Summary
In Peiser v. Bradbury, 138 Cal. 570 [ 72 P. 165], it was held that a deed operated as an assignment of a contract of sale.
Summary of this case from Whittaker v. E.E. McCalla Co.Opinion
S.F. No. 2501.
March 11, 1903.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco. James M. Troutt, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
E.C. Chapman, for Appellant.
Devoto Richardson, W.A. Richardson, and Richardson Long, for Lemuel Peiser, Respondent.
Gunnison, Booth Bartnett, for Defendants, Respondents.
This appeal is from the judgment upon the judgment-roll alone. Mrs. Peiser, wife of the plaintiff, on May 1, 1889, purchased from J. Fisher Smith two lots in the city of San Francisco, for the price of seven hundred dollars each, and paid in full for one of the lots, and received a deed conveying that lot to her, and a contract to convey the other upon payment of the several installments of purchase money stated therein.
On June 21, 1889, she executed to one Griffin a deed purporting to convey to him both lots, and on June 24, 1889, Griffin executed a deed to defendant Bradbury, purporting to convey both lots. Griffin paid no consideration for the conveyance to him, but Bradbury paid to Griffin five hundred dollars as the consideration for his conveyance. Neither Griffin nor Bradbury ever paid anything to Smith or to any one upon the contract for the second lot. No further reference need be made to the first lot (which was paid for and conveyed to Mrs. Peiser), as respondent concedes, or at least acquiesces in the conclusion that his claim thereto is barred by the statute of limitations, so that what is said hereafter relates solely to the second lot, unless the first is specially referred to.
The assignment of the contract for the second lot was made by Mrs. Peiser to the plaintiff, who paid to Smith the money due under said contract in full, and demanded a deed therefor, which his heirs at law (he having died, and his estate having been distributed to them) were ready to make when it should be determined who was entitled thereto.
The court, in addition to the foregoing facts, found that all the money paid for both lots was paid by the plaintiff out of moneys earned by him after his marriage to Mrs. Peiser; that he had been in possession of the property during all the times mentioned in the complaint; that Bradbury was not a bona fide purchaser, but took the conveyance thereof with notice of the plaintiff's rights thereto; that he paid nothing towards the fulfillment of said contract; and that at the time he took said conveyance no part of the purchase price had been paid.
The heirs of Smith were made defendants, and answered that they were ready to convey as the court should direct, and do not appeal.
The only question necessary to be considered is presented by appellant's demurrer to the complaint, upon the ground that plaintiff's action is barred by section 164 of the Civil Code.
Said section as it existed at the date of said contract (May 1, 1889), so far as material, was as follows: "Whenever any property is conveyed to a married woman by an instrument in writing, the presumption is, that the title is thereby vested in her as her separate property. . . . The presumption in this section mentioned is conclusive in favor of a purchaser or encumbrancer in good faith and for a valuable consideration." (Stats. 1889, p. 328.) The subsequent amendments (Stats. 1893, p. 71, and Stats. 1897, p. 63) add some other provisions which need not be quoted at length. They relate to cases where married women have conveyed real property which they acquired prior to May 19, 1889, and bar the husband or his or their heirs or assigns from commencing any action to show that such real property was community property, or to recover the same, from and after July 1, 1894.
The contract to purchase said lot, executed by Smith, was not a conveyance. It is from "conveyances" alone the presumption arises that "title" is vested in a married woman as her separate property, and such presumption, when it arises, is conclusive only "in favor of a purchaser or encumbrancer in good faith, and for a valuable consideration," and the court found that appellant, Bradbury, received the conveyance from Griffin with the full knowledge that said property was not the property of Minnie M. Peiser, and that she was a married woman, and, further, that he was not a bona fide purchaser without notice of plaintiff's title. Besides, it is clear that the deed executed by Mrs. Peiser to Griffin conveyed no title to the second lot. At the most it could only operate as an assignment of the contract which was wholly unperformed, and there is no pretense that either Griffin or appellant ever paid any part of the purchase money therein agreed to be paid, or obtained possession under it.
The reference made by appellant to the case of Peiser v. Griffin, 125 Cal. 9, is wholly outside of the record, nor is there any conflict with that case upon any question of law discussed herein. The property in question in that case was the same as in this, and it was there held that "if the property was community property, the legal title remained in the husband, notwithstanding that the deed was taken in the name of the wife, and the wife could not pass title to it. An attempt of the wife to dispose of community property is a nullity." And as the court found that plaintiff had been in possession during all the times mentioned in the complaint, Bradbury could not have acquired title by adverse possession.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Gray, C., and Cooper, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
McFarland, J., Lorigan, J., Angellotti, J.