Turner v. Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n

27 P.2d 383, 135 Cal. App. 314, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 301
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 1933
DocketDocket No. 1069.
StatusPublished

This text of 27 P.2d 383 (Turner v. Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n) 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
Turner v. Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n, 27 P.2d 383, 135 Cal. App. 314, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 301 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

Plaintiffs instituted this action for the purpose of quieting their title to certain real property in the city of San Diego which they had purchased at a commissioner’s sale made in accordance with a court decree rendered in a partition action. For the sake of convenience, the property, the title to which is the subject of the present litigation, will hereafter be called the Ivy Apartments. Upon the conclusion of the trial of the issues presented by the pleadings ■ the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs adjudging that the adverse claims of the defendants were invalid and declaring plaintiffs to be the true and- lawful owners of the property. From the judgment thus rendered the defendant Theolinda Margaretta Deacon has prosecuted this appeal. For its proper consideration a statement of the undisputed facts which were developed during the trial is required.

D. A. Deacon and Clara E. Deacon were at some time prior to the year 1925 husband and wife. This marital relation was dissolved. After its dissolution Clara E. Deacon brought an action in which her former husband was named as a defendant whereby she sought to obtain a partition and division of certain real property described in the complaint filed in said action among the owners thereof, according to their respective rights. Included in the real property sought to be partitioned was the property known as the Ivy Apartments. On June 11, 1925, a notice of lis pendens in the aforesaid action was duly recorded in the office of the county recorder of San Diego County. This notice stated that the partition action had been commenced and contained a legal description of the property affected thereby which it was declared was located in San Diego County. Included in the property described in said notice was the property known as the Ivy Apartments. The partition suit was duly tried and on April 1, 1926, the trial court made an interlocutory decree which determined the ownership of the various parties to the action in the prop *317 erty described in the pleadings. On June 29, 1926, a decree in partition based on the interlocutory decree theretofore made was signed by the court. This decree adjudged that D. A. Deacon and Clara B. Deacon were the owners of an undivided one-half interest in the Ivy Apartments and that A. T. Roark was the owner of the remaining undivided one-half interest, which latter interest was subject to an indebtedness of $6,500, secured by a mortgage in such amount thereon, which indebtedness had been assumed by A. T. Roark and was then due and unpaid by him. It was further adjudged that the Ivy Apartments should be sold and the proceeds divided among the above-named owners as directed in the decree. It was, however, provided that the aforesaid property should not be sold unless a specified price could be obtained therefor. The decree contained a further provision for the payment of specified attorney’s fees to designated attorneys. The defendant D. A. Deacon appealed from the decree thus rendered. The appeal resulted in a partial affirmation of the judgment. The single particular in which a reversal was ordered related to the provision fixing attorney’s fees, which was alone remanded to the trial court for further proceedings. The provision limiting the sale price was ordered stricken from the decree, but it was expressly decided that the presence of this limitation did not constitute sufficient reason for the reversal of the judgment (Deacon v. Deacon, 101 Cal. App. 195, 203 [281 Pac. 533]).

Upon the filing of the remittitur the trial court took further proceedings in conformity with the opinion rendered on appeal and thereafter made its supplemental decree wherein it was recited that, in accordance with the prior decree in partition, a sale of the property had been made by the commissioner appointed for the purpose, at which sale Val Turner was the purchaser and that said purchaser moved that the sale be vacated and the plaintiff Clara B. Deacon and the intervener, A. T. Roark, consented to the granting of the motion and the defendant Daniel A. Deacon submitted the motion without argument. It was then ordered that the prior sale be vacated and a commissioner was appointed to make a sale of the property. An order confirming the sale of the Ivy Apartments was thereafter duly made by the court. This order recites that *318 at the sale Val A. Turner submitted the highest bid for the said property and the property was accordingly sold to him for the price of $8,000 subject to confirmation by the court. The court’s order approved the sale and ordered the commissioner to execute a deed to the property upon payment of the full purchase price and that the purchaser be given possession of the premises. A deed was thereupon executed by the commissioner in which Val A. Turner was named as the grantee.

In the meantime on February 18, 1925, D. A. Deacon " was married to Theolinda Margaretta Deacon (appellant herein) and on August 26, 1926, he executed and delivered to his wife a promissory note made payable to her in the amount of $8,000 and as security for its payment he executed a real property mortgage on the Ivy Apartments. This mortgage was duly recorded on the date of its execution.

On October 29, 1926, A. T. Roark, who had formerly .been adjudged to be the equitable owner of an undivided one-half interest in the Ivy Apartments by a decree which had become final and who had paid the indebtedness secured by a mortgage on said property, executed a grant deed whereby he conveyed an undivided one-half interest in the said property to Val A. Turner. Turner and his wife thereupon instituted an action against Theolinda Margaretta Deacon whereby they sought to quiet their title to an undivided one-half interest in said property. The defendant in said action contended that the mortgage which was executed by D. A. Deacon on August 26, 1926, to secure payment of the note for $8,000 in which she was named as payee constituted a valid lien upon the whole property including the one-half interest therein claimed by the plaintiffs in said action. This contention did not prevail and the trial court made its decree quieting the title of the Turners to an undivided one-half interest in the property. The defendant in said action, Theolinda Margaretta Deacon, appealed from the judgment thus rendered. Her appeal was unsuccessful and the judgment was affirmed (Turner v. Deacon, 106 Cal. App. 329 [289 Pac. 179]).

The principal contention advanced by the appellant in support of her appeal in the instant action is that it *319 was adjudged in the prior action in which she was the defendant (Turner v. Deacon, supra) that her mortgage constituted a valid lien upon an undivided one-half interest in the Ivy Apartments and therefore that the judgment from which this appeal has been taken which quiets the title of respondents to the whole of said property and adjudges that her claim based on the aforesaid mortgage is invalid is erroneous. The contention is entirely lacking in merit. This is obviously true because the fundamental premise upon which the whole contention rests is incorrect. This basic premise is that it was decided in Turner v. Deacon, supra, that the lien of her mortgage was valid as to an undivided one-half interest in the property. It was not there so decided.

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Related

Turner v. Deacon
289 P. 179 (California Court of Appeal, 1930)
Deacon v. Deacon
281 P. 533 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
Peterson v. Gibbs
81 P. 121 (California Supreme Court, 1905)
Moore v. Schneider
238 P. 81 (California Supreme Court, 1925)
Pista v. Resetar
270 P. 453 (California Supreme Court, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 383, 135 Cal. App. 314, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-bank-of-america-national-trust-savings-assn-calctapp-1933.