Vance v. Anderson

45 P. 816, 113 Cal. 532, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 821
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1896
DocketS. F. No. 1
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 45 P. 816 (Vance v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vance v. Anderson, 45 P. 816, 113 Cal. 532, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 821 (Cal. 1896).

Opinion

Searls, C.

Action of ejectment to recover a lot of land in the city of Eureka, Humboldt county. Plaintiff had. judgment, from which judgment, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial, defendants appeal.

The first point made by appellant for reversal is that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. To properly present the question thus raised, it is necessary to quote from the complaint and answer, and to state some facts bearing upon the case. tThe complaint is in part as follows:

“ That on the 1st of May, 1891, she [the plaintiff] was seised in fee and possessed and entitled to the possession of that certain tract of land situate in,” etc., (describing the land and its location.)
“ That while the plaintiff was so seised, the defendants afterward, on the 1st of May, 1894, and without right or title, entered into possession of the demanded premises; and ousted and ejected the plaintiff therefrom, and now unlawfully withholds the possession thereof from the plaintiff, to her damage.”

Defendants interposed a general demurrer to the complaint, but before a hearing voluntarily withdrew such demurrer and took leave to answer within twenty days.

The answer is in part as follows: “Deny that plaintiff was, on the first day of May, 1894, or at any other time, or at all, or is now, seised in fee and possessed and entitled to the possession, or seised in fee or otherwise, or possessed, or entitled to the possession, or otherwise, [536]*536of that certain tract of land set forth and described in the said complaint.”

The pleadings were verified, and, at the trial, no objection to evidence was predicated upon the insufficiency of the complaint.

It will be observed that while the complaint avers seisin and possession in the plaintiff on the first day of May, 1894, it fails to state that she was so seised at the date of the suit brought, which was May 19,1894, or at any time after May 1st.

This was, we think, a failure of an essential allegation in the complaint. It is true that in some of the earlier cases in this court, a complaint in ejectment was in effect differentiated from those in other actions, and precisely similar complaints with this were held sufficient. (Salmon v. Symonds, 24 Cal. 260; Kidder v. Stevens, 60 Cal. 420; Yount v. Howell, 14 Cal. 465.)

We shall, however, assume that it was the duty of the plaintiff to tender to the defendants an issue as to her seisin or ownership at the date of the bringing the suit.

But the defendants did not wait, as they might well have done, for such tender, for in their answer they not only denied the seisin and right to possession of the plaintiff on the 1st of May, 1894, but added or at any other time, or at all, or is now seised in fee,” etc., as above quoted.

When defendants thus tendered an issue as to the seisin of plaintiff up to the time the action was brought, and that issue was tried and determined against the defendants, it was too late to raise the objection here.

It is a familiar rule of pleading, that defects in a complaint may be cured by the averments of an answer thereto. (County of San Diego v. Seifert, 97 Cal. 594; Harkness v. McClain, 8 Utah, 52; Code Civ. Proc., sec. 475; Diefendorff v. Hopkins, 95 Cal. 344; Schenck v. Hartford Ins. Co., 71 Cal. 28; Cohen v. Knox, 90 Cal. 266.)

Pomeroy is of opinion this rule of the curative property of an answer should be confined to cases in which the answer, affirmatively alleges the very fact [537]*537which is omitted from the complaint, but says it has sometimes been “ enforced, although the answer simply contained a denial of the necessary facts which should have been averred by the plaintiff.” (Pomeroy on Remedies, sec. 579.) The practice in this state has been to treat express denials as sufficient to cover the defect. (See cases cited supra.) Under these circumstances the contention of appellants cannot prevail.

2. The more important question to be solved relates to the character of the conveyance under which plaintiff claims title.

There was a deed of conveyance offered in evidence, executed and acknowledged in due form by the defendants on the sixteenth day of October, 1893, conveying the property in question to the plaintiff.

The consideration mentioned in the deed was five hundred dollars, and the deed was recorded October 17, 1893.

The defendants, at the trial, for the purpose of showing that the foregoing conveyance was intended to operate as a mortgage, and not as an absolute conveyance, introduced in evidence an agreement between the plaintiff and Leander Anderson, executed October 16, 1893, whereby the plaintiff covenanted and agreed to and with said defendant Anderson, that she, the said plaintiff, would sell, and he, the said defendant, would buy, the certain premises therein described, and being the same premises described in the conveyance to plaintiff by the defendant; such sale was to be made within six months, upon the payment by said Anderson to plaintiff of the sum of four thousand one hundred and ninety-three dollars and seventy cents, with interest at eleven per cent per annum from date until sale, which sum defendant covenanted to pay. If defendant failed to pay within six months, the agreement to convey was to be considered null and void, etc.

The agreement contained the following clause: “It is expressly understood and agreed that this instrument is not a mortgage, but an agreement to sell and buy real [538]*538estate, nor is it the intention of the parties hereto that this instrument should be, or operate in any way as, a mortgage.”

The instrument was duly acknowledged and recorded, but at what date does not appear.

The deed and agreement, when taken together, do not, upon their face, constitute a mortgage, for the reasons: 1. It does not appear therefrom that the parties were the same, the deed being executed to plaintiff by the two defendants, while the agreement runs to one only of such defendants; 2. They present no evidence of any pre-existing, existing, or future debt to be secured thereby; 3. The agreement to convey expressly provides that it is not, and shall not be considered, a mortgage.

It follows from these circumstances, and some others which might be mentioned, that the instruments taken together do not, on their face, in law, constitute a mortgage. This is not, however, conclusive. A deed absolute on its face may be shown, by parol, to be intended as a mortgage. It may be stated, as a general proposition, that in this state, at least, every conveyance of real property made as security for the performance of an obligation is, in equity, a mortgage, irrespective of the form in which it is made.

Equity looks beyond the mere form in which the transaction is clothed, and shapes its relief in such way as to carry out the true intent of the parties to the agreement, and to this end all the facts and circumstances of the transaction, the conduct of the parties thereto, and their declarations against their own interests, their relations to one another and to the subject matter, are subjects for consideration. (Campbell v. Freeman, 99 Cal. 546; Pierce v. Robinson, 13 Cal. 116; Loche v. Moulton

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Bluebook (online)
45 P. 816, 113 Cal. 532, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vance-v-anderson-cal-1896.