Overton v. Harband

44 P.2d 484, 6 Cal. App. 2d 455, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 929
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 1935
DocketCiv. 5329
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 P.2d 484 (Overton v. Harband) 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
Overton v. Harband, 44 P.2d 484, 6 Cal. App. 2d 455, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 929 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

RANKIN, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by defendants, Title Insurance and Trust Company, and Mortgage Guarantee Company, from a judgment decreeing a trust deed executed in the name of one Henry Schwartz, and conveying certain real property described therein, to Title Insurance & Trust Company, as trustee, and naming Mortgage Guarantee Company as beneficiary, to be null and void, and restraining appellants from asserting any rights thereunder.

The material facts bearing upon the questions raised by the appeal are as follows:

Respondents, Joseph Overton and Eliza A. Overton, are husband and wife, and on August 10, 1931, were the owners of the property described as Lot 59, Block 7, of McCarthy Company’s Florence Avenue Heights tract, in the city of Los Angeles, and improvements thereon consisting of bungalow court.

Following negotiations instituted some time in July, 1931, they sold the property, presumably to one Harry I. Harband, for a consideration of $10,000, evidenced by a promissory note in said amount, executed by Harco Construction Company and Harry I. Harband, in which deal it was agreed *458 that respondents were to receive the sum of $700, one year’s interest under the terms of said note, in advance.

On August 10, 1931, respondents went to the office of said Harry I. Harband, in the city of Los Angeles, delivered to him the deed they held to the property, their certificate of title and all insurance policies. Harband then requested them to sign a deed to the property, and respondents signed the instrument on the lines indicated by Harband, and left the deed on Harband’s desk. Neither of them read the deed, nor did they know whose name was written therein as grantee, or if any person was named as grantee. They then received from Harband the $10,000 note and $700, one year’s interest thereon. Respondents then delivered to Harband the possession of the property, and Harband collected the rents thereon for the month of August.

The deed signed by respondents was recorded August 12, 1931, at the request of the grantee. The grantee named in the deed is Henry Schwartz (a single man). The instrument purported to have been acknowledged before Harry I. Harband, a notary public, his certificate of acknowledgment being in due form and bearing the imprint of his notarial seal.

On August 12, 1931, Harband appeared in the office of the Mortgage Guarantee Company and met O. Henry, Jr., escrow officer of said company, and presented to him a written application for a loan of $3,000 on the property involved in this action, purporting to have been signed by Henry Schwartz. Harband was not personally known to Mr. Henry, but stated that he was Henry Schwartz. A note and a trust deed conveying the property to the Title Insurance & Trust Company as trustee, was prepared and delivered to Harband, who took the same to his office and signed the name “Henry Schwartz” thereto, and a notary public executed the certificate of acknowledgment in due form, certifying to the execution of the trust deed by “Henry Schwartz”. Harband then delivered said note and mortgage to the mortgage Guarantee Company, and on August 13th, Title Insurance & Trust Company issued its loan policy in the usual form in favor of Mortgage Guarantee Company, insuring the trust deed to be a valid incumbrance and a first lien upon the property, and delivered *459 it to Mortgage Guarantee Company. Before the loan policy was issued the examiner of Title Insurance & Trust Company called Mr. Overton on the telephone and asked him whether he had sold the property, to which question Mr. Overton replied that he had. Upon receipt of said instruments, Mortgage Guarantee Company paid over to Harband the amount of the loan, less expenses thereof, and immediately placed the trust deed on record. Payment of the proceeds of said loan were made to Harband by check payable to Henry Schwartz. Harband received this check and endorsed the same in the name of Henry Schwartz, and underneath the name of Henry Schwartz he wrote his own name also, as endorser. These negotiations were carried on with the Mortgage Guarantee Company officials by Harband, under the name of Henry Schwartz, and it was some three weeks after the transaction was closed that appellants, or either of them, learned that the real name of the man to whom they had made the loan as “Henry Schwartz”, was Harry I. Harband.

Defendant Harband had a brother-in-law living in Los Angeles by the name of Henry Schwartz. This brother-in-law was a tailor by trade, and had no knowledge of said transactions carried on by Harband until the fourteenth day of October, 1931; made no claim to the property; received none of the money from the loan placed thereon; and did not authorize in any manner the use of his name in said transaction.

Appellants filed an answer herein denying material allegations of the complaint and as a matter of defense, alleging that defendant Harry I. Harband adopted and used the name "Henry Schwartz” in acquiring title to the real estate involved, and in making a loan thereon. Appellants also, as a further and separate defense, pleaded that plaintiffs are estopped from denying the execution of said deed as against appellants.

The court made lengthy findings to the effect that all the material allegations of the complaint are true, and the allegations of the answer are untrue, and entered judgment in accordance therewith.

The first contention advanced by appellants is, that the trial court’s finding that the name of the grantee was not *460 contained in the grant deed executed by respondents, and that subsequently Harband inserted the name “Henry Schwartz” therein, is not sustained by the evidence.

The law is well established, and it is conceded by counsel that a deed in which the name of the grantee is left blank and in which the name of the grantee is afterwards inserted without authority of the grantor, is void—a nullity.

The question here involved is whether or not the evidence sustains the finding to that effect. A certified copy of the deed was offered and received in evidence. Section 1951 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides:

“Every instrument conveying or affecting real property, acknowledged, or proved and certified, as provided in the Civil Code, may, together with the certificate of acknowledgment, or proof, be read in an action or proceedings, without further proof; also, the original record of such conveyance or instrument thus acknowledged or proved, or a certified copy of the record of such conveyance, or instrument thus acknowledged or proved, may be read in evidence, with the like effect as the original instrument, without further proof.”

And sections 1920 and 1948 of the same code make such proof prima facie evidence of the execution of the writing and of the facts stated therein. The deed is sufficient in the absence of evidence to the contrary. (Thomas v. Fursman, 177 Cal. 550, 553 [171 Pac. 301].)

The burden of proving that at the time respondents signed and acknowledged the deed the name of the grantee was not written therein, was upon respondents.

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Bluebook (online)
44 P.2d 484, 6 Cal. App. 2d 455, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overton-v-harband-calctapp-1935.