Simons v. Bedell
Simons v. Bedell
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff brought this action to obtain the judgment of the court that he was entitled to certain funds in the hands of the administrator of his deceased wife’s estate. Plaintiff prevailed in the action, and this appeal is from the judgment in his favor and from the order denying motion for a new trial, and is presented by statement. A general demurrer to the complaint was overruled. The complaint and a supplementary amended complaint allege and the court found: That defendants Otis T. and Jane Bedell were husband and wife and
1. Defendants contend that the demurrer should have been sustained, as no cause of action was stated. The question was not presented by the demurrer, nor is it argued in the briefs as to the right of plaintiff to go into a court of equity to determine who is entitled to distribution—a question which it seems to us was clearly within the powers of and should have been determined by the court sitting in probate. (Siddall v. Harrison, 73 Cal. 560.) We are not prepared to say, however, that the court was without jurisdiction, and as all parties seem to have treated the matter as properly brought before the court we shall so treat it. Defendants urge that there is nothing in the complaint to show that said Jennie “intended to and would have made a valid will bequeathing to plaintiff all her interest in the Los Angeles property” had it not been for the action of her parents; nor “that she would have bequeathed any part of her property to plaintiff if she had made a will”; that the complaint states' the evidence instead of the ultimate facts, and that “evidentiary facts cannot be substituted in a pleading for an allegation of the facts to be put in issue.” (Citing Green v. Palmer, 15 Cal. 415; 76 Am. Dec. 492; Thomas v. Desmond, 63 Cal. 426; Feeney v. Howard, 79 Cal. 525; 12 Am. St. Rep. 162; Harris v. Hillegass, 54 Cal. 463.) It is not distinctly alleged that the said Jennie abstained from making a will devising her Los Angeles property to plaintiff in consideration of the promise made to her by her father, that he and her mother would convey their interest in that property to plaintiff should she die, but we think it sufficiently appears from the complaint that the parties so regarded the agreement, and that she conveyed the Hew York property upon the understanding that her parents were to convey their interest in the Los Angeles property to plaintiff. We do not think that the rule with regard to pleading ultimate facts instead of the evidence of those facts is so far violated as to bring the pleading within the cases cited and to make it obnoxious to a general demurrer.
2. It is objected that there is no finding of fact that Otis T. was the agent of his wife Jane, nor is there any allegation of
3. It is claimed by appellant that the agreement upon which plaintiff relies is void under the statute of frauds, not having been in writing. (Citing Wittenbrock v. Cass, 110 Cal. 1.) It
5. The only errors claimed in the admission of testimony are two: 1. A witness was called by plaintiff to relate a conversation she had with Mrs. Bedell at Los Angeles about the property just before the marriage of her daughter. The ground of the objection was that “it had no relevancy to the case and the nature of the conversation was not shown.” We think the question was relevant. 2. A witness was asked to state what plaintiff’s wife said in the presence and hearing of her father with relation to the property matters between herself and her hus
We discover no error in the judgment or order of the court, and therefore advise that they be affirmed.
Haynes, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are affirmed.
McFarland, J., Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Fleet, J.
Beatty, C. J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. Conceding the validity of the contract stated in the principal opinion, it is nothing more than this: In consideration that Mrs. Simons would deed to her mother the Hew York property and would not make a will, defendants Bedell would convey to plaintiff, after the death of Mrs. Simons, the Los Angeles property. As Mrs. Simons owned the Los Angeles property, and under the contract was expected to die such owner, the title which defendants were to convey was what they would inherit from their daughter. Had they conveyed this to the plaintiff, their deed would not have authorized plaintiff to recover the property from the administrator. He would take as heir, and an heir cannot recover the property from the administrator before distribution. Bone-brake is administrator and holds the property as such. The estate has not yet been distributed. (McDaniel v. Pattison, 98 Cal. 86; Siddal v. Harrison, 73 Cal. 560.)
After the death of his wife plaintiff was appointed administrator and had the Los Angeles property sold and then resigned. A successor was appointed, and this suit was brought. In a suit for specific performance, which this is, it seems clear to me that the money must take the place of the real estate. Such it was
Nor do I think there is any evidence to sustain the finding that Mrs. Bedell accepted the deed with full knowledge of the alleged contract. To the contrary, all the evidence upon the subject is to the effect that she was told that her husband had only told Mrs. Simons that they would convey the property if his wife, Mrs. Bedell, approved of it, subject to a mortgage for the amount of the debt on the New York property. Plaintiff’s testimony and his letters all tend to show this.
I also think the case is, in principle, within the decision in Jackson v. Torrence, 83 Cal. 521, and that there was grave error in the admission in evidence of the statements of plaintiff’s wife —not made at the time of the alleged contract, but subsequent thereto—as against Mrs. Bedell. It is assumed that the property had all belonged to Mrs. Bedell as her separate property.
Suggestion is made, however, that the evidence discloses that all the property was community property of Mr. and Mrs. Bedell. If so, then title to the New York property did not pass by Mrs. Bedell’s deed to Mrs. Simons, and there was no consideration for the alleged agreement.
It might be argued with some plausibility that upon the facts found a suit might be maintained to cancel the deed to the New York property, but I am unable to comprehend any relief to which the plaintiff is entitled under those facts in regard to the Los Angeles property.
Henshaw, J., concurred in the dissenting opiniofL.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JAMES J. SIMONS v. JANE BEDELL
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Estates or Deceased Persons—Eight of Distribution—Equity Jurisdiction—Equitable Eights of Heir against Oo-heir.—It is within the jurisdiction of the superior court sitting in probate to determine who is entitled to the distribution of the estate of a deceased person; but, if no objection is raised to the equity jurisdiction of the court over an action brought by one of two sole heirs at law to have it determined as against the other heir and her husband, and the administrator of the estate, that plaintiff was entitled in equity to a conveyance of the interest of the other heirs in land belonging to the estate, and to have it adjudged that plaintiff was equitably entitled to all the proceeds of the sale of such land made by the administrator, the subject matter will be treated upon appeal as within the equity •jurisdiction. Id.—Sufficiency of Complaint in Equity—Proposed Will—Agreement fob Disposition of Property—A complaint in equity by the husband of the decedent, showing that deceased expressed a desire to will property in this state to him, and property in New York to her mother, who was the only other heir, and that it was agreed that if decedent would make no will, and would deed the New York land to her mother, the mother and her husband Would convey the land in this state to the plaintiff, and that she conveyed the New York property to her mother upon the understanding that her parents were to convey to plaintiff as agreed, though not distinctly alleging that decedent refrained from making a will devising the land in this state to plaintiff in consideration of the promise of her parents, is not obnoxious to a general demurrer for want of such distinct allegation, nor for violation of the rule that only ultimate and not evidentiary facts should be pleaded. Id.—Agreement of Father with Decedent—Agency—Conditions of Conveyance to Mother—Duty as to Notice.—Where the decedent’s father agreed with her that he and her mother would convey the lands in this state to plaintiff, if she would convey the New York property to her mother, it became the duty of the father correctly to inform the mother of the proposed conditions; and it is not necessary to allege or prove or find that the husband was the agent of his wife in making the agreement. Id.—Knowledge of Conditions—Duty of Grantee.—Ti the mother did not know of the conditions until after the death of her daughter, it became her duty when they were discovered either to comply with them by joining in the required conveyance to the plaintiff, or to surrender the property conveyed to her to the estate of the decedent. Id. — Ratification of Agreement—Enforcement of Conditions in Equity.—The mother’s acceptance and retention of the benefits of the conveyance made to her, which was the consideration of the agreement to convey the lands in this state to the plaintiff, was a ratification of the agreement, and she cannot retain its benefits and repudiate its obligations, but equity will compel the performance of them. Id.—Validity of Agreement as to Wife—Construction of Code.—Section 3390 of the Civil Code, providing that an agreement “to perform an act which the party has not the power lawfully to perform,” and an agreement “to procure the act or consent of the wife of the contracting party, or of any third person,” has no application to a case where the wife, though she could not be compelled in the first instance to carry out the terms of the agreement made by her husband, has accepted a conveyance which is the consideration of the agreement, and retained its benefits. Id.—Specific Performance against Married Woman—Unacknowledged Agreement.—Where a married woman has received and retained a conveyance which is the full consideration of a fair and equitable agreement to convey her separate estate, a specific performance of such agreement will be enforced, notwithstanding there is no acknowledgment of an instrument of agreement to convey. Id,— Sale of Property by Administrator—Alternative Decree.— Where the property to be conveyed was sold by the administrator by the order of the probate court, and the proceeds of the sale remain in the control of the court, it is within the power of the court in the case in equity to make an alternative decree directing payment to the plaintiff, or that he is entitled to the distribution of the proceeds, subject to the payment of the debts, charges and expenses of the estate. Id.—Evidence—Declarations of Defendant.—A conversation had between the decedent and her mother, who is one of the defendants, in reference to the property in controversy, was relevant; and a conversation between the decedent and her father, who is a codefendant, tending to prove the conditions upon which the deed to the mother was made, was admissible, though not made in the presence of the mother, and though there was no previous knowledge of or consent to the conditions on her part.