Parker v. Hardisty

202 P. 479, 54 Cal. App. 628, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 503
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2367.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 202 P. 479 (Parker v. Hardisty) 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
Parker v. Hardisty, 202 P. 479, 54 Cal. App. 628, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 503 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The opinion of the trial judge, which is set out in respondents’ brief, seems to us to be a clear and satisfactory exposition of the facts and of the legal principles involved in the case, and we hereby adopt it, as follows:

“This is an action to vacate a judgment of this Court heretofore rendered by Judge MeSorley and entered on January 24, 1910. The facts upon which plaintiffs seek relief are in substance as follows:

“On March 29, 1895, one Robert Reed Jenkins was the owner of 1350 acres of agricultural land in Calaveras County, one lot in Camp Seco, and four lots in the city of Stockton. Upon that day he executed a gift deed whereby he apparently attempted to convey all of this property to his wife, Julia. The deed refers to the land conveyed as ‘ containing 1350 acres.’’ Jenkins was the owner of the south half (%), the fractional northwest 'quarter (%,) and the fractional southwest quarter (%) of the northeast quarter of Section 16, but in the deed to his wife the word ‘of’ was interpolated after the words ‘the south half (%),’ which had the effect of eliminating from the description the south half, and the north one-half of the north-west quarter of the section. Of the property thus omitted from the description in the deed, the defendant Etta Hardisty claims to be the owner of about 235 acres by virtue of a conveyance from her mother, Julia A. Jenkins, bearing date Jan. 18, 1896; and as to the remaining 125 acres of the omitted property, it appears that on said Jan. 18, 1896, for a valuable consideration the said Julia A. Jenkins executed a deed therefor to Hiram Tyrer, who entered into possession under said deed and thereafter, on June 5, 1905, executed a deed of the property to one Frank Sanborn.

*630 The latter, for a valuable consideration, on Sept. 15, 1909, executed a conveyance of the property to W. S. Dennis, one of the defendants in this action. The following month the attorneys for Dennis discovered that the description in the deed from Jenkins to his wife did not include the property that had been purchased by Dennis, which seems to have been the first discovery made by any one that the word ‘of’ had been interpolated in the deed.

.“At the request of Dennis, Mrs. Etta Hardisty procured Letters of Administration upon the estate of her father, Robert Reed Jenkins, to be issued to her, and on Jan. 10, 1910, Dennis commenced an action in this Court against Mrs. Hardisty, as such administratrix to reform the gift deed from Robert Reed Jenkins to his wife Julia A. Jenkins, upon the ground of the mutual mistake of Jenkins, his wife, and the scrivener who drew the deed, said mistake, being the insertion of the word ‘of’ heretofore referred to. By said action Dennis also attempted to obtain a decree quieting title upon the ground of his predecessor’s adverse possession for more than- five years. Mrs. Hardisty as administratrix filed an answer consenting to a judgment in favor of Dennis in said action. All of the expenses of Mrs. Hardisty and her attorney in procuring .letters and appearing in said action were paid by Sanborn, the grantor of Dennis. Judge McSorley took evidence in said action, and by his decree not only adjudged the reformation of said deed by striking out the word ‘of’ but as well found and decreed that Dennis and his predecessors had been in the actual, open and continuous occupation of the land, and paid all taxes levied and assessed thereon ever since the execution of the deed to Julia A. Jenkins.

“The defendant, Etta Hardisty, and the three plaintiffs in this action are the surviving children of Robert Reed Jenkins and his heirs at law, the wife, Julia A. Jenkins, having died Feb. 5, 1907. For nearly fifteen years it was assumed by all of these persons that by the deed of conveyance from Robert' Reed Jenkins the whole of his property had been vested in his wife Julia A., and it was not until the rendition of the judgment by Judge McSorley that the plaintiffs discovered the error in the description, whereupon they commenced this action to vacate and annul that judgment.

*631 “While it is claimed by the Plaintiffs that the judgment heretofore rendered was made in pursuance of a conspiracy to cheat and defraud plaintiffs, and while the said acts complained of may be such as to constitute legal and actionable fraud, yet it is but fair to the defendants to say that there is not a particle of evidence to indicate that they were intentionally endeavoring at any time to wrong or defraud any person, but on the contrary they were acting from honest motives in an attempt to correct the paper title of the property of the defendant Dennis.

“Consideration will be first had of the plaintiffs’ asserted cause of action against the defendant Dennis.

[1] “The rule is well established that in order for the plaintiffs to prevail in an action of this character, they must show not only that the former judgment was procured by fraud, but also that they had a substantial defense to the action in which the judgment was rendered, for equity will not annul a judgment if it is a correct and just determination of the rights of the parties thereto. See Reed v. Bank of Ukiah, 148 Cal. 97 [82 Pac. 845]; Parsons v. Weis, 144 Cal. 417 [77 Pac. 1007] ; People v. Perris Irrigation Dist., 142 Cal. 606 [76 Pac. 381]; 23 Cyc. 1039 and 1040.

“The facts in this case in reference to the error in the deed are quite similar to those appearing in Hart v. Walton, 9 Cal. App. 504 [99 Pac. 719]. There the Court adjudged a reformation of a deed, because through the carelessness of the scrivener in writing the word ‘of’ instead of ‘and’ the grantee received 115 acres of land less than she bargained for. In that ease, however, the grantee had paid a valuable consideration for the conveyance. [2] It is here urged that as the conveyance from Jenkins to his wife was a mere voluntary transfer without any consideration, the former judgment of this Court in reforming the deed was erroneous, citing Enos v. Stewart, 138 Cal. 112 [70 Pac. 1005]. That was a suit against the husband as administrator of his wife’s estate, brought by her mother to correct a description in a deed of gift executed to the mother by the daughter prior to her death. It was there said: ‘It is a universal principle of courts of equity that in all cases where relief is asked by aiding and correcting mistakes in the execution of instruments and powers, the party seek *632 ing such relief must stand upon some equity superior to that of the party against whom he asks it. If the equities are equal, the law must prevail, and the Court will remain silent and passive. The equities of respondent are, at least, equal to those of the appellant. It is the dictate of. equity and natural justice that the property of a wife dying without issue should go in part to her surviving husband. . . . By refusing to correct the deed no fraud nor injustice is done to appellant. She has lost nothing because she paid no consideration for the deed.’

“The statement often made that ‘Courts of equity will not aid voluntary conveyances,’ cannot be accepted as an inflexible rule, for like most others it is subject to exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P. 479, 54 Cal. App. 628, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-hardisty-calctapp-1921.