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Biggi v. Biggi

Supreme Court of California
Mar 29, 1893
98 Cal. 35 (Cal. 1893)

Summary

In Biggi v. Biggi (1893) 98 Cal. 35, 37, 39-40 [32 P. 803], the court characterized such a contract between a husband and wife who jointly owned a parcel of real property as "an agreement for the division of their property," but held only that the contract prevented either spouse from seeking a judicial partition until the contract was breached, and that the contract was enforceable.

Summary of this case from 14859 Moorpark Homeowner's Ass'n v. Vrt Corp.

Opinion

         Department One

         Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Alameda County and from an order denying a new trial.

         COUNSEL:

         Upon the entry of the decree of divorce, title to an undivided one-half interest in the lands in dispute vested in the plaintiff. (De Godey v. Godey , 39 Cal. 157.) The defendants were estopped by the agreement of October 23, 1888, from denying that the lands were, at the time of the divorce, community property, or that plaintiff's interest therein was an undivided one half. (Rhine v. Ellen , 36 Cal. 362; Carey v. Brown , 62 Cal. 373; Belcher Con. G. Min. Co. v. Deferrari , 62 Cal. 160; Dodge v. Walley , 22 Cal. 225; Tartar v. Hall , 3 Cal. 263; Montgomery v. Whiting , 40 Cal. 299.) The agreement was such as the parties had the right to make. (Civ. Code, sec. 159.) The agreement absolutely determined the lands to be community property, and established the right of the plaintiff to one half thereof, which ripened into a perfect title upon the entry of the decree of divorce. (De Godey v. Godey , 39 Cal. 157.) The agreement did not operate to convey the interest of the plaintiff in the lands in dispute. This is shown by the agreement of the defendant to pay rent. This amounted to a lease and estops the defendant from denying the plaintiff's title. (Standley v. Stephens , 66 Cal. 541; Mauldin v. Cox , 67 Cal. 387.) All parts of a contract should be construed together to ascertain intention, and effect should be given to every part and word if possible. (Civ. Code, secs. 1068, 1636, 1641; 2 Parsons on Contracts, 504; Brannan v. Mesick , 10 Cal. 95.)

         George W. Reed, and George M. Shaw, for Appellant.

          Hall & Earl, and Dodge & Fry, for Respondents.


         The words claimed to constitute an estoppel are mere recitals of collateral facts unnecessary to a conveyance, and therefore do not have that effect. (Ingersoll v. Truebody , 40 Cal. 603; McGarrahan v. Min. Co ., 49 Cal. 331.) A vendee may deny his vendor's title when claiming under another title. (Grattan v. Wiggins , 23 Cal. 39; Cannon v. Stockmon , 36 Cal. 535; Trenath v. Gilbert , 63 Cal. 407.) The words cannot constitute an equitable estoppel (estoppel in pais ), for such estoppel never takes place where one party did not intend to mislead, and the other party is not actually mislead. (Anderson's Law Dict., p. 416; 30 N.Y. 541.) Equitable estoppels never extend to divest title to land. (Davis v. Davis , 26 Cal. 41.) The agreement operated is a conveyance of any interest of the plaintiff in the land in dispute, as the agreement contained sufficient and apt operative words of conveyance, and there is nothing to contradict them. The agreement should be most strongly construed against the plaintiff. (Dodge v. Walley , 22 Cal. 225.) The operative words of conveyance must control and cannot be contradicted. (Rhine v. Ellen , 36 Cal. 362.) Admitting that the defendant under the agreement holds the property in trust to sell the same and divide the proceeds, still the plaintiff gets no estate or interest in the land. She simply has a chose in action, a right to enforce the trust. (Civ. Code, sec. 863.) The beneficiary of an express trust has no estate, legal or equitable, in the land. (Ward v. Waterman , 85 Cal. 488.)

         A conveyance by one spouse to the other for a valuable consideration, converts community property into separate property. (Taylor v. Opperman , 79 Cal. 468.) The court did not err in quieting title of respondent as against appellant. Appellant's right to one half of the proceeds of the sale of the land gave her no title to the land, legal or equitable. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 863; Ward v. Waterman , 85 Cal. 488, 506.)

         JUDGES: Harrison, J. Garoutte, J., and Paterson, J., concurred.

         OPINION

          HARRISON, Judge

          [32 P. 804] The plaintiff was at one time the wife of the defendant, Narcisso, and in October, 1888, pending an action between them for divorce, they entered into an agreement for the division of their property, in which it was provided that a lot of land situated on San Pablo Avenue, in Oakland, should be sold, and the proceeds of the sale equally divided between them, but that such sale should not be for less than three thousand one hundred dollars, and that whenever an offer should be made therefor, one Vandercook should be the exclusive judge as to the value of said premises, and as to accepting or rejecting said offer, and that they would abide by his judgment, and sell the premises for such sum as Vandercook might determine. This lot of land had been purchased during the marriage of the parties, and the title thereto taken in the names of them both; but the judgment of divorce which was afterwards rendered between them, was silent upon the disposition of the community property. In June, 1889, Vandercook received an offer of three thousand two hundred dollars for the property, which he deemed sufficient therefor, and which the plaintiff agreed to accept; but the defendant, when requested thereto, refused to accept the offer, or sign a contract of sale, unless he should receive the entire proceeds thereof. The plaintiff thereupon brought this action, alleging in her complaint that the land was owned in common between her and the defendant, Narcisso, setting forth the foregoing agreement and the refusal of the defendant to comply with its terms, and asking for a sale of the land and the division of the proceeds between them. The defendant in his answer denied that the plaintiff had any interest in the land, and also denied that he had refused to accept the offer which the plaintiff alleged had been made for the land. Upon the trial the court found that the defendant was the owner in fee of the entire tract of land, and that the plaintiff had no interest therein, and rendered judgment against the plaintiff, and also a judgment in favor of the defendant, Narcisso, upon his cross-complaint therefor, quieting his title to the land, as against the plaintiff. The court did not make any finding upon the issue of the defendant's refusal to accept the three thousand two hundred dollars offer.

         The finding of the court that the defendant was the owner in fee of the entire tract, and that the plaintiff had no interest therein, is contrary to the evidence. The conveyance of the land to the husband and wife made it presumptively community property, and their subsequent divorce, without any disposition of that property in the decree, left them tenants in common thereof (De Godey v. Godey , 39 Cal. 157); and the fact that the title had been conveyed to them both caused each of them to be thereafter the holder of the legal title to one half of the land. The agreement between them prior to the decree of divorce, was a recognition by the husband that it was community property, and that the plaintiff was entitled to one half thereof.

         The contention by the respondent that by the aforesaid agreement between the parties, the plaintiff conveyed to the defendant whatever interest she had in the land in question, and that her rights against him are only an obligation on his part to pay her one half of the proceeds of any sale that he may make, is contrary to a proper construction of the instrument. The provision therein that until the property should be sold the husband should be entitled to its possession and occupancy, and should pay to the plaintiff six dollars per month therefor, and the further provision that "the parties hereto agree to abide by the judgment of said Vandercook, and to sell said premises for such sum, offered or not, as said Vandercook may determine," are inconsistent with the proposition that the plaintiff's title to the land passed to the defendant by the instrument, and show that whenever a sale should be made in accordance with its terms, it was to be made by both parties, and that the consent of the plaintiff, as well as of the defendant, was necessary to effect the sale. The clause relied upon by the respondent wherein the plaintiff "releases and acquits said party of the first part from all and every claim of every character and kind whatsoever to other property, other than said one-half interest in said life estate, and the one half of said net proceeds of said sale, as aforesaid," when read in connection with the other portions of the instrument, and the purposes for which the parties recite that they have executed the agreement, must be construed as relating to "other" property than that enumerated in the instrument, and not as a release of her interest in the property out of whose sale she was to receive one half of the proceeds.

         For the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties, and the interpretation to be given to the instrument, all of its parts must be considered, and when so considered, it is to be construed as a mutual, executory agreement on the part of both parties that they will consent to a sale of the land for such sum, not less than three thousand one hundred dollars, as may be [32 P. 805] approved by Vandercook, and that upon such sale each will accept one half of the proceeds thereof. As in the case of any other executory agreement, its breach by one party gave to the other the right to treat it as rescinded or to seek for its enforcement. It may be conceded that until a breach by either party, the right to a partition of the land between them was superseded or suspended; but the refusal of the defendant to perform the agreement, and his denial of the right of the plaintiff to its performance, gave her the right to disregard the agreement, and either bring an action for the partition of the land, or treat the agreement as existing, and seek its enforcement against the defendant. For this purpose the plaintiff alleged in her complaint the facts constituting the breach by the defendant, and the court should have made a finding upon this issue, as the evidence in the record is ample to sustain her allegations. Upon such finding, inasmuch as her allegation in the complaint that the land could not be partitioned without great prejudice to the owners thereof was not denied, her right to a judgment for its sale and the division of the proceeds between them would have been established.

         The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.


Summaries of

Biggi v. Biggi

Supreme Court of California
Mar 29, 1893
98 Cal. 35 (Cal. 1893)

In Biggi v. Biggi (1893) 98 Cal. 35, 37, 39-40 [32 P. 803], the court characterized such a contract between a husband and wife who jointly owned a parcel of real property as "an agreement for the division of their property," but held only that the contract prevented either spouse from seeking a judicial partition until the contract was breached, and that the contract was enforceable.

Summary of this case from 14859 Moorpark Homeowner's Ass'n v. Vrt Corp.
Case details for

Biggi v. Biggi

Case Details

Full title:THERESA BIGGI, Appellant, v. NARCISSO BIGGI et al., Respondents

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Mar 29, 1893

Citations

98 Cal. 35 (Cal. 1893)
32 P. 803

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