Roman Catholic Bishop v. Lawrence

129 P.2d 931, 54 Cal. App. 2d 730, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 419
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1942
DocketCiv. No. 2980
StatusPublished

This text of 129 P.2d 931 (Roman Catholic Bishop v. Lawrence) 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
Roman Catholic Bishop v. Lawrence, 129 P.2d 931, 54 Cal. App. 2d 730, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 419 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This in an action to quiet title to certain real property which had been deeded to the plaintiff by May Adeline Driscoll, but which in a later will Mrs. Driscoll left to the defendant, Mrs. Dewey Smart. The property in question is a duplex house in Colton, one part of which Mrs. Driscoll occupied as a home and the other part of which she rented. The court found in all respects in favor of the plaintiff and the defendants have appealed.

On August 5, 1938, Mrs. Driscoll, who was then 61 years of age, came to St. Bernardine’s Hospital in San Bernardino suffering from a heart attack, to which malady she had been subject for some years. It appears, without conflict, that while she was physically very ill she was mentally alert, and that for several years she had intended to leave her home, the duplex, to the Catholic Church. On a number of occasions, over a period of two years, she had told two of her neighbors of this intention. Father Mathews, chaplain for the hospital, who had not previously known her, made a routine call upon her on the day she entered the hospital. During their conversation Mrs." Driscoll told him that she realized her days were numbered, that she wished to make a will, that she wished to leave the property she lived in for the benefit of the Colton parish, and that she wanted to remember certain of her friends with some cash. He told her that he would call an attorney to make out a will for her, which he did. This attorney first visited Mrs. Driscoll alone. She gave him instructions for drawing her will, telling him that she owned this duplex and had about $2,000 in the bank, that she had a brother in Ireland whom she had not heard from for many years, that she did not want him to have any of her property, that she wanted to leave $100 each to four of her neighbors who had been kind to her, that she wanted the parish in Colton to have her real estate, the duplex property, and that she wanted any balance of her money to go to Father Mathews. At that time the attorney explained to her the probate provisions, relative to charitable bequests and told her these restrictions might prevent the carrying' out of her wishes with respect to her real property if she died within thirty days and partially prevent this if she died within six months. Mrs. Driscoll then said: “Well, I want the Church to have this property,” and asked the attorney if there was any positive or sure way this could be accomplished. He told her it could be done by executing a deed to the property and explained to her that the effect of a deed [733]*733would be an immediate conveyance of the property, passing title to the property at once, while a will would only take effect upon her death. She replied that she wanted the Church to have the property and instructed him to prepare such a deed and to prepare a will with reference to her personal property, her final instruction being: “Go ahead and make up the deed and the will.”

The attorney called Father Mathews and explained to him the reason for making the deed and inquired as to the proper designation of the grantee in a deed to the Church. Thereupon, Father Mathews made a second call on Mrs. Driscoll and assured her that the bishop would not interfere with her staying in the home while she lived, and that she would be allowed to continue in possession of the property as long as she lived. Mrs. Driscoll then informed him that she wanted the Church to pay her funeral expenses so that this expense would not come out of her personal property, and Father Mathews agreed that this would be done. Father Mathews also testified that he assured her that the deed would not be recorded, although he was not certain whether that assurance was given at that time or on a later occasion.

On the next day, August 6, 1938, the deed to the duplex property which had been prepared by the attorney, and which named the plaintiff as grantee, was executed by Mrs. Driscoll in the presence of the attorney, a notary and two nurses. After the notary had placed the acknowledgment certificate thereon Mrs. Driscoll delivered the deed to the attorney and asked him to deliver it to Father Mathews. This he did, and Father Mathews, on the same day, mailed the deed to the bishop at San Diego. Immediately after the deed was executed the will disposing of her personal property was signed by Mrs. Driscoll and two witnesses thereto. Mrs. Driscoll retained the original will and the attorney kept a copy. Two days later, Mrs. Driscoll was sufficiently recovered to return to her home. Shortly thereafter, Father Mathews delivered to her a letter from the bishop thanking her for the property. At the request of the bishop, Father Mathews then asked her whether or not she desired the Church to take care of the taxes and insurance on the property. Mrs. Driscoll replied that these were paid up to date and that she would take the rent from the other part of the duplex and take care of these things in the future. Shortly after her return from the hospital, on separate occasions, Mrs. Driscoll informed [734]*734two of her neighbors that she had deeded her property to the Catholic Church and that she had also made a will in which she had remembered them. One of these witnesses testified that Mrs. Driscoll also told her that she did not want anyone to know she had deeded the property to the Church and that she further stated that “she had deeded the place to the Catholic Church, but she was going to ask for the deed, but she was going to let it stand as it was, but she only wanted the deed of her property.”

On October 17, 1938, the attorney who had prepared the deed and the will called at Mrs. Driscoll’s home and she paid him for his services and expressed no dissatisfaction with what had been done. Some time in November, 1938, Mrs. Driscoll called Father Mathews, who came to her home. She then told him that some of her neighbors had said that the bishop had recorded the deed and was going to throw her out on the street. He testified that she was quite disturbed, not about the deed but about “the fact she was going to be thrown out on the street,” that he assured her that this was not so, and she replied: “I will take your word for it.” He then testified that to make doubly sure he told her that he would ask the bishop to send .him the deed so he could show it to her “to put her mind at rest about being thrown out of her property”; that shortly thereafter he got the deed from the bishop; that he took the deed to her home and asked her to observe that it had not been recorded; that he then said: “I will leave it with you now and keep it safe because it is a very important document”; that she replied: “You know, Father, I want the Church to have the property”; and that he left the deed with her and had never seen it since.

On November 30, 1939, Mrs. Driscoll suffered a stroke of paralysis and was taken to the Loma Linda Hospital. The next day, her doctor asked Mrs. Smart, who had been a friend of Mrs. Driscoll’s, whether Mrs. Driscoll had sufficient money to pay her hospital expenses. At that time Mrs. Driscoll was paralyzed and was unable to talk, and Mrs. Smart knew nothing of her business affairs. Mrs. Smart took a man with her and went to Mrs. Driscoll’s home to look for a will and any papers which might indicate whether she had any money. She found nothing in Mrs. Driscoll’s desk, but in a dresser drawer she found two bank books, a receptacle containing documents, and the will which Mrs. Driscoll had executed on August 6, 1938, which had been torn in a number of pieces. [735]

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Bluebook (online)
129 P.2d 931, 54 Cal. App. 2d 730, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roman-catholic-bishop-v-lawrence-calctapp-1942.