Moss v. Jack

90 P. 552, 151 Cal. 190, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 410
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1907
DocketSac. No. 1349.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 P. 552 (Moss v. Jack) 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
Moss v. Jack, 90 P. 552, 151 Cal. 190, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 410 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

This is an action in equity to have a certain assignment and deed executed by plaintiff to defendant set aside, as having been fraudulently procured, and to recover from defendant the sum of fifteen thousand dollars for moneys and property of the plaintiff obtained by defendant under this deed and assignment. The trial resulted in findings .wholly exonerating the defendant from the charges and imputations of fraud, and judgment followed the findings in defendant’s favor.

The essential facts are the following: Plaintiff is a son, heir, and devisee of William S. Moss, deceased. Upon his death William S. Moss, who was a resident of California, left a will, whereby were appointed as executors of his estate Judge Baldwin and defendant, Jack. Defendant, Jack, had married a daughter of William S. Moss, and is a brother-in-law of plaintiff. Besides property in California, Moss left property and property interests in the state of Illinois, which were, and for years had been, deeply involved in litigation. It is not necessary to particularize in this regard further than to say that this litigation involved the adjustment of partnership accounts, awards to Moss in the accounting, the levy upon and execution sales of pieces of real property, the purchase of them by Moss, appeals resulting in setting aside these decrees, the clouding of the titles so obtained by Moss, affirmance of the execution sales as to certain pieces, and disaffirmance as to others, litigation over this, outstanding liens upon these pieces of property, with resulting confusion and uncertainty as to what would be the ultimate outcome of the litigation. An administrator in Illinois had been appointed to take charge of the property of Moss in the state of Illinois, which property was, of course, first subject to the claims of the Illinois creditors. Jack himself had been the attorney in fact of his father-in-law during his lifetime, and after his death presented to his co-executor, Judge Baldwin, a claim for thir *192 teen thousand dollars, ten thousand dollars of which were for services rendered as his attorney in fact, three thousand dollars being for advancements and payments of money. Judge Baldwin, with the consent of all the heirs and devisees, approved this claim, and it was in turn approved by the judge in probate, but thereafter objection having been made by one of the devisees, Jack, with the consent of the court, withdrew his claim for the purpose of presenting it, and it was presented to the probate court in Illinois. Some time before, while Judge McCulloch in Illinois was acting as attorney and adviser for the California executors and the heirs of Moss, Jack, at McCulloch’s suggestion, had purchased certain outstanding trust titles which were liens upon the Illinois property, in which the estate of Moss was interested, for the purpose of protecting the Moss interest from loss by hostile and aggressive foreclosure, as in the then uncertain condition of the Moss title or interest, it was extremely doubtful whether it would be expedient for the-estate to attempt to redeem from such forced sales,-—that is to say, whether its own interests were sufficiently secure to justify these added expenditures. Thus Jack came to have large demands against the property in Illinois, both by reason of his ownership of the trust-deeds, as well as by reason of his thirteen-thousand-dollar claim against the estate. In addition to this, there were other claims filed for approval, in Illinois, some of which were unquestionably valid, others of which were doubtful, and there were in addition court costs and attorney’s fees for the litigation already had and still pending. In August, 1891, all of the heirs and devisees of Moss joined in the conveyance and assignment to Jack of the Illinois property, and it is this conveyance and assignment which is here attacked for its fraudulent procurement. At the time when plaintiff executed it he was over the age of twenty-five years, and some twelve years passed thereafter before this action was commenced. The specific allegation of fraud charged in the complaint is that on the twenty-ninth day of August, 1891, while Jack was acting as executor of the last will and testament of Moss, he, Jack, requested plaintiff to convey to him the property belonging to the estate of Moss in Illinois, and, acting upon the request of Jack, he joined in *193 and executed to Jack a deed of conveyance; “that at said time Jack did not inform plaintiff that he had collected said sum of $7,395.14 from Louisa H. McCall, and did not inform plaintiff that he had collected said sum of $1000 from said sheriff, and did not inform plaintiff of the true value of the real property; and plaintiff alleges that the procuring of ¡said conveyance and said assignment from said plaintiff was and is fraudulent as to this plaintiff; that this plaintiff did not know the true description or value of the real property, and did not know that Jack had collected the moneys or had received said rents until within six months prior to the commencement of the action.” It is then ¡alleged upon information and belief that at the time of the 'execution of the deed and assignment there was nothing ■whatever due to Jack from the estate of Moss, and nothing ■due to Jack from plaintiff, and that plaintiff received no •consideration for the deed.

Without discussion as to whether or not Jack, so far as the property in the state of Illinois is concerned, was chargeable -to this plaintiff with the high duty and faith of a trustee, and, indeed, declaring that he was so chargeable, the evidence completely answers and disposes of the specific charges of fraud made in the complaint. Thus, as has been said, it was established that J ack was directly through his claim, and indirectly ■through his liens upon the property, title to which was •claimed by the estate of Moss, a heavy creditor of the estate. It is established that Jack did not collect any sum of money In settlement of the litigation or otherwise from the Illinois property until after the deed and assignment to him by the heirs, and these collections were made under and by virtue •of that assignment. It is established that he did not collect ■the sum of one thousand dollars from the sheriff, except by virtue of the assignment and deed, and it is still further •established that the one thousand dollars was a thousand dollars which he himself had advanced to protect the interest of the Moss estate. It is established that the plaintiff did know the true description and value of the real property, not only from the letters of Judge McCulloch in Illinois and the explanations of Judge Baldwin in California, but from a personal visit which he himself made to Peoria, and from examinations and inquiries which he there instituted, and from *194 information which he there personally received from Judge McCulloch. Upon every matter of fraud concerning which the complaint speaks, the answering evidence of the defense is full and complete. It establishes, as the court finds, that Judge McCulloch in Illinois, representing the interests of the heirs, wrote frequently at great length to Judge Smith, who was the attorney for the California executors and to the California executors themselves. Judge Baldwin, one of these executors, is dead. But it is abundantly established by the testimony of Judge Smith and of the defendant Jack that the heirs were kept advised with most painstaking care of all the transactions and complications in the progress of the settlement of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 552, 151 Cal. 190, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-jack-cal-1907.