Plaintiff, a judgment creditor of defendant Wilson H. Soale, instituted this action to have a certain deed and conveyance executed by said defendant to his codefendant declared null and void as having been made without consideration and for the purpose of preventing satisfaction of plaintiff's judgment. The decree was rendered as prayed for and both defendants appealed.
In the year 1908 the appellants purchased certain real property in the county of Los Angeles, for which a consideration of eight thousand dollars was paid, this money, so the evidence showed, being at the time of the investment the separate property of appellant Carl B. Soale, who is the wife of appellant Wilson H. Soale. A contract of purchase was first entered into on the part of these appellants as vendees, in which contract the amount of money mentioned was agreed to be paid as a consideration for the transfer, and the character of deed mentioned in this contract as required to be given was a "grant" deed. Both of these appellants signed the contract of purchase, and when the deed was made out it contained the recital that the grantors did "grant to Carl B. Soale and Wilson H. Soale, her husband, as joint tenants with the right of survivorship," the property of which a description followed. This deed was recorded on the twenty-first day of July, 1908, in the office of the county recorder. On August 6, 1912, judgment was rendered in favor of respondent herein against appellant Wilson H. Soale. On the following day and before this judgment was entered so as to become a lien against real property standing in the name of said appellant, appellant Wilson H. Soale made his deed which purported to transfer to his wife all of his interest in the real property. Respondent, his judgment creditor, upon the entry of her judgment, caused execution to issue and a levy to be made against the *Page 311 interest of her judgment debtor in the real property, and then brought this action to have the conveyance of Soale to his wife set aside. Appellants in their answer denied that Wilson H. Soale had any interest in the real property at all, and alleged that the same had been at all times subsequent to the purchase thereof the sole and separate property of Carl B. Soale. This issue was decided adversely to their claims, and the question is presented here as to whether the evidence heard was sufficient to sustain the judgment declared by the court. On behalf of respondent it is insisted that there is ample evidence to support the finding of the trial court that appellant Wilson H. Soale, at the time respondent obtained her judgment against him, held a joint tenant's interest in the property, which he had acquired by gift from his wife. This contention makes it necessary that the evidence be examined in detail. It must be admitted at the outset that, in so far as the express declarations of appellants are shown to have been given in testimony, such declarations negative wholly the claim that there was an intention on the part of the wife to make a gift to her husband of an interest in the real property. The trial judge, however, in making up his conclusions, was required to take into consideration all of the circumstances surrounding the transaction and determine from them what the intent of the parties really was. (Title Ins. etc. Co. v.Ingersoll, 153 Cal. 1, [94 P. 94]; Reed v. Reed, 135 Ill. 482, [25 N.E. 1095]; Brunner v. Title Ins. Trust Co., 26 Cal.App. 35, [145 P. 741].) And if upon this review it may be said that there was some substantial evidence upon which to found the judgment as entered, such judgment cannot be disturbed. As before mentioned, it appeared that both appellants signed the contract of purchase, and, in so far as their relation to that contract is concerned, it would appear to an unadvised third party that they were taking a joint ownership in the property. The wife testified that she gave no direction as to what form the deed was to take, and the husband, when asked regarding any direction which he gave affecting that matter, was stopped by an objection from his counsel, and this objection was sustained by the court. At any rate, it did appear that in the following year, about April, the wife, so she testified, learned of the condition of the deed as to its form and knew that it made her husband the joint tenant in the property with herself. When asked whether, if plaintiff had not obtained a *Page 312 judgment against her husband, she would have required any change to be made in the deed, she expressed uncertainty and left her testimony as to that particular, subject to a fair inference to be drawn by the court that she would not have required any change to be made. At any rate, she testified that when her husband told her of the fact that judgment had been obtained against him by this respondent, she requested him to make the deed to her, which he did immediately. It fairly appeared, also, that the appellants kept their bank account in a form so that it could be drawn upon by either party. We have, then, it shown in proof that the appellants jointly engaged to purchase the real estate mentioned in the pleadings and that they received a deed by which their interests were declared to be joint, with right of survivorship. As to who gave the direction to have the deed made in this somewhat unusual form, seems immaterial, because the wife, when she learned that it had been so made, raised no objection to it until three years had elapsed, and at the trial fairly intimated that she never would have objected to it had it not been that judgment was obtained against the husband. If she had determined to leave title to the property in such a form as that the husband upon her death should secure her interest in it, then we think a gift of the joint interest was effectuated beyond her power to afterward, and after a creditor had reduced a claim against her husband to judgment, recall. If the gift had become effectual, then there could be no return gift made by the husband which would have the effect of defeating the claims of his creditors. Taking all of the facts and circumstances shown in evidence, we think that it must be said that the judgment finds some support in proof and that it should be affirmed.
In respondent's complaint filed in this action she alleged as preliminary matter the entire history of the transaction upon which she obtained her judgment, which included a recitation of fraudulent acts committed by the appellant Wilson H. Soale. A motion to strike out these matters was made and denied and a bill of exceptions prepared to cover that ruling. Of course, the material thing to be shown by the respondent, the plaintiff, was that she occupied the relation of a judgment creditor. It was not necessary to set out the history of the litigation or an abstract of the pleadings of the action in which the judgment was obtained. Nevertheless, as *Page 313 respondent suggests, the introduction of the judgment-roll on making proof of the judgment would have shown in substance the same matters which it was sought to have stricken out of her complaint in this action. The fact that appellants admitted the entry of judgment does not render any technical error of the court made by the ruling on the motion prejudicial.
The judgment is affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on March 2, 1916.