Moulton v. Holmes

57 Cal. 337
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketNo. 6,361
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 57 Cal. 337 (Moulton v. Holmes) 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
Moulton v. Holmes, 57 Cal. 337 (Cal. 1881).

Opinion

McKee, J.:

This was an action brought by the plaintiffs, as executors of the estate of B. F. Moulton, deceased, to set aside a settlement of accounts between the defendants Holmes and Moore, and a release executed in consideration thereof, and to compel an accounting of the dealings and transactions of Holmes in the management and sales of certain real estate held by him as the trustee of Moulton.

It was charged in the complaint, that the settlement was not for the benefit of the estate; that it was made without the authority of the executors and the approval of the Probate Court, and under a mistake as to the insolvency of Holmes, which was caused by false and fraudulent representations made by the latter for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the estate out of the moneys which he had in his hands belonging to it, and of appropriating them to his own use.

Holmes, in his answer, denied the allegations of the complaint. Upon the issues made by the pleadings, the cause was referred to a referee to take and state an account of the transactions of Holmes as the trustee of Moulton. Upon the coming in of the report, the Court below made and filed its findings of facts, and gave judgment for the plaintiffs for the sum of $57,545.66, with [340]*340interest and costs. But afterwards, upon a motion made by the defendant Holmes for a new trial, upon the grounds that the evidence was insufficient to justify the findings of the Court, and that the decision was against law, the Court ordered a new trial, and from the order comes this appeal.

Presumptively, the order is correct; and it is incumbent upon the appellants to show that the Court erred. They contend that it was error to grant a new trial, because the release, executed in consideration of the settlement between Holmes and Moore was voidable, if not void, for the reason that Moore had no authority from Moulton, or from the executors of his estate, to make the release, and it was never approved by the Probate Court.

The release itself was not so much the object of attack as the consideration for which it was given. Having been given in consideration of the settlement of accounts or transactions between Holmes and Moore, acting as the attorney of the executors, the object of the action was to impeach the settlement for fraud and want of authority.

The Court found that there was no fraud in the settlement, and that it had not been made or approved by the Probate Court. But it did not find that it had been authorized by the executors, although it found probative facts from which that fact ought to have been deduced. For it found, in substance, that Moulton was, in his lifetime, the owner of 113 lots of land in the city and county of San Francisco, and on the 14th of August, 1868, he conveyed them, by a contract in writing, to Holmes, for the sum of $90,000. Of this amount, $43,526 were paid at the time of the transaction, leaving due and unpaid a balance of $46,474, which, by the contract, Holmes agreed to pay as follows, namely: By buying in an outstanding title to_ some of the lots, “ on such terms as he and Moulton might agree upon,” and by putting them all in market and selling them from time to time as he could; and, after paying the unpaid purchase-money in that way, he agreed to divide the net proceeds of the sales equally between himself and Moulton, after payment of the expenses, etc., attending the management and sales of the property. Several sales were made under the contract, and a portion of the moneys realized from them was paid to Moulton.

On the 20th of October, 1868, Moulton assigned the contract [341]*341to the defendant Moore, to the extent of $8,000, and authorized him, as his attorney, to collect from Holmes any money which might be coming to him from sales made by Holmes. After-wards, on the 19th of October, 1869, he conveyed all his right, title, and interest in the land, by quit-claim deed, to Moore, with intent to make Moore his trustee; and soon after the making and delivery of this deed he died; the appellants became his executors, and Moore continued to act as attorney for the estate.

In Stewart v. JSfevins, 50 Cal. 279, it was held, that this conveyance to Moore, and the contract entered into with Holmes, left the testator no interest except an interest in the moneys for which the lands vyere to be sold under the contract with Holmes; that the precise sum to which the testator would be entitled could only be ascertained upon accounting and settlement first had with Moore and Holmes; and that the surplus, should there be one, belongs to the estate of the testator, and the executors are entitled to an accounting concerning it.

To ascertain this sum, Holmes and Moore made the settlement which is now sought to be impeached. Result of the settlement was, that Holmes conveyed to Moore, in trust for the estate, 46 lots, being all of the unsold portions of the land transferred to him by the testator. Moore executed and delivered to him a release, in which were acknowledged the execution and delivery of the conveyance, and that there had been received from Holmes, by Moulton in his lifetime and by Moore after his death, the sum of $66,811 on account of the transactions and sales under the contract, and that in consideration thereof, he, “ as owner and assignee of the contract,” canceled and annulled the contract, and released and discharged Holmes from all liability on account of it.

The Court did not find that Holmes was in fact insolvent at the time of the settlement, or that he represented himself to be so, or that the executors knew of, advised, and consented to it, and afterwards ratified it. On the contrary, it found that the executors did not consent to the settlement or ratify it, and that they did not authorize it, except on the condition that Moore should satisfy himself that Holmes was insolvent to the extent of '$60,000, and that Moore never did satisfy himself that Holmes was insolvent to that extent.

[342]*342A careful examination of the record satisfies us that the findings upon these matters are not sustained by the evidence. The evidence concerning them is not conflicting: it runs all one way; and it proves beyond question that Moore learned from reliable authority that Holmes was insolvent, and he communicated his knowledge to the executors, and the executors agreed with him upon the subject of Holmes’s insolvency, and that it was best that a settlement should be made with him. They accordingly advised Moore to settle with him “ upon the best terms he could get.” At their solicitation, Moore made the settlement, and informed them of all that had been done. “ They did not disapprove of it,” but received the property which had been conveyed by Holmes in trust for the estate. When they received it, they knew that both Holmes and Moore had mortgaged it before the settlement; and knowing that fact, they, by an agreement in writing, assumed payment of the notes and mortgages made by Moore, and agreed to save Moore harmless from any liability on account of them.

Instead of a finding that the executors did not consent to the settlement, or authorize it to be made, the Court should have found that they did consent to it and authorized it.

The failure of the Court to find according to the facts, and the finding of certain material facts being against the evidence, that reason alone was sufficient to authorize the Court below to grant a new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Cal. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moulton-v-holmes-cal-1881.