donahue v. Sweeney, 171 Cal. 388, 391-392 [153 P. 708]; De Cou v. Howell, 190 Cal. 741 [214 P. 444]; Whitlow v. Durst,

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Bluebook (online)
205 P.2d 438, 91 Cal. App. 2d 484, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnulty-v-copp-calctapp-1949.