Pixley v. Huggins

15 Cal. 127
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 15 Cal. 127 (Pixley v. Huggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pixley v. Huggins, 15 Cal. 127 (Cal. 1860).

Opinion

Field, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court

Baldwin, J. and Cope, J. concurring.

This is a suit, on the equity side of the Court, to enjoin the sale of certain real property, alleged to belong to the plaintiff, situated in the City of San Francisco, under an execution issued upon a judgment recovered by the defendants, Huggins and Hall, against B. F. Moulton and others. The facts of the case are briefly as follows : In August, 1852, the property in question was conveyed by Thomas O. Larkin to the wife of Moulton, for four thousand dollars, and this sum is recited as the consideration in the deed to her. A few days subsequently, Moulton and wife conveyed, by their joint deed, the property to the plaintiff, for the consideration recited therein, of nine thousand and five hundred dollars. This deed was acknowledged by both husband and wife before a Notary Public of the county, and of the acknowledgment two certificates were indorsed by the Notary, both of which were sufficient in form as to the acknowledgment of the husband, but only one of them was sufficient as to the acknowledgment of the wife ; the other was defective in that respect. The deed was recorded with the defective certificate, the other being omitted.

[131]*131In October, 1855, the defendants, Huggins and Hall, recovered a judgment in the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District, against Moulton and others, for upwards of seven thousand dollars, and on the fifteenth of December of the same year, a transcript of the docket of the judgment was filed in the office of the Recorder of San Francisco county, so as to become a lien upon property owned by Moulton at the time in that county. Upon this judgment execution was issued, and placed in the hands of the Sheriff of San Francisco county, who proceeded thereunder, and levied upon the property which was conveyed by Moulton and wife to the plaintiff, and advertised for sale all the i;ight, title and interest which Moulton possessed therein on the said fifteenth day of December, 1855. It is to enjoin this sale that the present suit is brought.

The property in question previous to the sale to the plaintiff, is presumed to have belonged to the community existing between Moulton and his wife, and in the absence of proof that it was purchased with the separate funds of the wife, the presumption is absolute and conclusive. The fact that the deed from Larkin was taken in the individual name of the wife, does not justify any inference that the property was her separate estate. The statute determines the character of the property. By its provisions all property acquired after marriage, by either spouse, except that acquired by gift, bequest, devise or descent, was common property. The conveyance in question was made upon a purchase, and this fact excludes the supposition of acquisition by gift, bequest, devise or descent. (See Meyer v. Kinzer, 12 Cal. and Smith v. Smith.) As the property belonged to the community, it was subject to the disposition of the husband. He was possessed of the same absolute power over it, as over his separate estate. He could sell it without the concurrence or consent of his wife. It is of no moment, therefore, that the deed to the plaintiff was recorded with the defective certificate of her acknowledgment. Her signature to the instrument was unnecessary, for it could add nothing to the validity or completeness of the transfer. The entire estate passed upon the execution of the deed by the husband alone.

But even had the signature of the wife been necessary to the transfer of the property,. the record of the defective certificate could not have been of any avail to the defendants. The deed bears a sufficient .certificate of acknowledgment, and subsequent judgment creditors of the vendors cannot, before a sale, object to its operation against their judg[132]*132ment that it was not on record. The Registry Act was not intended to protect them ; it was only intended to protect subsequent purchasers and mortgagees in good faith and for a valuable consideration. (Act concerning Conveyances, sec. 26; Rose v. Munie, 4 Cal. 173.) Had the signature of the wife been necessary, and a sale had taken place, the purchasers at such sale, without notice, actual or constructive, of the conveyance to the plaintiff, would have been in a position to invoke the protection of the act, and to prevent a state of things of this nature from arising, a bill like the one in the present suit might have been filed.

As the property vested by the deed of August, 1852, no interest would have passed to the purchaser under the sale advertised upon the execution issued upon the judgment of Huggins and Hall. But it does not follow, as the counsel of the defendants insist, that the" plaintiff was not entitled to the equitable interposition of the Court to prevent the sale. The jurisdiction of the Court to enjoin a sale of real estate, is co-extensive with its jurisdiction to set aside and order to be cancelled a deed of such property. It is not necessary for its assertion in the latter case that the deed should be operative, if suffered to remain uncancelled, to pass the title, or that the defense to the deed should rest in extrinsic evidence, liable to loss, or be available only in equity. It is sufficient to call into exercise the jurisdiction of the Court, that the deed casts a cloud over the title of the plaintiff. As in such case the Court will remove the cloud, by directing a cancellation of the deed, so it will interfere to prevent a sale, from which a conveyance creating such cloud must result. (Pettit v. Shepherd, 5 Paige, 501.) And every deed from the same source through which the plaintiff derives his real property must, if valid on its face, necessarily have the effect of casting such cloud upon the title. Such deed is calculated to create uneasiness in the owner, and to awaken suspicions in others of the existence of concealed defects in the title, which may, at some day, be developed, and must thus tend to depreciate the value of the property in the market, and to embarrass the owner in its sale or use as security.

The deed of the Sheriff, upon the sale on the execution of the defendants, would have, of course, the same effect as if the deed were executed directly by Moulton himself; and if placed upon the record it would naturally create doubts as to the validity, as against the judgment creditors, of the previous transfer to the plaintiff. The very fact that the conveyance from Larkin was taken in the individual name of [133]*133the wife, would add strength to these doubts, and lead to the inference that the transfer was intended only as a cover. Against the casting of a shade in this way upon his title, the plaintiff was entitled to the preventive remedy, by injunction. \

The case of Shattuck v. Carson et al. (2 Cal. 588) is similar to the one at bar. In that case, the plaintiff had purchased certain premises of one Griffith, and the defendants were proceeding to sell the same, under an execution upon a subsequent order or judgment against the vendor. The complaint averred, that Griffith had no interest in the premises, but that the sale, if suffered to take place, would cast a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title; and prayed for an injunction against the sale. The Court below held, that as the judgment debtor had no interest in the property, nothing would pass by the sale, and dismissed the complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Cal. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pixley-v-huggins-cal-1860.