Treager v. Friedman

179 P.2d 387, 79 Cal. App. 2d 151, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 805
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1947
DocketCiv. 13236
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 179 P.2d 387 (Treager v. Friedman) 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
Treager v. Friedman, 179 P.2d 387, 79 Cal. App. 2d 151, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 805 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Appeal from judgment for defendant in an action to quiet title to four furnished apartment houses, and *153 their furnishings, in San Francisco, and to require defendant to account to plaintiffs for the profit from defendant’s operation of such houses.

The complaint, filed January 19, 1943, alleged that plaintiffs were the owners of four certain apartment house properties together with their furniture, furnishings, and personal property; and in the usual terms of a quiet title action, that the defendants claimed an interest in and to said real and personal property, but that such claims were without right. Frances Treager, one of the original plaintiffs, died during the proceedings, and her husband as administrator of her estate was duly substituted in her place. The defendants were Beatrice Friedman and a number of fictitious defendants. Mrs. Friedman was the only defendant sued, and from henceforward we will treat the pleadings and case as though she were the only defendant. The complaint then went on to state that defendant had been in possession of the real and personal property described since on or about December 28, 1937, and had been collecting, and still continued to collect the rents, issues and profits thereof, retaining the same and claiming without right to be the owner thereof; that said rents, issues and profits "were the property of and belong to plaintiffs; that defendant refused to account, and that defendant “now hold[s] the said real and personal property hereinabove described in trust for these plaintiffs.” The plaintiffs prayed that their title be quieted, that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the apartment houses and collect the rents, and that defendant be required to account for the net profits of her operation of the houses.

Defendant’s answer denied that the property belonged to the plaintiffs and alleged that defendant claimed the ownership of the real and personal property in fee simple absolute; admitted that defendant had been in possession since December 28, 1937, collecting the rents, issues and profits; alleged that she intended to continue collecting the same; and claimed to be the owner thereof. The answer then set up the defense of the statute of limitations, -alleging that plaintiffs’ alleged cause of action was barred by the provisions of sections 318 through 326, and sections 336 (2), 337 (1), 338 (1), (2), (3), 339 (1), and 343, Code of Civil Procedure. Defendant then alleged her adverse possession for more than five years.

This answer was filed April 8, 1943. The complaint did not allege the type of trust under which it was claimed defen *154 dant held the property, the date of the origin of that trust, or the date of any repudiation thereof. The defendant did not demur, but answered. On April 10, 1944, over a year after the answer was filed, in an endeavor to cure the defects in their complaint, plaintiffs moved to amend on the ground that the allegations in the complaint concerning the alleged trust “should be amplified.” The court denied the motion.

Prior to the time of trial, the court on motion of defendant ordered that the affirmative separate defenses in the answer-statute of limitations and title by prescription—be tried before the trial of any other issues in the case. On these issues, after a lengthy trial (the reporter’s transcript contains 2,341 pages) the court found for defendant on each of the affirmative separate defenses and entered judgment accordingly. At the trial, plaintiffs renewed their motion for leave to file an amended complaint, which motion the court, although at one time intimating that it should be granted, finally denied. Plaintiffs claim on appeal that the court erred in denying their motions to amend, but say in their opening brief, ‘ ‘ These motions probably become important only if the issues made by the complaint and answer, other than the affirmative separate defenses, are hereafter tried.”

This litigation grew out of the purchase at foreclosure sale by defendant of the property above mentioned, under a. deed of trust and chattel mortgage executed by Dr. Aaron Friedman to his brothers and sisters, the plaintiffs, and a deed of trust and chattel mortgage executed by another brother, Joseph Friedman, to two of the plaintiffs, Isaac and Abe Friedman. At the time of the foreclosure sale, defendant, who was then known by her maiden name, bid in the properties under the name “B. Silverman,” the latter being her former married name. About eleven months after the sale defendant married Dr. Friedman, who died November 29, 1940.

Plaintiffs contend that the deeds of trust and chattel mortgages were given by Dr. Friedman and by Joseph Friedman to them to secure bona fide debts owed them, and that when defendant bid the property in at the foreclosure sale, she paid no money but used the credit of the indebtedness which the instruments secured; that thereby a resulting trust was created under which defendant held the property for them, which trust she did not repudiate prior to March 14, 1942 (less than a year before the suit was filed), and hence that *155 no statute of limitations could apply, and there could be no prescriptive title.

It was defendant’s position that with the exception of $27,000 which Dr. Friedman admittedly owed to plaintiffs Abe and Isaac Friedman, doing business as Friedman Brothers Glass Company, the entire debt set forth in the instruments was fictitious, and that the deeds of trust and chattel mortgages were made to protect Dr. Friedman and Joseph Friedman against the claims of a certain creditor of theirs. In other words, defendant claimed that the encumbrances were fake to protect them against the claims of another; that when she purchased at the foreclosure sale she was acting under the instructions of Dr. Friedman; that while she paid no moneys and used the credit of the apparent debt, there actually was no indebtedness and the foreclosure sale was merely for the purpose of getting the title into her to be held for herself; and that from the day of the foreclosure sale on she held the title and the properties adversely against all the plaintiffs.

The trial court found in accordance with the contention of the defendant, after a lengthy trial in which there was a definite conflict of testimony. Because there was no conflict as to certain important facts, plaintiffs take the position that the “conflict of testimony” rule does not apply, and that as a matter of law the court from such facts should have found that defendant held under a resulting trust. Before discussing this contention, it will be well to set forth the facts of the case. It is impracticable, due to the voluminous amount of evidence adduced, to set it all out here, but the main portions of the evidence will be discussed.

Disregarding all conflicts in the evidence and giving the evidence of defendant the weight to which it is entitled in an appellate court, an examination of the evidence confirms the findings of the trial court and shows the following to be the situation:

Prior to 1933, Joseph Friedman, a brother of plaintiffs and of Dr. Friedman, had given to one Palmer and his associates (hereinafter referred to as the Palmers) a promissory note for $65,000, secured by a deed of trust on certain Mission Street property. Dr. Friedman had endorsed this note.

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Bluebook (online)
179 P.2d 387, 79 Cal. App. 2d 151, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treager-v-friedman-calctapp-1947.