Pailhe v. Pailhe

247 P.2d 838, 113 Cal. App. 2d 53, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1335
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 12, 1952
DocketCiv. 15056
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 247 P.2d 838 (Pailhe v. Pailhe) 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
Pailhe v. Pailhe, 247 P.2d 838, 113 Cal. App. 2d 53, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1335 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

An action by Alfred Paihle, individually, and one by him as administrator, against his brother Rene, were consolidated for trial. In the first mentioned action the court gave judgment for defendant. Plaintiff did not appeal. *56 In; the second action the court decreed that defendant held certain real property and an insurance policy in trust for plaintiff as administrator. Defendant appeals.

Questions Presented

1. Sufficiency of the complaint.

2. Sufficiency of the evidence to show fraud and undue influence.

3. Were grantor’s declarations subsequent to execution of deed admissible?

4. Where the only allegations concerning fraudulent transfer of the insurance policy were contained in the action which the court adjudged in defendant’s favor, was the judgment that defendant held it in trust valid?

5. Erroneous findings and judgment.

1. Sufficiency of the Complaint

Inasmuch as the court found against plaintiff on his complaint as an individual we are concerned with the sufficiency of the administrator’s complaint alone. At the beginning of the trial defendant moved to exclude all evidence on the ground that the complaint did not state causes of action. The court took the motion under advisement and apparently never ruled on it. The court’s action amounts to a denial of the motion.

While the complaint is hardly a model of pleading, it is sufficient. The first count, after alleging the death of Elisabeth on September 28, 1948, the appointment of plaintiff as administrator, and the fact that plaintiff and defendant are her sons and sole heirs at law, alleges that she was the owner of certain real property in San Francisco; that prior to December 17, 1946, she was an elderly person suffering from severe illnesses and consequent pain and incapacitation; that defendant then represented to her that if she would convey the real property to him to the exclusion of plaintiff, defendant would care for her for the remainder of her days, would provide her with necessaries and reasonable luxuries, and would lift from her all worries, tribulations and labor of any description; that these representations were false and fraudulent, made without intent to perform them, and with the design that decedent would rely on them and deed the property to defendant; that decedent did rely on them and, further, placed the highest degree of trust and confidence in defendant; that a relationship of trust and confidence existed between decedent and defendant; that she was thereby *57 induced to and did sign and deliver to defendant a deed of said property; that defendant carried his fraudulent plan into effect by in nowise caring for decedent or in lifting her burdens and obligations, but did, in fact, make them heavier.

The second count incorporates all the allegations of the first count, and then alleges that in doing the things therein set forth defendant exercised undue influence and restraint over decedent’s mind and thereby induced her to sign the deed in the following eircumstancs, among others: that at such time decedent was not of sound and disposing mind but was in so extreme a condition of mental and physical weakness as to be unable to exercise a free will as to her affairs; that her volition was overcome by that of defendant, who thereby induced her to depart from her free desire to bequeath the property equally to plaintiff and defendant and induced her to grant it exclusively to defendant.

Defendant contends that the complaint merely sets forth conclusions and not facts, as was the situation in Bacon v. Soule, 19 Cal.App. 428 [126 P. 384]. In that case there was no allegation of confidential relationship. The action was between a brother and his sisters and the court pointed out that the brother-sister relationship alone did not raise a presumption of confidence and trust. But in our ease not only was there a parent and child situation which the Bacon case holds raises a presumption of confidential relationship (p. 434), but in addition there was an allegation that such confidential relationship actually existed. The allegations in the first count of representations which defendant had no intention of carrying out, coupled with the allegation that decedent placed the highest degree of confidence in defendant, were somewhat similar to those which the court in Alaniz v. Casenave, 91 Cal. 41 [27 P. 521], held to be sufficient. As to the second count the allegations of control by defendant of decedent’s mind, coupled with the allegations of confidence, were somewhat similar to those upheld in Estate of Bixler, 194 Cal. 585 [229 P. 704]. The allegations which defendant contends are mere, conclusions were there held to be ultimate facts.

Defendant contends that the complaint is defective because there is no allegation of an offer to restore. He points out that there is also no allegation that defendant gave no consideration for the deed. However, it is alleged that the conveyance was a deed of gift, and, in the first count, that it was given on defendant’s promise to provide for her, *58 etc., and that defendant did not keep that promise- but actually made her burdens heavier. In the second count, it is alleged that decedent’s volition was overcome by that of defendant. While the complaint could have been better drawn, it sufficiently informed defendant that plaintiff was claiming that defendant gave no consideration for the deed and hence there was nothing for plaintiff to offer to restore. Section 1691, subdivision 2, Civil Code, requiring an offer to restore in proper cases, does not apply. A number of the criticisms of the complaint cannot be raised on general demurrer. (See Campbellv. Genshlea, 180 Cal. 213, 217 [180 P. 336].) There was no special demurrer. Defendant was not harmed by the court’s not requiring that particularity and technicality in pleading which the courts once required.

2. Sufficiency of the Evidence

Elisabeth, the mother of plaintiff and defendant, lived since the death of her husband their father several years ago in a two-story, seven-room dwelling house in San Francisco belonging to her. She owned a life insurance policy for $500, taken out to cover funeral expenses, of which plaintiff was the beneficiary. In May, 1940, Elisabeth made a will leaving her property equally to her two sons and naming defendant executor without bonds. On November 27, 1946, she executed an endorsement on the insurance policy making defendant the beneficiary. In September, 1946, she went to Mr. Jean Arees, a notary public and an old friend of 30 years’ standing, and had him prepare a will, which she executed, leaving the home to defendant and the residue of her estate to both sons. On December 17, 1946, she conveyed the home to defendant. Plaintiff was not informed of these transactions. In 1944 Elisabeth suffered a major stroke, leaving a partial paralysis on the left side. Dr. McClure testified that since that time she had been deteriorating mentally and physically. In the fall and winter of 1946 her reasoning powers were below normal and her memory was defective.

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Bluebook (online)
247 P.2d 838, 113 Cal. App. 2d 53, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pailhe-v-pailhe-calctapp-1952.