Sullivan v. Sullivan

196 P. 491, 51 Cal. App. 226, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 624
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3535.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 P. 491 (Sullivan v. Sullivan) 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
Sullivan v. Sullivan, 196 P. 491, 51 Cal. App. 226, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 624 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

SEAWELL, P. J., pro tem.

All of the parties to this action are children of John J. Sullivan, Sr., deceased, except James A. MacMonnies, who is the husband of defendant, Grace E. MacMonnies, and for that reason is made a party. Defendants John J. Sullivan and Grace MaeMon- . nies were made parties because of their refusal to join plaintiffs in the action. James Sullivan, whose name frequently appears in the proceedings, was also a child of said John J. Sullivan, deceased, but died unmarried, without issue and intestate. The parties to the action, including James, deceased, comprised the entire family of children of said John J. Sullivan and Elizabeth M. Sullivan, his wife. The latter died on the tenth day of April, 1904, and her husband remained a widower thereafter.

The record title of the property in suit was conveyed to Emma Gertrude Sullivan by her - father, John J. Sullivan, *227 by deeds of conveyance, as will hereafter appear. The deed upon which plaintiffs rely to establish a trust relation, with Emma as trustee for the other children, is dated June 20, 1904. It conveys, upon its face, the title to her absolute.

The purpose of plaintiffs by this action, first, w'as to establish a trusteeship in Emma, and, next, to compel her to convey to each of said brothers and sisters, six in number, their respective equitable interests in said property. The trust sought to be established rests in parol and consists in an alleged oral promise made by Emma to her father at the time he executed and placed in escrow said deed dated June 20, 1904, that she would hold it as a trustee for the benefit of all of his children and upon his death convey to each child then living an equal interest in and to said property. The appointment of a receiver, an accounting for rents, issues, and profits, and the usual relief incidental to a trusteeship is demanded.

The facts practically conceded or incontestably established are these: The property in litigation constituted the family residence of the elder Sullivan for many years and is generally described as a portion of vara lot No. 122, situated on Sacramento Street, near Hyde, in the city and county of San Francisco. It has a frontage of 34 feet on Sacramento Street and a depth of 137 feet. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Sullivan filed a homestead on said real property in 1887. By proceedings taken in April, 1904, after her death, the homestead was declared vested in the husband, John J. Sullivan. The father’s petition to vest the homestead in himself did not receive the approval of John, James, and Harry and perhaps one daughter, who was suspected of being in sympathy with the opposition offered by said three sons. Their antagonism, in fact open hostility, to this proceeding was bitterly resented by the father. The father, however, maintained the old homestead as a family residence to the time of his death, to wit, March 18, 1915. Prior to his death four of the children had married and established homes of their own, while others, especially the three younger male members of the family above named, being given to excesses and dissipations, came and went as their vagarious tendencies inclined them or as necessity impelled them. Emma, however, remained constantly the companion of her father to the end.

*228 On June 20, 1904, John J. Sullivan was the admitted owner of said property in fee simple. On that day he executed a deed of gift absolute in form conveying said property to his daughter, Emma, and delivered the deed to Judge A. E. St. Sure, then a practicing attorney and the drawer thereof. John J. Sullivan and the attorney, Honorable A. P. St. Sure, were brought together by the former’s son, Thomas B. Sullivan. The considerations recited in the deed are the love and affection that the father bore for his said daughter and “also for the better maintenance, support, protection, and livelihood” of said daughter. With the deed there was also delivered a letter of instructions directing said attorney to deliver said deed to his daughter Emma upon his death. By the letter of instructions he declared that delivery was made “without any reservation of right to recall the same” before death, “and with the absolute and final determination that it shall take effect when the contingency of my death happens.” Contemporaneous with these instruments he executed and delivered to said attorney his holographic will by which he gave all the property of which he might die seised or possessed to his said daughter. He mentioned all of his children living by name and stated that he purposely omitted to make any provision for them. By said will full power was given to his daughter Emma, who was made executrix without bonds, to dispose of all or any part of his estate without order of court.

The former family residence occupied the same lot but was destroyed by the fire of April 18-19, 1906. In 1907 the property was improved by the erection of a building containing six flats. The estimated cost of the improvements was $7,000, and that amount was borrowed from the Humboldt Savings Bank. John J. Sullivan, as owner, gave as security therefor a mortgage on the property. He made the affidavit frequently required of borrowers as to ownership, in which he averred that he was the owner and “had never deeded or transferred said property or any part thereof * since affiant acquired it.” The officers of the bank, before accepting the property as security, required further of bim that he obtain a deed from his children conveying to bim any and all right, title, or interest they might have in said property. Accordingly, on May 2, 1907, such a deed was exe *229 cuted, in which all the plaintiffs, except William B. Sullivan, then a minor, and all named defendants except John J. Sullivan, Jr., who did not appear at the trial of the cause and whose presence was and has been unknown the greater portion of time for some years past, joined. James, the other child not joining, is dead.

On October 7, 1907, finding that he had underestimated the cost of said improvements, he obtained an additional loan of $3,000 from said Humboldt Savings Bank. A deed of trust was executed securing said bank for the whole amount of the loan, to wit, $10,000. Again an affidavit was made by him, as owner, similar in all respects to the affidavit made upon obtaining said first loan of $7,000. The building was completed October 24, 1907, and on that day, in a sworn notice of completion, John J. Sullivan again described himself as owner.

On December 31, 1910, acting upon the advice of his attorney, Thomas B. Sullivan, his son and one of the plaintiffs herein, John J. Sullivan commenced an action under the provisions of the MeEnemey Act (Stats. 1906, Ex. Sess. p. 78), subscribed to and filed the required affidavit in which he averred that he was the owner in fee absolute of said property, and that no conveyance of said property or any part thereof nor any interest therein had been made by him except the deed of trust executed and delivered to the Humboldt Savings Bank to secure said loan of $10,000. The affidavit concludes in the following language : “That there are no subsisting mortgages, deeds of trust or other liens against said property except as herein-before described. That affiant does not know and has never been informed of any other person who claims or may claim any interest in or lien upon the said property or any part thereof adversely to plaintiff except as hereinbefore described.”

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Bluebook (online)
196 P. 491, 51 Cal. App. 226, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-sullivan-calctapp-1921.