Kibbe v. Graves
Kibbe v. Graves
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in an action to quiet title to certain real estate in the county of Los Angeles, and also from orders denying a new trial and refusing to vacate the judgment.
The facts of the case are complex. Many matters are set up in the pleadings which occurred in actions between the same parties previous to this action, and in the interest of clarity, we shall discuss the events as found by the court, in the order of their occurrence, and without regard to the order in which they are pleaded.
On August 21, 1915, one Florence E. Rickershauser was the owner of the real property involved in the present action. At that time she was insolvent and executed a deed to one McMahan covering said property, which conveyance was duly recorded on December 3, 1915. On August 27, 1915, McMahan executed a declaration of trust with reference to said property, declaring that he held the same not in his own right, but as trustee for certain creditors of the grantor, the names of the creditors and the amounts of their claims being set out in the declaration of trust; that he held the same for the benefit of said creditors with power to manage and sell said property and to apply the proceeds to the payment of said debts, and to pay the balance, if any, over to the grantor, Florence E. Rickershauser.
*578 On May 18, 1916, defendant Amy Graves instituted an action (No. B-38190) against E. E. Denton and Florence E. Bickershauser, and recovered a judgment therein for $3,474.24. On July 11, 1916, a writ of execution was issued upon said judgment, and the sheriff levied upon the property involved herein, as the property of Florence E. Rickershauser, and published a notice of sale to be held on August 31, 1916. On August 8, 1916, McMahan instituted an action (No. B-40999) against the sheriff to restrain him from selling said property, and alleged that the property was held by him in trust for the benefit of certain creditors of Florence E. Riekershauser, and that Florence E. Rickershauser had no right, title, or interest therein. In this action Amy Graves intervened and by her complaint in intervention and the answer thereto, there was put in issue the questions of the validity of the deed from Florence E. Bickershauser to McMahan, and the validity and purposes of the trust declared by him to attach to said property. It was adjudicated in that action that the conveyance from Bickershauser to McMahan was bona fide and not in fraud of creditors; that it was impressed with a trust in accordance with the trust declaration hereinbefore referred to; that Florence E. Riekershauser was entitled to whatever beneficial interest remained in the trust property after the payment of the claims enumerated in the trust declarations, and that McMahan was, therefore, not entitled to a permanent injunction against the sheriff to restrain him from selling whatever beneficial interest Florence E. Riekershauser had in the property.
Thereafter, in pursuance of the trust agreement, the property was sold by the trustee McMJahan on July 30, 1917, and the sale confirmed by the court, and the purposes of the trust accomplished by the payment of the debts. On August 30, 1917, the sheriff proceeded with the execution sale to satisfy the judgment in said action No. B-38190, in accordance with the judgment in case No. B^10999. Amy Graves purchased at said sale, all the right, title, and interest of Florence E. Riekershauser in and to said property. A certificate evidencing said sale was issued to the purchaser by the sheriff, but a deed has not yet been executed by the sheriff conveying said interest so purchased. It will be observed from this statement of facts, that before Amy Graves *579 made her purchase at the sheriff’s sale, the property had already had sold to the plaintiffs under the power given in the trust agreement, and the proceeds from said sale had been used in the extinguishment of the debts of Florence E. Rickershauser, the said sale under the trust deed had been confirmed by the court and the trustee discharged, according to the allegations of the pleadings and the findings of the court. At the time Amy Graves purchased the beneficial interest of Florence E. Rickershauser she had notice of the conveyance to plaintiffs made under the power contained in the trust agreement, as said conveyance to plaintiffs was duly recorded.
All of the above facts are preliminary to a discussion of the present suit, but they all appear from the pleadings and findings in the present action. In the present action the plaintiffs, who are the grantees of McMahan under the power given him in the trust agreement, seek to quiet title to the land against the defendant, and they also set out in their complaint the facts regarding the execution sale under which the right, title and interest of Florence E. Rickershauser was sold to Amy Graves, and allege that the sheriff will execute a deed to said Amy Graves on August 30, 1918, in consummatiion of said sale unless restrained by the court, and that such deed, if executed, will cloud the title of the plaintiffs to their property, and they ask that the sheriff be restrained from executing this deed. In other words, the plaintiffs seek to litigate the question of whether or not Florence E'. Rickershauser had any beneficial interest In the land in controversy at the time of defendant’s purchase, and to restrain the sheriff from executing the deed to defendant until such matter may be determined—so as to keep unclouded the title of the plaintiffs to the land. It is also alleged that the value of the property is something over $30,000, and that the interest of Florence E. Rickershauser was sold at sheriff’s sale for about $2,600, and plaintiffs offer to redeem from said sale if it be adjudged that Florence E. Rickershauser had any beneficial interest in said property at the time of the purported sale to Amy Graves. It is also alleged that the plaintiffs purchased the property in good faith from Thomas T. McMahan, trustee, and paid therefor $33,641.85. Amy Graves filed an answer denying the title of plaintiff and setting up title in herself by virtue *580 of the execution sale. She also makes various allegations in her answer and cross-complaint' as to matters decided in action B-40999 with reference to the fraud of Florence B. Rickershauser in conveying to McMahan, and the validity of McMahan’s conveyance to plaintiffs, all of which we need not discuss here, as these questions were decided adversely to the defendant Amy Graves in said action No. B-40999, and such matters are res adjudicate as between these parties.
The trial court in the present action issued a permanent injunction restraining the sheriff from clouding the title of the plaintiffs by issuing the deed to the defendant.
One further point is argued by the appellant, which has reference to the descriptions of the property contained in the various instruments involved in this action. The point is made merely with reference to the last parcel of real property set out in the complaint—parcel G. This parcel of land when it was conveyed by Florence E. Rickershauser to McMahan, trustee, was described as follows: “An undivided one-half interest in lots 1, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 24 in Block. 15 of the Breen Tract, Wilmington.” This same description was used in the deed from McMahan to plaintiffs; it was also used in the complaint to quiet title herein. It was the description found by the court to cover the land in controversy, in its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and in its judgment herein. It is the description contained in the injunction against the sheriff, and he is enjoined from executing a deed to defendant Graves of land described in that manner.
However, in the cross-complaint of Amy Graves filed herein, in which she sought to quiet title to this land and to have the deeds from Rickershauser to McMahan, and from McMahan to plaintiffs, declared void, this particular parcel of land is described as follows: “An undivided one-half interest in lots 1, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 24 of the Breen Tract as per Book Fifteen, page forty-two of maps.” The execution in action No. B-3.8190 had been issued against this parcel described in this manner, and the sale by the sheriff was made to the defendant Graves under this description.
Because of this variation in the descriptions of the ten lots in the Breen Tract, appellant is taking the position that the property to which the plaintiffs are entitled under the deed from McMahan, and under the decree of the court quieting title, is not the same property under which execution was issued in action B-38190 and not the same property which defendant Graves purchased at the sheriff’s sale. Therefore, they contend that, regardless of the judgment quieting *583 title according to the prayer of plaintiffs’ complaint, defendant Graves is entitled to a deed to ten lots in the Breen Tract. There is nothing in the record from which this court can determine whether these certain ten lots “in the Breen Tract” and the ten lots numbered the same “in block 15 of the Breen Tract” are the same lots. If they are not, then obviously defendant may have her deed to the lots “in the Breen Tract,” while the plaintiffs have their title quieted to the lots “in block 15 of the Breen Tract.” But it requires no modification of the judgment to bring about such a result, because the injunction merely restrains the sheriff from executing a deed to these certain lots “in block 15 of the Breen Tract.” It in no way interferes with his action in executing to the defendant Graves a deed to any different lots “in the Breen Tract” which she may have purchased.
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, J., and Brittain, J., concurred.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.