White v. Rosenstein

47 P.2d 358, 8 Cal. App. 2d 217, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 646
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1935
DocketCiv. 9818
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 47 P.2d 358 (White v. Rosenstein) 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
White v. Rosenstein, 47 P.2d 358, 8 Cal. App. 2d 217, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 646 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

STEPHENS, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs-respondents made and entered pursuant to our order after a former appeal. Howard White, one of the respondents, is deceased, and no substitution has been made. The appeal of National Surety Company has been dismissed, leaving Harriett B. Rosenstein as the sole appellant.

The basic facts from which the cause of action arose are as follows: On the sixteenth day of March, 1928, Anna B. Dorn owned certain real property situated in Los Angeles County, and on that day one Ora Nye, falsely representing herself to be Anna B. Dorn, appeared before the defendant Harriett B. Rosenstein and signed the name of Anna B. Dorn as grantor to a deed purporting to convey such property to one J. Harvey; and at the same time the defendant Harriett B. Rosenstein took the acknowledgment of the said Ora Nye masquerading as Anna B. Dorn to such deed and attached her certificate of acknowledgment thereto in due form, in which she certified that Anna B. Dorn personally appeared before her and was known to her to be the person whose name was subscribed to the deed. The deed was subsequently recorded. At the time of the acknowledgment the notary was not acquainted with the said Ora Nye who was masquerading under the name of Anna B. Dorn, and an acquaintance of the appellant, Harriett B. Rosenstein, introduced Ora Nye to her as *220 Anna B. Dorn. To further satisfy herself as to the identity of the supposed Anna B. Dorn, the notary, Harriett B. Rosenstein, requested identification, and said Ora Nye, posing as Anna B. Dorn, exhibited to appellant, correspondence, letters and other documents addressed to Anna B. Dorn and on which the name Anna B. Dorn appeared.

Thereafter and subsequent to the recordation of said pur.ported deed Ora Nye, posing under the name of Jean Harvey, requested a loan of $4,000 from the plaintiffs to be evidenced by a promissory note and secured by a deed of trust on said property, which at that time stood of record in the name of J. Harvey. Ora Nye and her confederate, J. Harvey, approached a loan agent by the name of Whitman, and Whitman as their agent contacted a man by the name of Kinsey, who was a loan broker. Kinsey, who was an agent for respondents, told the latter about the proposed loan and went with Mary E. White to examine the property. The property consisted of a lot 50 by 120 feet, and on the front of the lot stood a vacant house. About 20 feet away from the front house and on the rear of the lot stood a smaller house, in which an elderly woman, Anna B. Dorn, then resided and in which she had resided for many months. Mary E. White and her agent Kinsey, after inspecting the front house, passed through the rear door into the space between the front and rear houses. There they saw Anna B. Dorn, owner of the premises, who was, as stated, living in the smaller house on the rear of said lot. Anna B. Dorn inquired as to what was wanted. Kinsey replied that they were looking through the house. Mrs. Dorn made no objections and no further conversation was had between the said elderly woman and Kinsey or Mrs. White, the latter believing the elderly woman, Mrs. Dorn, to be a tenant on said property. No investigation was made by Mrs. White or Kinsey relative to the status of the elderly woman, Mrs. Dorn, or her interest in or to the property. Thereafter respondents delivered into title company escrow the sum of $4,000, to be paid over, and J. Harvey and Jean Harvey, alias Ora Nye, delivered into the same escrow a promissory note and a trust deed purporting to secure the payment of said note. The note and deed were both signed by J. Harvey (a single man) and Jean Harvey (a married woman), and the signatures to the deed were acknowledged before a notary. No investigation of identity of Jean Harvey was made.

*221 This case was before us on a former appeal (134 Cal. App. 576 [25 Pac. (2d) 884]). The trial court had decided in favor of plaintiffs, and after the signing of findings of fact and conclusions of law and a judgment the court determined under a motion authorized by section 663 of the Code of Civil Procedure to change its conclusions of law so that the specific or probative facts, rather than the ultimate facts found, should support the conclusions of law and the judgment. Accordingly the conclusions of law were changed and a judgment was entered for defendants. The appeal was upon the judgment roll, and we determined that it did not appear that the conditions authorizing such action were present. The conditions referred to consisted of those in the following quotation from Forsythe v. Los Angeles Ry. Co., 149 Cal. 569 [87 Pac. 24] : “But, in the second place, the general rule is that the finding of the ultimate fact prevails in support of the judgment notwithstanding a finding of a probative or evidentiary fact which tends to show that the ultimate fact was found against the evidence. And findings of probative facts will not invalidate the finding of an ultimate fact unless the latter is based on the former, and is entirely overcome thereby, and unless, also, it appears that these findings of probative facts dispose of all the facts involved in the pleadings, and that the facts found constitute all the facts in the case.” We therefore found that the specific or probative facts in the findings did not operate to overcome the ultimate facts which supported the judgment, and we reversed the judgment with directions to make and cause to be entered a judgment for plaintiffs against defendants as prayed for, or, in effect, the reentry of the first judgment. This order was complied with, and this appeal is upon this third judgment and is by the defendants, whereas the first appeal was by the plaintiffs.

The appeal is upon the record under section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure, and one of the main points of the appeal is that plaintiffs were guilty of negligence or contributory negligence proximately contributing to the injury. Appellant contends that this and other points made are foreclosed by the former opinion and decision, under the doctrine of the law of the ease. It will be borne in mind that it was held in the former opinion that the judgment roll did not reveal that all of the probative fact was set out specifically in the findings, and that was the reason why we could not say that the specific findings entirely overcame the ulti *222 mate findings. There may have been probative facts directly supporting the ultimate findings. Our statement in the first opinion that the findings do not support the judgment appealed from, but on the contrary support the relief sought by the complaint or the first judgment entered, was based on the rule that it must be assumed on appeal that the evidence supports the ultimate facts found by the court where the facts are not in the record, except in the circumstances of the quotation from the Forsythe ease. We intimated there that the probative facts stated in the findings would not support the judgment, but we specifically held that the point was not before us. We conclude that the law of the case does not preclude our examining the evidence for the purpose of considering the question of negligence.

Now after a study of the briefs upon this appeal, with the evidence before us, we can pass authoritatively upon the point we ventured to intimate upon.

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Bluebook (online)
47 P.2d 358, 8 Cal. App. 2d 217, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-rosenstein-calctapp-1935.