Vanasek v. Pokorny

238 P. 798, 73 Cal. App. 312, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 265
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 1925
DocketDocket No. 5135.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 P. 798 (Vanasek v. Pokorny) 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
Vanasek v. Pokorny, 238 P. 798, 73 Cal. App. 312, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 265 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CASHIN, J.

The action was commenced by plaintiff, Edna Vanasek, to quiet title to certain land in Alameda County as against Frank Strybl, appellant herein, Erzsi Novak, respondent, Joe Novak, the husband of respondent and others. Respondent filed her answer to the complaint denying the alleged title of plaintiff, and therewith her cross-complaint against appellant, alleging therein her marriage to Joe Novak on June 1, 1914, and that at all times thereafter they continued to be husband and wife, the acquisition of the land by them on June 17, 1917, in the name of the husband as community property, that the land was acquired wholly with community funds; that on August 1, 1919, her husband, without her consent, by his several deed, executed 'and recorded on that day, conveyed the land to appellant, who took with knowledge of the existing marriage relation, that respondent upon the transfer of the land to her husband acquired, as the legal effect thereof, in her own right, and continued to own as a member of the matrimonial com-' *315 munity, a present vested interest, estate and property therein equally with her husband; that the Strybl deed was wholly void; that appellant was not and never had been the owner of any estate or interest in the land or any part thereof; that his deed was a cloud on “the title of said matrimonial community and of this cross-complainant thereto and therein,” and asked the decree of the court adjudging the Strybl deed to be void, and that she be adjudged as against plaintiff and the appellant to be the owner of the land.

The cross-complaint contained no allegation of want of consideration for the transfer to appellant or that there was fraud in the transaction, and no allegation of ownership or title in respondent other than as a conclusion from the community status of the land. Her husband was not made a party to the cross-complaint, was not served with summons in the action and made no appearance therein.

Appellant demurred to the cross-complaint, alleging want of sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action and the nonjoinder of Novak, the husband, as a necessary party thereto.

The demurrer being overruled, appellant answered, alleging title in himself by virtue of the Novak deed; that a valuable consideration, to wit, $500, had been paid therefor to Novak, the husband, which was the reasonable value of the land, and that the purchase was made in good faith upon the representation by Novak that the land was his separate property.

After trial the court found generally that all the allegations of the answer and cross-complaint of respondent were true, and specifically that the land was community property purchased wholly with community funds; the conveyance thereof by Novak, the husband, to appellant; his knowledge of the community status of the land; the want of consent by respondent to the conveyance; that “at all of said times mentioned in said pleadings said matrimonial community was and now is the owner of said community real property, and that Joe Novak and the said Brzsi Novak, as members of said matrimonial community, each was and now is the owner respectively of an equal, certain and definite and present interest in the property so purchased, and the court finds that said interest vested in them respectively upon the *316 delivery of said deed to said Joe Novak, and that said interest ever since has been and now is so vested in them respectively”; and further that appellant “is not now and at none of the times mentioned in the pleadings in this action was he the owner of any estate, right, title or interest in or to said real property or any portion thereof”; that appellant and plaintiff were asserting an interest in the property adverse to respondent, all without right, and concluded as the legal effect of the findings that the Strybl deed was wholly void, conveyed no interest in the land and should be canceled of record; and thereupon entered a decree adjudging respondent as against appellant and plaintiff to be the owner in fee of the land, and that her title thereto be forever quieted against all and every claim of plaintiff and appellant and each of them.

Plaintiff did not appeal. The appeal taken by Strybl is upon the judgment-roll, the evidence not being brought up.

Respondent contends that the findings are sufficient to support the judgment, and, therefore, that the judgment must be affirmed.

The action, by fair construction of the allegations of the cross-complaint, is one to remove a cloud upon the alleged community status of the land—the deed to Strybl, which on its face is not void—and is thus a proceeding under the provisions of section 3412 of the Civil Code, and not simply an action to quiet the alleged title of respondent as against adverse claims of appellant, as provided in section 738 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The distinction in purpose and the difference in requirements as to pleading between the two proceedings are pointed out in Castro v. Barry, 79 Cal. 443, 446 [21 Pac. 946, 947], wherein the court said: “The distinction between the two kinds of action is clear. They are different not merely in form (for we have no forms of action in the common-law sense) but in purpose. In the former case the proceeding is aimed at a particular instrument or piece of evidence which is dangerous to plaintiff’s rights and which may be ordered to be destroyed in whosesoever hands it may happen to be; while in the latter the proceeding is for the purpose of stopping the mouth of a person who has asserted or who is asserting a claim to the plaintiff’s property, whether such claim be founded upon evidence or utterly baseless”; and that “in *317 an action to remove a cloud there can be no question but that the facts which show the apparent validity of the instrument which is said to constitute the cloud, and also the facts- showing its invalidity ought to be stated” (Hyatt v. Calkins, 174 Cal. 580, 582 [163 Pac. 1007]; Hibernia Sav. & Loan Soc. v. Ordway, 38 Cal. 679, 681).

Such was the purpose of the pleader in the instant case so far as it was deemed essential to a right of recoverv. After alleging the acquisition of the land as community property and that a conveyance thereof was made without her consent, in a separate paragraph the conclusion is drawn therefrom and alleged that respondent was, by reason of the community status of the land, the owner of a definite vested interest and estate therein equally with her husband; and in the same paragraph that appellant is not and never was the owner of any estate or interest in the land or any part thereof, no facts other than as above being alleged showing or tending to show that appellant’s deed was invalid or that he did not acquire thereby and then own an interest in the land. While a general allegation of ownership in plaintiff or of the invalidity of an adverse claim of defendant is usually held to be one of ultimate fact and not a conclusion of law, yet the same averment may be one of fact or of a conclusion of law, acording to the context (Levins v. Rovegno, 71 Cal. 273 [12 Pac. 161]; Turner v. White, 73 Cal. 300 [14 Pac. 794]; Heeser v. Miller, 77 Cal. 192 [19 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
238 P. 798, 73 Cal. App. 312, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanasek-v-pokorny-calctapp-1925.