Nagle Sexson v. Sexson

199 P. 61, 52 Cal. App. 644, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 204
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 1921
DocketCiv. Nos. 3606, 3607.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 P. 61 (Nagle Sexson v. Sexson) 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
Nagle Sexson v. Sexson, 199 P. 61, 52 Cal. App. 644, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 204 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Two actions were brought in the superior court by the above-named plaintiff against the above-named 'defendant, in each of which judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. Separate appeals were taken by the defendant from the judgments. The eases were tried together in the superior court and by stipulation the appeals are presented in the same way.

The actions of the plaintiff were brought for the purpose of having it determined that she was owner of certain real property situated in the city of San Diego. The general allegations of the two complaints were similar, except that the property involved was of different descriptions. For the sake of brevity we will designate the property described in action 3606 as the Horton’s Addition lot, and that described in action 3607 as the Hillerest lot. The plaintiff first alleged that she was, and for a long time prior to the occurrence of the matters stated in her complaint had been, the wife of the defendant; that she was the owner of both of the lots mentioned in her sole and separate right; that in November, 1913, she deeded to the defendant an undivided one-third interest in the Horton’s *646 Addition lot, and in April, 1918, transferred the legal title to the Hillerest lot to the defendant. She alleged that these transfers were made without consideration of any kind and were made “for the purpose of establishing an immediate and temporary credit for said defendant, and under the agreement and promise of the defendant to use said property for such purpose and no other, and with the specific understanding and agreement between plaintiff and defendant that defendant would deed said property to-plaintiff upon her request after any credit obtained by the defendant by virtue of holding said property had been satisfied.” Demand was alleged to have been made upon the defendant on or about the first day of November, 1919, that he deed the property back to the plaintiff, and that such demand had not been complied with. In a second cause of action alleged in each of the complaints it was set out that the deeds of the plaintiff to both parcels of realty had been obtained by fraud and undue influence; that defendant had great influence over the plaintiff on account of the relationship existing between the two and that the plaintiff had great confidence in the defendant and great reliance upon statements made by him, and by reason thereof, upon his representing and agreeing that he would deed back the property to her at her request, she made the transfers hereinbefore referred to. She alleged further® that defendant at the time of the making of said representations did not intend to deed the property back to her in accordance with his agreement, but intended to defraud plaintiff out of her real property. Allegation was also made that plaintiff did not discover the “said fraud of said defendant until she demanded that defendant deed said property to her, to wit, on or about the first day of November, 1919.”

[1] The parties to the actions were married in 1909. The defendant was then employed as driver for a transfer company and earned” an amount which, according to his testimony, varied from $125 to $140 per month. He continued steadily at this employment up to about April, 1916, when he ceased to work for a period of about one year, and then secured employment in the sheriff’s office in San Diego County, in which position he was employed at the time of the trial of the action. In the fall of 1919 he ceased *647 to live with plaintiff and in 1920 the two actions here concerned were brought, one on February 27th and one on April 7th. It is shown by the evidence that at the time of her marriage plaintiff owned the Horton’s Addition lot, which was a lot about 50 by 100 feet in dimensions, located in the downtown district of the city of San Diego. According to some testimony offered at the trial, this lot in 1913 was worth, exclusive of improvements, about $25,000. In 1910 it was decided by the plaintiff and defendant that a garage building should be erected on this lot. Plaintiff did not possess the necessary funds to pay the construction cost. The defendant owned in his separate right a lot in another part of the city and besides had in cash about $1,000. (His wife testified the amount was $600.) He arranged to deed to the contractor who was to construct the garage building the lot owned by him at an agreed valuation of $2,100, and added to that the amount of money which he had. Mrs. Sexson had several hundred dollars in cash and enough more money was borrowed to make up the contract price of the garage building, which was $7,500. Upon its completion the building was immediately rented and continued thereafter to be steadily occupied by a tenant. The rents were collected by the defendant and placed in an account at the bank which was first kept in the name of the defendant only, but later in the joint names of the plaintiff and defendant. Out of this money the several indebtednesses incurred on account of the construction of the garage were satisfied in installment payments, except that it was the contention of the defendant that he never was reimbursed out of that money for his contribution toward the building of the garage, which contribution, taking the admission of the plaintiff as to the amount, was the sum of $2,700. The earnings of the defendant in his employment were used to satisfy the living expenses of the family. From the time the garage was built in 1910, up to November, 1913, defendant had not received from the plaintiff any written evidence showing the amount of money from his separate estate that he had contributed toward the building of the garage. It was on November 20, 1913, that the wife deeded to defendant an undivided one-third interest in the garage property. The circumstances attending the whole matter of the building *648 of the garage and the use of the defendant’s separate funds in that enterprise are persuasive, as the story is read from the printed page, as affirming the truth of defendant’s claim, and as indicating that when the deed of the one-third interest was made it was executed for the purpose of adjusting the separate interests of the husband and wife in the garage property. In suggesting this conclusion, • however, we are here met with the condition that the plaintiff made a sworn declaration as to a totally different understanding and agreement. She testified that for the money advanced by the husband it was agreed that he would reimburse himself from the rents afterward collected. A statement of the amounts of rent which were collected by the defendant and deposited in the account referred to in the bank was received in evidence, and it does appear that the income was of such a sum as, deducting taxes and allowing for payment of the outside indebtedness, would leave enough money to have satisfied defendant’s claim for the amount contributed by him toward the construction of the building. Admitting a sharp conflict to have existed between the sworn testimony of the plaintiff and defendant, it must, nevertheless, be said that the findings, upon all of the issues as to the facts set out in the first alleged cause of action as asserted by the plaintiff, find support in the evidence. The court was not assisted by having presented in complete detail a schedule of the various expenditures made on behalf of both of the parties during the time that they lived together as husband and wife.

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Bluebook (online)
199 P. 61, 52 Cal. App. 644, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nagle-sexson-v-sexson-calctapp-1921.