Wolf v. Gall

169 P. 1017, 176 Cal. 787
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1917
DocketS. F. No. 7592. S. F. No. 7617.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 169 P. 1017 (Wolf v. Gall) 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
Wolf v. Gall, 169 P. 1017, 176 Cal. 787 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Plaintiffs brought their action to quiet title to one undivided tenth each in certain real property in the city and county of San Francisco. Their asserted title rested upon their claim of heirship as children of a deceased child of Tobe Funkenstein, their paternal grandmother, their father being Newman Wolf, a son of the said Tobe, who predeceased her. The defendants are the four surviving children of Tobe Funkenstein, issue of her second marriage. They answered to the same effect. They asserted prior ownership in the property in their mother and alleged that on December 21, 1907, she made and executed to them her deed of grant, conveying the property in question to them—her four children—as tenants in common. They denied the asserted ownership of the plaintiffs in and to any part of the realty, and finally pleaded prescriptive title. Trial was had, resulting in findings and judgment in favor of the defendants. Plaintiff, Arturo Wolf, appeals from the judgment (S. F. No. 7592). Plaintiff, Maria Julia Wolf, appeals from the order denying her motion for a new trial (S. F. No. 7617). In its findings the court declared that prior to, at the time of, and subsequent to the making of the deed to her four children, respondents herein, Tobe Funkenstein, though aged in years, possessed all her mental faculties, and was at all times mentally competent, and that at the time of, and in the making of, the deed she “was of sound mind and memory and not acting under mistake, duress, fraud, menace, or undue influence of any kind.” The principal grievance urged upon our attention on the appeal from the judgment is over the findings above quoted, and this means simply that these appellants are unwilling to be foreclosed by the judgment in this action which they brought, from further litigating issues of fraud presented by them and determined against them in the action. Nor yet are they willing that the judgment restraining and enjoining them from further litigation against *789 these defendants over the titles to these properties should be allowed to stand.

Yet what are the facts? The defendants set forth their title by deed from their mother. The law gave the plaintiffs a replication without pleading to this asserted title. They were before the court. To prevail, they must establish the infirmity and insufficiency of this written instrument. It was not only their right, but it was their duty so to do. In evidence and in argument they attack the deed in every conceivable way—nonexecution, nondelivery, fraud in its procurement, forgery by implication, undue influence. Under what circumstances was this evidence addressed to and admitted by the trial court? It is shown by the- record as follows:

“Mr. Lezinsky: In order to get this record straight, your Honor, I think if your Honor please, we are entitled to introduce now in evidence in this cause any evidence which will show that this deed was not signed, any evidence which will show that this deed was procured by fraud, any evidence which will show that this deed was procured by menace, undue influence or misrepresentation.
“The Court: Unquestionably so—granted.
“Mr. Lezinsky: Also any evidence which would show what the intention was, or if there was any intention whatever on the part of Tobe Funkenstein to make any deed to these defendants at any time whatever.
“The Court: Granted.”

There is scarcely a page of the voluminous brief presented to this court on the appeal from the order refusing to grant a new trial that does not contain either some direct argument as to the fraud of these defendants and their witnesses in procuring the deed, or some innuendo to the same effect.

In another branch of this litigation where, notwithstanding the injunctive order against so doing, Arturo Wolf attempted by a new action to litigate the questions of fraud, and was cited, therefore, in contempt of the injunction in this case, this court said in relation thereto: “Furthermore, the injunction herein granted was not in fact incidental to the main relief sought. It was a substantial and inherent part of the relief. The plaintiffs and defendants were seeking to have title quieted against each other.” (Wolf v. Gall, 174 Cal. 140, [162 Pac. 115].) At that hearing the same contention was made as is here advanced, that the findings *790 of the court were without the issues, and the decision is determinative against the contention.^ It is abundantly settled that under issues framed as here, the plaintiffs could, as their attorney represented to the court, overcome the effect of the deed and so destroy its validity upon either equitable or legal ground. (Moore v. Copp, 119 Cal. 436, [51 Pac. 630]; Johnson v. Taylor, 150 Cal. 201, [119 Am. St. Rep. 181, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 818, 88 Pac. 903]; Hermosa Beach Land etc. Co. v. Law Credit Co., 175 Cal. 493, [166 Pac. 22].) Here, as in those eases, these defendants sought a decree determining that the plaintiffs had no right or claim in or to the property or any part thereof, establishing full and complete title in themselves, and enjoining the plaintiffs from ever asserting any further claim thereto.

It is finally urged that the court fell into error in failing to find upon the question of title by prescription tendered by defendants’ answer. Manifestly that failure in no wise injures this appellant if the finding of record title in the defendants and the decree establishing the same are good. (Smith v. Smith, 173 Cal. 725, [161 Pac. 495].) To this consideration we pass in the appeal No. 7592.

Tobe Funkenstein, a widow, and the mother of plaintiffs’ father, married Julius Funkenstein and the four defendants are the issues of that marriage. The Funkehsteins lived in San Francisco, where the father and his eldest son Edward engaged in the real estate business under the firm name of J. Funkenstein & Son. Tobe Funkenstein brought no property to the matrimonial community. The firm of Funkenstein & Son prospered. The father bought real property, and when he died this property had been conveyed to his widow. The. four children were adults and were all living under the parental roof. They continued so to live after the death of their father. Mrs. Funkenstein was uneducated and unversed in business. Her activities were in the home. During her husband’s life he and his son Edward had managed all of the business affairs. After her husband’s deat.h her son Edward continued to do so and to conduct business under the original firm name. The bank account in the name of J. Funkenstein & Son was the only bank account which was ever maintained in the lifetime of the father, and was the only one maintained after the father’s death. The son attended to all of the business affairs—renting, leasing, in *791 suranee, mortgages, etc. About two months after the father’s death the mother executed the deed in controversy to the four children, resident under her roof. The circumstances of its execution are in brief as follows: William H. Sharp and his son William B. Sharp, attorneys at law, had been the attorneys of the father in his lifetime. William H. Sharp had died. William B.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P. 1017, 176 Cal. 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-gall-cal-1917.