Stevenson v. Boyd

96 P. 284, 153 Cal. 630, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 506
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4429.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 96 P. 284 (Stevenson v. Boyd) 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
Stevenson v. Boyd, 96 P. 284, 153 Cal. 630, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 506 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

J.—Thomas Boyd, now deceased, was the father of Melissa J. Stevenson, the plaintiff, Thomas M. Boyd, one of the defendants, George Culberson Boyd, and Mary Alice Zinns. In December, 1892, Thomas Boyd and his son, the defendant Thomas M. Boyd, each then owning an undivided one half of an eighty-acre tract of land situated in Fresno County, executed a deed of trust of said real property to E. R. Hamilton and W. P. Coleman, as security for the payment of their promissory note for three thousand two hundred dollars, payable two years after date to the Sacramento Bank. In October, 1897, Thomas Boyd, the father, conveyed his undivided one-half interest to the plaintiff, in trust to receive the rents and profits and to pay them to the use of the grantor, Thomas Boyd, during his life, and in case George Culberson Boyd should survive his father, to apply such rents and profits for his support and maintenance during his life. The deed of trust gave plaintiff power to sell, mortgage, or lease said real estate, and provided that if the property was not sold by plaintiff, in pursuance of said deed of trust, it should, upon the death of Thomas Boyd and George Culberson Boyd, be vested in the plaintiff and Mary Alice Zinns, share and share alike.

*632 In July, 1897, Thomas M. Boyd married his co-defendant, Josephine Porter Boyd. Some months thereafter the Sacramento Bank, the holder of the note secured by the deed of trust to Hamilton & Coleman, requested payment of the note. Some attempt was made to raise the money, but it was not. paid, and the bank finally directed the trustees to sell. The-sale was originally advertised to take place in March, 1898, but Mrs. Stevenson, the plaintiff, secured from the bank a postponement for six months. In August, 1898, the defendant. Thomas M. Boyd made arrangements with the Bank of Selma, to pay off the loan of the Sacramento Bank, which at that time amounted to about three thousand four hundred dollars. Of this amount, some eighteen hundred dollars was furnished by the defendant Josephine Porter Boyd, and the balance by the Bank of Selma. The note was assigned by the Sacramento Bank to the Bank of Selma and the latter directed the trustees, Hamilton & Coleman, to make a sale. On October 15, 1898, the trustees did sell the property for three thousand five hundred dollars—a little more than the amount due-on the note. The purchaser at the sale was the Bank of Selma, which immediately conveyed to T. M.. Boyd and Josephine Porter Boyd, the defendant. On February 21, 1901, Thomas M. Boyd conveyed to his co-defendant, Josephine Porter Boyd, an undivided one-half interest in the ranch for seven thousand five hundred dollars, of which five hundred dollars was paid in cash and the balance in instalments, evidenced by notes. Some of these notes were paid by Mrs. Boyd to her husband.

On October 13, 1902, two days less than four years after the sale by the trustees to Thomas M. and Josephine Porter Boyd, and over nineteen months after the conveyance from Thomas M. Boyd to Josephine Porter Boyd, this action was: brought by the plaintiff. The complaint alleged that, prior to-the trustees’ sale, the defendants, in pursuance of a conspiracy to that end, did by threats of violence and otherwise, prevent the plaintiff from raising the money necessary to pay off her one half of the indebtedness to the Sacramento Bank, and that they procured the Bank of Selma to take an assignment of the note and to direct a sale of the property by the trustees, Hamilton & Coleman, for the purpose of destroying the rights-of plaintiff under the deed from Thomas Boyd. It is alleged *633 that the Bank of Selma, in taking the assignment of the note from the Sacramento Bank, was acting as agent for the-defendants, and not in its own interests. In the complaint, plaintiff offers to pay to the defendants such portion of the indebtedness paid to the Sacramento Bank and to make such allowance to the defendants for the cultivation of the property since the sale as the court may deem equitable. She asks for an accounting of the profits, and prays judgment that it be decreed that she is the owner, as trustee, of an undivided one-half interest in said real property, and that defendants be compelled to convey to her such interest free of encumbrance except for her just share of the indebtedness, to the Sacramento Bank.

Thomas M. Boyd and his wife, Josephine Porter Boyd, answered separately. Each of the answers denies that the defendants had conspired or contrived to defeat the deed of' trust under which plaintiff claims, or to deprive the plaintiff as trustee of her interest in the property, or that plaintiff was prevented by any act of the defendants, or either of them, from raising the money necessary to pay her share of the-indebtedness. The defendant Josephine Porter Boyd set up a special defense of laches, alleging that at the time the land was sold by the trustees to the Bank of Selma, and by the-Bank of Selma to the defendants, its value did not exceed five thousand dollars; that on February 21, 1901, Thomas M.. Boyd sold his interest in the land to Josephine Porter Boyd for the sum of seven thousand dollars, more than three thousand dollars of which has been paid in cash and the balance in notes secured by mortgage; that since said sale by the trustees to the Bank of Selma and by the Bank of Selma to the defendants the land has greatly increased in value and is now of the value of about fifteen thousand dollars; that the defendant bought the interest of her co-defendant in good faith and paid and obligated herself to pay the full increased value thereof to said co-defendant Thomas M. Boyd; that plaintiff made no claim to any interest as trustee or otherwise in or to said property and took no steps and made no effort to subject said property to any claim until it had greatly increased in value. The defendant further alleges on information and belief that the plaintiff would not have made any such claim had the property not increased in value, and. *634 that at the time the defendant Josephine Porter Boyd bought the said property the same was of little value and yielded very little income, and that in buying the same the defendants ran the risk of losing the money paid upon the purchase price thereof. It is further alleged that ever since the sale the defendants have cultivated the land and been in charge thereof and have improved and increased the value of said property.

The answer of Thomas M. Boyd, in addition to its denials of many of the allegations of the complaint, set up a claim as against his wife, the co-defendant Josephine Porter Boyd, his contention being that the eighteen hundred dollars belonging to Josephine Porter Boyd which went into the purchase of the property at the time of the trustees’ sale was a loan to him, and that the conveyance of the undivided one-half interest to said Josephine Porter Boyd was made as security for such loan.

The trial resulted in findings and judgment in favor of the defendant Josephine Porter Boyd. The court found against the allegations of the complaint regarding a conspiracy between the defendants, found against the allegation that the sum of eighteen hundred dollars paid by Josephine Porter Boyd wras a loan to her co-defendant, and found that the conveyance of October 19, 1898, from the Bank of Selma to Thomas M.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Morning Star, LLC v. Canter
Ninth Circuit, 2025
McMillan v. County of Siskiyou CA3
California Court of Appeal, 2020
Brown v. State Personnel Board
166 Cal. App. 3d 1151 (California Court of Appeal, 1985)
Conti v. Board of Civil Service Commissioners
461 P.2d 617 (California Supreme Court, 1969)
Lewis v. Superior Court
261 Cal. App. 2d 736 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)
Anderson v. Associated Investment Co.
219 Cal. App. 2d 206 (California Court of Appeal, 1963)
Lund v. Heinrich
189 A.2d 581 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1963)
Stewart v. Indian Creek Lumber Co.
192 Cal. App. 2d 93 (California Court of Appeal, 1961)
Friedberg v. Weissbuch
287 P.2d 785 (California Court of Appeal, 1955)
Hopson v. National Union of Marine Cooks & Stewards
253 P.2d 733 (California Court of Appeal, 1953)
Mulli v. Mulli
232 P.2d 556 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
Neet v. Holmes
154 P.2d 854 (California Supreme Court, 1944)
Chilberg v. City of Los Angeles
128 P.2d 693 (California Court of Appeal, 1942)
Ammann v. Foster
1937 OK 4 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)
Smith v. California Portland Cement Co.
25 P.2d 1013 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Penziner v. West American Finance Co.
24 P.2d 501 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Johnson v. Superior Court
283 P. 331 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
McCarthy v. McColgan
278 P. 918 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
McMahon v. Grimes
275 P. 440 (California Supreme Court, 1929)
Newport v. Hatton
231 P. 987 (California Supreme Court, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 P. 284, 153 Cal. 630, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-boyd-cal-1908.