Nelson v. Thomas

172 P. 398, 36 Cal. App. 433, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 440
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2298.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 P. 398 (Nelson v. Thomas) 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
Nelson v. Thomas, 172 P. 398, 36 Cal. App. 433, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 440 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This was an action to quiet title. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, and the defendants appealed, Clarence G. Thomas being thereafter substituted for C. S. Thomas, one of the original defendants.

*434 The defendants in the action claimed title to the property described in the complaint by virtue of an instrument dated December 30, 1913, purporting to be a deed from plaintiff: Nelson to C. S. Thomas and Ella Thomas, his wife, and which property they claimed to have received from Nelson as a gift. Nelson, on the other hand, while admitting that he signed and acknowledged this paper, supported his claim of title by evidence that in signing it he supposed he was executing his will, and therefore denied that on December 30th, or at any other time, he either made or intended to make or deliver a deed of the property to the defendants. The court accepted this view-of the transaction, and entered judgment accordingly quieting plaintiff’s title.

The circumstances attending the execution of the instrument in controversy are briefly these: About the year 1879 Nelson acquired a small ranch in the southern portion of Humboldt County, at a place known as Elk Ridge, where he engaged in cattle-raising. From time to time he increased his holdings until he had acquired the property here involved, a tract of some one thousand seven hundred acres. About the year 1890 the defendants went to work for Nelson on his ranch. C. S. Thomas was a carpenter, and built barns, outhouses, and fences for Nelson, while his wife Ella was engaged there as cook and housekeeper. They were thus respectively employed for about a year, when they moved to Briceland, a place about eight miles distant. The relationship between Nelson and Thomas became very close and strong, so much so that Nelson would sign without reading any paper that Thomas might present to him, according to a statement attributed by one of the witnesses to Thomas. At Briceland, Thomas, in addition to pursuing his regular calling, occupied the offices of justice of the peace and notary public, and for four or five years prior to the execution of the disputed deed he transacted Nelson’s legal business for him. On December 28, 1913, Nelson was single, about sixty-eight years of age, and in poor health. About a week before this date he had told Thomas that because of ill health he could no longer look after his stock, and had concluded to lease his property, whereupon Thomas offered to try to find a tenant for him, and in a few days sent to Nelson a prospective renter. This man failed to inspire confidence in Nelson, and no arrangement was arrived at with him. There *435 after Thomas called on his friend, and informed him that he would be willing to rent the ranch himself if the terms were reasonable, and in the course of the conversation invited Nelson to come to Briceland and live with him as one of the family if the ranch should be rented. The next morning Nelson rode into Briceland, called on Thomas, and announced that he had come to stay, and would let Thomas have the ranch for five years at an annual rental of $550. The terms were accepted, and Thomas was told to prepare the lease, which he accordingly did. The document being completed, Nelson expressed a wish to make his will, and requested Thomas to prepare it. He indicated his desire that legacies of five hundred dollars each should be given to two friends, one thousand five hundred dollars to each of the defendants’ children, and that the residue of his estate should go to Thomas and his wife, share' and share alike. The will was accordingly prepared, being completed that evening.

Up to this point there is no material dispute between the plaintiff and defendants, nor of the fact that on the following evening Nelson executed several papers, one of which was a deed to his property in favor of Thomas and his wife, and left them with Thomas.

The plaintiff was a witness in his own behalf, and testified that he did not know that he had signed a deed; that he had no intention to make a deed of the property; that he supposed he was making a will; that the first intimation he received that he had made a deed was from a friend, one Alfred Grey, who told him that Thomas was claiming to have a deed to the property; that at that time he did not believe Thomas had deceived him, and apparently desiring not to give offense, said nothing to Thomas at the time of what he had heard from .Grey; that later, however, becoming apprehensive, he asked Thomas for the paper, and learning that it was in a bank in Eureka, he, although feeble, rode ninety miles on horseback to that city for the purpose of examining it and thus learn if Grey’s statement was true; that on being denied an inspection of the document in Eureka he at once returned to Briceland and called on Harry Co wen, a notary public, who had taken his acknowledgments on the occasion of his executing the papers prepared by Thomas, and then learned from him that one of those papers was a deed.

*436 Nelson thereupon left the home of Thomas, where he had been staying for the past fifteen months, employed counsel to advise him, and finally brought this action.

The notary, Cowen, testified that he took the acknowledgment of Nelson to a deed and a lease; that in doing so Nelson admitted to him that the signatures affixed to the deed here involved and the lease were his, but at that time that Nelson did not read the instruments in his presence nor participate in the conversation, but sat back and looked sick, bad, and distressed; that at some time between May 25 and June 5, 1915, Nelson called on him and inquired whether or not one of the papers acknowledged by him on December 30th was a deed; that upon being informed that such was the fact, the color left the man’s face, he staggered, made queer motions, and looked horribly shocked.

Another witness, Fred Fearrien, testified: “A few days after December 30, 1913, I asked Thomas if there would be any chance to rent or lease the Nelson ranch, and he said no, that he had already leased it for five years. Later he [Thomas] told me that Mr. Nelson had willed the property to him and his folks and two other parties. I don’t think he ever told me he had a deed.” It appears that this witness and Thomas were friends of twenty years’ standing, and on .intimate terms.

Witness Nathan Stansberry testified: “In the spring of 1915 I had a conversation with C. S. Thomas. I came along and Thomas was working on the ranch. We got to talking, and I said jokingly, ‘I guess you will give a man something now to kill Nelson for you.’ Mr. Thomas said, ‘No, Nelson has always been good to me and I am going to be good to him, and maybe he will give me the place some day.’ ”

Witness Grothe testified: “On April 6, 1915, I rode from Garberville to Briceland with Thomas. He told me Nelson wanted to come to. Eureka, and wanted all his deeds and other papers that he [Thomas] had. He said he had them down in a safe in the Bank of Eureka. He was coming down in about two weeks and would get them for Nelson then; that they were Nelson’s and he could have them; that they belonged to him. He said the deed and will were the only papers that he had of Mr. Nelson’s left at this time. Thomas said, speaking of the lease, that he had read it over several times, and never noticed it before, but there was nothing in *437

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fay v. Norquist
140 P.2d 141 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
Merkle v. Merkle
258 P. 969 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 P. 398, 36 Cal. App. 433, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-thomas-calctapp-1918.