Steiner v. Thomas

211 P.2d 321, 94 Cal. App. 2d 655, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1584
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1949
DocketCiv. 16867
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 211 P.2d 321 (Steiner v. Thomas) 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
Steiner v. Thomas, 211 P.2d 321, 94 Cal. App. 2d 655, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1584 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

*657 MOORE, P. J.

The question for decision is whether a judgment denying the rescission of a contract for the conveyance of realty allegedly induced by fraud was also an adjudication of plaintiff's claim of a breach by the grantee of the same agreement to bequeath the property to appellant, such claim being coexistent with that alleged in the former action.

In September, 1946, appellant sued the executor of the estate of Dorothea Thomas alleging (1) that decedent had breached her agreement to devise Lot 83 of Tract 1976 in Los Angeles County; (2) that by such agreement made in October, 1930, appellant had conveyed Lot 83 of Tract 1976 to Dorothea “as consideration” for the latter’s promise to devise it by her last will to appellant; (3) that the consideration for the contract was the deep love that existed between the two, her service to decedent and her own forbearance to sue Dorothea for the lot. The alleged agreement to devise was evidenced by two letters written to appellant by decedent.

The administrator entered a general denial to the fifth amended complaint and pleaded in bar certain statutes of limitation and the statute of frauds requiring an agreement to devise property to be evidenced by a writing. In addition, he pleaded that the findings and judgment in action 494796 of the same court, herein referred to as 494, was res judicata of the issues raised by the fifth amended complaint. The case having come on for trial, the court heard respondents’ motion for judgment on the pleadings after appellant had requested the court first to try the plea of a former adjudication. Respondents’ motion was granted on the ground that action 494 filed and tried in 1944 had determined the same issues raised by the fifth amended complaint.

The file in 494 disclosed that Dorothea’s executor recovered a final judgment on the merits of appellant’s suit for rescission. The pleadings in such file show that in such action appellant alleged that she was by decedent fraudulently induced to visit Europe and that while she was residing in Czechoslovakia in 1930, Dorothea fraudulently induced her to convey Lot 83 to Dorothea so that the latter could collect the rents and protect the property, and promised to reconvey the lot to appellant on the latter’s return home; that in reliance upon such representations, without consideration she conveyed the lot to Dorothea. She supplemented her allegations of fraud by a recital of her intimate personal relationship with decedent as one of mother and adopted daughter. The findings in 494 *658 disclose also that appellant acknowledged full payment for the deed to Lot 83 and that Dorothea Thomas was “after the 13th day of October, 1930, the owner of and entitled to the possession of and was in the actual and exclusive possession of this property until her death . . . and that the claim of plaintiff and all others claiming through her are without any right whatsoever in the premises.” Also, respondent introduced in evidence by reference the file in the matter of the estate of Dorothea Thomas showing that she had deceased February 13, 1945, and that her last will had been admitted to probate.

On the trial of the instant action the court had before it (1) appellant’s allegations of her ownership of Lot 83, (2) the two letters alleged to constitute decedent’s last will, (3) her complaint in 494 alleging the agreement of Dorothea to devise the lot to appellant, (4) the same two letters used as exhibits in 494 and (5) the judgment roll in the latter action.

It was correct procedure to try the issue of res judicata and to enter judgment against the plaintiff after the court had ascertained that the special plea was substantiated. (Code Civ. Proc., § 597.) After reaching such conclusion it would be sheer nonsense to consume the time of a court by investigating the merits of the alleged contract and claim of appellant. The documents offered as proof of the plea included, besides the file of 494, the files in the estate of Dorothea Thomas and in the termination of the joint tenancy of Louis Henry Thomas, deceased. All such files were competent proof of a prior adjudication of the issue raised by the fifth amended complaint. (Olwell v. Hopkins, 28 Cal.2d 147, 151 [168 P.2d 972].)

Appellant deems herself aggrieved by not having had a trial herein on the merits. The fact is that in the former action the merits of all the facts were determined and relief was denied her. Upon presentation of the special plea in the instant action the court had merely to decide whether the facts alleged in the first suit for rescission of the contract were substantially those alleged in the second action for breach of the same contract. In the first amended complaint of 494 it was alleged that from 1928 to 1944 a close, intimate friendship existed between the women; that defendant frequently stated that she had adopted plaintiff; that in 1942 she stated that she had made a will of Lot 83 and other properties to plaintiff; that she intended to leave all her property to plaintiff ; that in 1944 she discovered that decedent had sold Lot 83 *659 and that the promise to leave it. to plaintiff was impossible of performance.

The findings in 494 determined the facts contrary to the allegations of appellant and also that the relationship between the two women did not excuse plaintiff from looking after her own affairs or hinder her from taking legal action for the protection of her asserted rights to Lot 83; that while Dorothea wrote two letters * prior to her will purporting to devise her estate to plaintiff, they have not been admitted to probate; but that on March 23, 1945, the last will of Dorothea was duly admitted to probate; that prior to an altercation between plaintiff and Dorothea, the latter frequently stated that she intended to bequeath her property to plaintiff but that after the altercation Dorothea struck and beat plaintiff and the latter then created a disturbance of the peace “necessitating the calling of police officers to subdue plaintiff” and therefore Dorothea made no bequest to plaintiff. Pinal proof of the identity of the issues is found in the fact that the evidence used to prove her cause in 494 consists of the same documents pleaded by appellant, namely, the two letters written by decedent. While appellant had knowledge of the pendency of the probate proceedings of decedent, she did not herself offer the two letters for probate.

The judgment therefore was correct in decreeing that 494 was res judicata of the instant action. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1908.) A judgment estops the plaintiff from main- *660 taming a subsequent action between the same parties, not only as to the issues raised but also as to every other issue that might properly have been litigated. The estoppel is effective not only where the grounds for recovery in the second action are identical with those pleaded in the first which he failed to prove but he is likewise barred where he failed to allege those grounds in his first suit. (Panos v. Great Western Packing Co., 21 Cal.2d 636, 638 [134 P.2d 242];

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Bluebook (online)
211 P.2d 321, 94 Cal. App. 2d 655, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steiner-v-thomas-calctapp-1949.