Saint v. Saint

7 P.2d 374, 120 Cal. App. 15, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 109
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 19, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4478.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 7 P.2d 374 (Saint v. Saint) 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
Saint v. Saint, 7 P.2d 374, 120 Cal. App. 15, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 109 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PRESTON, P. J.

This is an action to establish a trust in certain real property situate in Los Angeles County formerly owned by William M. Saint.

Demurrers were interposed to the complaint by Carrie I. Davis Dubbs and Wilbur L. Y. Dubbs, individually, and as executors of the last will and testament of Hannah Y. Saint, deceased, and a separate demurrer was interposed by the defendant Harry Y. Saint. The court sustained the demurrers as to each defendant without leave to amend. Judgment of dismissal was then entered. Prom this judgment the plaintiff Gertrude Saint prosecutes this appeal.

The complaint is based upon facts alleged to have occurred in 1904 and 1905, more than twenty-five years ago. The *17 complaint, when divested of all superfluous matter, may be briefly summarized as follows:

Appellant is now and has been since 1904 the wife of Otto R Saint and the daughter-in-law of William M. Saint, deceased. William M. Saint was the father of Harry and Otto R Saint and the husband of Hannah Y. Saint. William M. Saint died a resident of Los Angeles on December 20, 1904, leaving surviving him said two sons above named, and his said widow Hannah Y. Saint. His estate consisted in part of real property in the city of Los Angeles, which was appraised in the course of administration at $18,000 and is now alleged to be of the value of $185,000. On the death of William M. Saint, his son Otto R Saint, the husband of plaintiff and appellant, a resident of New York, was insolvent and indebted to various creditors in the sum of approximately $30,000. On December 25, 1904, Harry Y. Saint, who at that time was in Los Angeles, wrote his brother Otto R Saint, in part, as follows:

“Sunday 12/25/04.
“My Dear Bro. . . . Father died of acute consumption following a cold and subsequent pneumonia .... he left no word for anyone and did not ask to see anyone. He was informed of your request, but said matters were as they should be. . . . He voted at election time purposely establishing his residence in California. We will settle all matters out of court, if permitted to do so by your creditors. In fact there is little to settle. His property has been dissipated—as you know probably better than the rest of us. What it will amount to I cannot tell, but will be about ½ what I thought his estate would be.
“I have nothing to say to you at this time about your dealings with Father. You promised me in New York that you would not advise Father further in his investments. I have scrupulously refrained from so doing for years. You failed to do as much. His losses in steel, from his letters to me, were the beginning of his- decline, resulting in his death. In saying that I have said all I ever intend to say on that subject.
“Now as to the future;—Father left no will. If anything is left out of the remnant of his estate for you, I intend that your wife shall have it and not your creditors. Ma *18 is equally determined, but has left methods to me and apart of these methods she must never know and don’t want to know, for I never intend that she shall ever be compelled to testify to anything a shade off color in case she is dragged into court—by your creditors.
“1st. The papers and notes referring to your transaction with Father, are all intact and Ma has not examined them. She knows all about them, however.
“2nd. The assignment you sent me has not arrived. However, it was made after Father’s death—and is probably illegal because without consideration and fraudulently intended to beat creditors.
“3rd. I do not know what your indebtedness to the estate is—but it must be increased to cover any contingency from your creditors. Hence—make out a note dated at the time Pa sold his steel stock—make it for six per cent and $5000.
“Make it a judgment note of short enough time so that it is due and payable now. This note I will put among Pa’s papers and will testify, if called upon, that I found it there.
“I think the steel stock was sold about a year ago last November. You can save this letter which will protect you from the use of this note for any other purpose than that intended by this plan.
“4th. Make another assignment of your interest in this estate to Mother and myself—giving as consideration the notes against you—stating that they exceed your share of the estate—that the assignment is in satisfaction of the indebtedness and to facilitate in the estate settlement. Have a lawyer supervise drawing the papers.
“I can protect anything that may be coming to you in this way and this only and mother will know nothing of this note and I will -it was among the papers should creditors step in. I hope to settle matters out of court, but can’t say surely for .the life insurance is made payable to his executors, administrators or assigns.
“Please act promptly in these matters for some one may jump in an yank us into court and I wont be ready. And I have a business which is running without a manager at $100.00 a day and I cant stay here over 10 days and must *19 be ready to act as soon as this assignment gets back. Wire me, my expense, as soon as you sent it with note.
“Sincerely your Bro
“Harry.”

It is alleged that, by the terms of this writing, Harry Y. Saint and Hannah Y. Saint were constituted trustees of the interest of Otto R Saint subsequently assigned to them. No confidential relations are anywhere in the complaint alleged to have existed as between Otto R Saint and Hannah Y. Saint, although such relation is alleged to have existed between Otto R Saint and Harry Y. Saint.

At the death of William M. Saint, Otto R Saint owed his father approximately $9,600, evidenced by a promissory note payable to William M: Saint. In reliance upon the above letter from Harry Y. Saint to Otto R Saint, and on December 29, 1904, Otto R Saint assigned his interest in the estate of William M. Saint to Harry Y. Saint and Hannah Y. Saint, in consideration of Otto R Saint’s indebtedness to said estate; Otto also executed and delivered his post-dated promissory note in the sum of $10,137.35 payable to William M. Saint.

The complaint further alleges:

“The plaintiff avers that though said note and deed of assignment recite a consideration, yet in truth and in fact such note for ten thousand one hundred thirty-seven and 50/100 ($10,137.50) dollars, was made and delivered without any consideration therefor, and no money was paid or intended to be paid as a consideration for said note; and plaintiff further says that though said deed of assignment likewise avers a consideration, yet in truth and in fact there was no consideration therefor, and no money was paid or intended to be paid, as a consideration for said assignment.”

Hannah Y. Saint was legally appointed administrator of the estate of William M. Saint, and after the allowance of her final account, the above-mentioned real property was distributed in equal shares to Harry Y. Saint and Hannah Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 P.2d 374, 120 Cal. App. 15, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saint-v-saint-calctapp-1932.