Towne v. Towne

92 P. 1050, 6 Cal. App. 697, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 190
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 385.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 92 P. 1050 (Towne v. Towne) 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
Towne v. Towne, 92 P. 1050, 6 Cal. App. 697, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 190 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

HALL, J.

This action was brought to have it decreed that a certain piece of land in the city of Santa Cruz was the homestead of plaintiff, and that she be entitled to the possession thereof, and that a certain conveyance thereof executed by Willis J. Towne to J. W. Towne be decreed to be null and void.

The action was originally brought against Willis J. Towne and J. W. Towne, but J. W. Towne having died after the action was brought, Harry B. Towne, as the administrator of his estate, was substituted as defendant in his place and stead.

Willis J. Towne is the divorced husband of plaintiff, and was made defendant because he refused to join with plaintiff in bringing the action. Willis J. Towne and plaintiff intermarried in 1888, and in 1890 Willis J. Towne entered into an oral contract with his father, said J. W. Towne, by which said J. W. Towne agreed to sell to Willis J. Towne the lot of land in dispute for the sum of $500. Willis • J. Towne, in order to build a dwelling upon the lot, borrowed from a bank the sum of $800, for which his father, J. W. Towne, went security. A house was built upon the lot by Willis J. Towne, and plaintiff and said Willis J. Towne took up their residence therein, and continued to reside therein with their child until some time in 1899.

On the twenty-third day of August, 1895, while plaintiff and defendant were husband and wife, and while they were residing on the premises in dispute, plaintiff executed, ac *700 knowledged and recorded in the county recorder’s office a declaration of homestead in all respects sufficient in form for a declaration of homestead by a married woman.

On the fifteenth day of April, 1896, J. W. Towne and his wife acknowledged before said Harry B. Towne, who was a notary public, a deed, dated January 11, 1896, in terms conveying the premises in dispute to said Willis J. Towne for the expressed consideration of $5. This deed was confessedly placed in the hands of Willis J. Towne on or about the day of the acknowledgment thereof by said Harry B. Towne, by the direction of said J. W. Towne and his wife.

On the twenty-seventh day of August, 1898, plaintiff caused said deed to be recorded in the office of the county recorder.

On the tenth day of November, 1898, said Willis J. Towne executed and acknowledged a deed to the said premises, purporting in terms to convey said premises to said J. W. Towne, which was recorded on the same day.

On the nineteenth day of February, 1901, Willis J. Towne obtained a decree of divorce from plaintiff.

As before stated, the action was brought to have it decreed that the premises described in the complaint were the homestead of plaintiff, and that she was entitled to the possession thereof as against J. W. Towne and his estate, and that it be decreed that the deed from Willis J. Towne to J. W. Towne was null and void.

Harry B. Towne, as administrator of the estate of J. W. Towne, answered, and also filed a cross-complaint to quiet the title of the estate to said premises as against plaintiff and Willis J. Towne.

The court found the facts in favor of plaintiff, and entered judgment annulling the deed from Willis J. Towne to J. W. Towne, and decreeing said premises to be the community property of plaintiff and defendant Willis J. Towne, and to constitute the homestead of plaintiff and said defendant, and that the estate of J. W. Towne has no right or estate in said property.

Defendants moved for a new trial, and this appeal is from the order of the court denying the motion for a new trial and from the judgment.

The only grounds urged for a reversal of the order or the judgment concern the sufficiency of the evidence to support *701 certain findings of the court, and the whole matter resolves itself down to two questions:

1. Does the evidence show that the deed to the premises of date January 11, 1898, from J. W. Towne and wife to Willis J. Towne was ever delivered with intent to become operative as a conveyance?—the contention of appellants being that, though the deed was actually delivered, that is, placed in Willis J. Towne’s possession, by direction of the grantors therein, it was so delivered upon the understanding that it should not be effective until the premises were fully paid for and that the same were never in fact fully paid.
2. Was plaintiff divested of all interest in the premises in dispute by the judgment of divorce between Willis J. Towne and herself ?

We will first dispose of the question concerning the delivery of the deed.

It is undoubtedly true, as contended for by appellants, that a deed may be placed in the manual possession of the grantee without accomplishing a legal or operative delivery. (Denis v. Valati, 96 Cal. 227, [31 Pac. 1] ; Kenney v. Parks, 137 Cal. 531, [70 Pac. 556] ; Hibbard v. Smith, 67 Cal. 551, [56 Am. Rep. 726, 4 Pac. 473, 8 Pac. 46].) But it is equally true that when it is shown that a deed, duly signed and acknowledged by the grantor, has been placed in the hands of the grantee by the grantor, or by his direction, a prima facie case of delivery has been established. (Black v. Sharkey, 104 Cal. 279, [37 Pac. 939]; McDougall v. McDougall, 135 Cal. 316, [67 Pac. 778].)

The possession of the deed duly executed in the hands of the grantee is prima facie but not conclusive evidence of its delivery. It therefore follows that he who disputes this presumption has the burden of proof, and must show that there has been no delivery. And not only must this presumption be overcome, but it is held that there is such a strong implication that it has been delivered when it is found in the hands of the grantee that only strong evidence can rebut the presumption. (Devlin on Deeds, sec. 294; Ward v. Dougherty, 75 Cal. 240, [7 Am. St. Rep. 151, 17 Pac. 193].)

In the case at bar the deed in question was, after being signed and acknowledged, handed to the grantee by direction of the grantor, where it remained until it was recorded two *702 years and four months thereafter. Indeed, there is no evidence that it was ever recalled, or any attempt made by the grantor before the bringing of this action to claim possession thereof. The only evidence relied upon by appellants to overcome the presumption of a delivery is the evidence of defendant Harry B. Towne, who is a son of J. W. Towne and one of the heirs at law, and Willis J. Towne, also a son and heir at law of J. W. Towne.

Upon this point Harry B. Towne, after testifying that his father and mother acknowledged the deed before him, said: “They told me, they said to hand it to my brother Willis, and if he paid all the money to let him go and record the deed, and if he did not pay all the money the deed was to be handed back to my father, and in case of the death of my father the deed was to be recorded by my brother Willis; if he did not make the payments it was to be of no effect.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P. 1050, 6 Cal. App. 697, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towne-v-towne-calctapp-1907.