Sacramento Bank v. Montgomery

81 P. 138, 146 Cal. 745, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 597
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1905
DocketS.F. No. 3239.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 81 P. 138 (Sacramento Bank v. Montgomery) 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
Sacramento Bank v. Montgomery, 81 P. 138, 146 Cal. 745, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 597 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an action to quiet title to certain real property in the city and county of San Francisco in the possession of defendants.

The court found that plaintiff is not and never has been the owner of said lot, or of any interest or estate therein, and gave judgment for defendants. Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.

Both parties claim under R. H. McDonald, who was the owner of the property on the first day of September, 1891.

The plaintiff claims under an attachment, judgment, and execution sale of the property, in a proceeding against said R. H. McDonald, and the defendants by virtue of a conveyance made by said McDonald, which conveyance antedates plaintiff’s attachment and judgment.

Plaintiff claims that said conveyance was void because it attempted to create a trust forbidden by the laws of the state.

Defendant Montgomery, while contending for the validity of the conveyance, further contends that the judgment under which plaintiff claims was void, and that plaintiff derived no title by the execution sale, even if the conveyance by McDonald was void.

The conveyance under which defendants claim purported to grant, bargain, sell and conivey the property in question to one Crin F. Miner and his successors in trust “To have and to hold said premises for the following uses and purposes and none other, viz.:

*747 “In trust to lease said premises not exceeding a term of five years, to collect the rents thereof and to pay out of the same all taxes, assessments and charges and retain a reasonable sum for the care and business thereof, and to pay to my son Richard H. McDonald the net rentals so long as he shall live and upon his death to convey to any child or children hereafter born to him or the issue of a child not living so born to him said property; but in the event he shall not have such child or children, then my trustee shall convey said property to the child or children or the issue of any child not living of my daughter Mrs. Mattie Spencer share and share alike.”

Defendant Montgomery is the duly and regularly appointed trustee in place and stead of said Miner, also a defendant, the only other defendant being Richard H. McDonald, Jr., the son of the grantor and a beneficiary under the deed.

So far as this deed purports to create a trust for the conveyance of the property upon the death of the son, it must be held to be void under the decisions of this court. (Estate of Fair, 132 Cal. 523; 1 Estate of Sanford, 136 Cal. 97; Estate of Pichoir, 139 Cal. 682; Hofsas v. Cummings, 141 Cal. 525; McCurdy v. Otto, 140 Cal. 48.)

The trust to lease the property, collect the rents, and to pay the net rentals to the son so long as he shall live, is, however, one authorized by the law of this state. (Civ. Code, sec. 857, subds. 2, 3.) The question, then, arises as to whether this valid provision is so interwoven with the invalid one that the invalid provision cannot be eliminated without interfering with and changing the main scheme of the grantor. If not, it will stand (Estate of Pichoir, 139 Cal. 682; Nellis v. Rickard, 133 Cal. 617, 2 and cases there cited), and the estate of the trustee will be upheld to the extent necessary to enable him to execute the valid trust, and will be void only as to the invalid trust.

We think there can be no doubt that the two attempted trusts are severable. It is impossible to distinguish this deed of trust, so far as this question is concerned, from the deed made by the same grantor, considered in Nellis v. Rickard, 133 Cal. 617, 2 under which there was a valid trust for the benefit of Mrs. Spencer for her life, and an attempted trust for the benefit of her children, after her death, which latter trust was *748 claimed to be void because of suspension of alienation beyond the legal period. This court said in that case: “Looking at the deed before us, what seems to us to be intended as the primary trust is the trust for the benefit of Mrs. Spencer, and the ulterior contingent limitajtion is easily separable from the primary trust, and is but incidental, its purpose being to provide for a contingency which may never arise, since Mrs. Spencer may outlive all her children, and the failure of the provision as to them would not affect the trust as to her.’’

The same, in effect, may be said with equal force of the deed here involved.

The case is clearly distinguished from Estate of Fair, 132 Cal. 523, 1 and 136 Cal. 79, wliere it was held that the asserted estate of the trustees for life in the realty, and the trust as to personal property, fell with the trust to convey, because they could not be separated therefrom without destroying the whole scheme of the testator. In Estate of Pichoir, 139 Cal. 682, this court, in holding that a trust as to personalty was not so inseparably blended with an invalid trust as to realty as to make it necessary to hold that the trust as to the personalty was also void, fully discussed the Fair case, and the considerations compelling the decision therein. (139 Cal. 686, 688.) What was said by the court in that case and in the opinions in the Fair case show that the court considered that the several trusts in the Fair will were all parts of an exceedingly complicated scheme, so inseparably blended that the settled purpose of the testator would be entirely frustrated were a portion only of the scheme adhered to. All must stand or fall together, In the Fair case reported in 136 Cal. 79 it was said that to hold “that the testator, if he had known that his attempted disposition of the realty was invalid, and that upon his death his vast amount of real property, worth many millions of dollars,. would go immediately in fee simple to his children, would have given to them also the income of the personal property, would be to indulge in a most impossible supposition and to violate the settled law on the subject.”

No such conditions exist here. As in the case of Nellis v. Rickard, 133 Cal. 617, the trust for the benefit of the son during his life was a separate independent scheme, apparently *749 the primary trust, and the invalid trust but incidental. It was plainly the intention of the grantor that, whatever might ultimately become of the property, his son should have the net income thereof so long as he lived, and we see no good reason why effect cannot be given to such intention.

In Estate of Sanford, 136 Cal. 97, 100, the trust for the benefit of the children of the nephew of the decedent until one] of said children should attain the age of twenty-five years was held invalid, not because it was inseparably blended with the trust to convey, but because it was merely discretionary. The ruling in Hofsas v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P. 138, 146 Cal. 745, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacramento-bank-v-montgomery-cal-1905.