Broome v. Broome

This is an action in partition. The property sought to be partitioned is the following described real estate situate in the county of Ventura, state of California:

"All that tract of land known as the Broome Estate Ranch, consisting of the larger part of the Rancho Guadalasca, comprising two thousand acres more or less; the land called the 'Conejo Tract,' adjoining the Rancho Guadalasca on the east, comprising about six hundred sixty-three acres, and that part of the Rancho La Colonia which is situated between the county road known as the Hueneme Road, and the northwesterly boundary of said Rancho Guadalasca, comprising about four hundred sixty-three acres, together with the buildings and other improvements thereon."

This description is quoted from the complaint, at the time of the filing of which a summons was issued containing the same description, and a lis pendens also containing it, filed in the office of the county recorder of Ventura County. The defendant, Frances Broome, now appellant, demurred to the complaint on general grounds and specifically on the ground that its description of the property is not "proper, legal, sufficient or adequate." The demurrer being overruled, the court found on the issues of the cause in favor of the plaintiff, Thornhill Francis Broome, and decreed that the property should be partitioned between the parties to the action according to their respective interests therein. There are two appeals, one from the interlocutory decree of partition and from an order denying a new trial, and the other from the order appointing a receiver. The appeals have been consolidated into one, and its four main questions are (1) whether the court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause, *Page 640 appellant contending in this behalf that neither the complaint nor the lis pendens adequately described the property; (2) whether the trial court erred in finding that the services rendered by plaintiff's counsel were for the common benefit of all the parties to the action; (3) whether the decree of partial distribution entered in the estate of William Francis Broome, deceased, whereunder the plaintiff and the nonappealing defendants, Montague Watson Broome and Amy Lillian Broome, claim as tenants in common an interest in the land subjected to partition can be availed of as muniment of title; and, finally, (4) whether the court erred in failing to find upon the issue that the action was prematurely instituted presented by an allegation of the answer to the effect that the partial decree of distribution of the estate of the testator to the parties to the action had not become final before the date of the filing of the complaint in the action.

The third ground of the appeal may be dismissed with the observation that, as shown by the record, the decree of partial distribution in the estate of Richard Broome having become final prior to the commencement of this action, fixed and determined the rights of the distributees thereunder, subject only to defeasance as the result of fraud (Rountree v.Montague, 30 Cal.App. 170, 178, [157 P. 623]). While as to the fraud alleged to have been perpetrated in the procurement of this decree it would suffice to say that the finding of the trial court that there was none is amply sustained by the evidence, still it may not be amiss to further say, that the facts forming the fraud pleaded and relied upon in the answer of the defendant, Frances Broome, to defeat the finality of the decree of partial distribution in so far as it is claimed to have concerned and controlled the rights of the parties are, in substance, these: The parties had some ten months prior to the procurement of the decree of partial distribution agreed in writing, among other things, that the accounts of the defendant Frances Broome, as "the former executrix of the will of William Richard Broome, deceased, of her administration of said estate to be deemed balanced as of the date of the revocation of her letters testamentary and the same shall be allowed accordingly by order of the court. . . . That all of the property of the estate, real and personal, as shown by the final account of the said Frances Broome and now in the possession of said Frances Broome, together with any income received by *Page 641 her from said property since her removal and not reported in said account, to be delivered to the administrator with the will annexed for the purposes administration and distribution; . . . that the administrator with the will annexed file his final account and petition for final distribution of said estate and proceed diligently to secure the final distribution of said estate to the end that the decree of final distribution of said estate may be made on or before the 1st day of June, 1910; it being understood that this stipulation shall not be considered as a waiver of said Frances Broome's right of appeal from said final decree for the purpose of getting a legal construction of the last will of said Richard Broome, deceased, on file in this proceeding. . . . This stipulation is understood to be a complete and final compromise of all differences between the said heirs and legatees. . . ." The foregoing agreement was made and dated April 21, 1910, and it is alleged in the complaint that the defendant Frances Broome executed the same as the result of the persuasion and inducement of the plaintiff, Thornhill Francis Broome, and the attorney who was then representing her and the other defendants jointly in the matter of the administration of the estate of said deceased. On the 29th of November, 1910, the plaintiff, Thornhill Francis Broome, filed in the estate of William Richard Broome, deceased, his petition for a partial distribution, praying, among other things, that there be set apart and distributed to him as an heir at law of said deceased two-ninths of the residue remaining of said estate after provision made for the payment of all expenses of administration. Prior to the filing of this petition for partial distribution and prior to the making of the agreement hereinbefore referred to, namely, on August 4, 1909, the defendant Frances Broome jointly with the defendants Montague Watson Broome and Amy Lillian Broome, presented and filed a petition for the partial distribution of the estate of said deceased wherein they prayed that there be set apart to them, and to each of them, the proportion of said estate to which they were entitled under the terms and provisions of the last will and testament of the said deceased. On or about December 31, 1910, all of the said petitions for partial distribution came on for hearing and that of the plaintiff Thornhill Francis Broome was granted, but the petitions of the defendant Frances Broome and of the other defendants were denied upon the ground that there was no *Page 642 provision in the last will and testament of the said deceased for distribution to said defendants save in a manner prohibited by law. Thereafter, on January 3, 1911, the plaintiff Thornhill Francis Broome, represented by his counsel, and the defendants Amy Lillian Broome and Montague Watson Broome, represented by their counsel, entered into a written stipulation entitled "In the Matter of the Estate of William Richard Broome," wherein it was provided that the submission of the respective petitions of all of the parties, including that of the defendant Frances Broome, for partial distribution, be set aside, and that the decision thereon and theretofore made, be vacated, and that the petitioners Montague Watson Broome and Amy Lillian Broome might amend the prayer of their respective petitions by adding thereto and at the end thereof the following clause, to wit: "And your petitioners further pray that in the event the court shall so construe said will as not to permit a distribution of said estate according to its terms, the court distribute to said petitioners, and to each of them, the share of the estate to which in the opinion of the court they may be entitled respectively. . . ." The defendant Frances Broome, although named as a petitioner with the other defendants for partial distribution in the petition as originally filed, refused to become, and was not a party to the written stipulation last hereinbefore mentioned. On January 20, 1911, an order apparently in keeping with this last-mentioned stipulation was made by the court in the said estate which recited the fact of the original filing and hearing of the several petitions for partial distribution, the proceedings had thereon, and the determination thereof as above outlined, and that the same were resubmitted for decision on the evidence previously and originally received in support of the petitions; It was alleged that none of the defendants as the petitioners named in the petition for partial distribution as originally filed was represented in the proceedings which culminated in the order for resubmission and that at no time thereafter did the defendant Frances Broome receive any notice of the making thereof; and that the petitions referred to in the stipulation for resubmission were never at any time after the making of said order actually and formally amended, nor were any amendments ever served upon said defendant Frances Broome. On June 30, 1911, following said resubmission the court adjudged and decreed that the trust attempted to be created *Page 643 by the terms of the last will and testament of said deceased was void, and that the petition of the defendant, Frances Broome, therefore must be denied except as to the property specifically bequeathed to her, and that with that exception all of the property of the said estate belonged to the heirs at law of said deceased, and that the plaintiff Thornhill Francis Broome and the defendants Montague Watson Broome and Amy Lillian Broome were entitled to partial distribution of the property of said estate as in their respective interests prayed for. With these facts as a basis, it was alleged, as it is argued here, that said decree of partial distribution was obtained by fraud, in this, that it was petitioned for and granted subsequent to and despite the stipulation which purported to compromise the differences of the parties, which reserved unto the defendant Frances Broome the right of appeal from any decree of final distribution which would be ultimately entered in said estate to the end that she might procure a final legal construction of the scope and effect of the last will and testament of said deceased; and that relying upon the terms of said stipulation she was imposed upon and misled to the extent that she did not take or prosecute any appeal from said decree of partial distribution.

Now, then, is it not obvious that all of the foregoing makes a much ado about nothing? While the allegations of the answer involving the claim of fraud are extensive, they are not altogether free from equivocation and embrace but few farfetched facts which neither singly nor collectively suffice to make a satisfactory showing of fraud which had for its purpose the deluding and deceiving of the defendant, Frances Broome, into sleeping upon whatever right she may have had for a revocation of the decree of partial distribution. The stipulation of April 21, 1910, which was signed in person by the defendant Frances Broome and which, while purporting to be a compromise of the differences of all of the parties interested in the estate, reserved unto said Frances Broome the right to appeal from the final decree of distribution which might be entered in said estate was, as evidenced by its very terms, entered into primarily for the purpose of initiating and stimulating proceedings looking to an early and final distribution of the estate of deceased, and neither expressly nor by necessary implication is there anything to be found in the stipulation which gave the defendant Frances Broome any *Page 644 assurance that the proceeding for partial distribution would not be instituted prior to an application for final distribution. Nor can we conceive how the defendant Frances Broome because of anything contained in the stipulation could have been misled and deceived into foregoing her undoubted right, notwithstanding the stipulation, to appeal from the decree of partial distribution.

The alleged fact that Frances Broome was in no manner made a party to the proceedings for the resubmission of the several petitions for partial distribution, including her own, and which ultimately resulted in the decree complained of, is emphasized as an evidence of the fraud alleged to have been perpetrated in the procurement of the decree, but in response to this it need only be noted that the record is barren of any evidence, or even suggestion, that she did not have notice of that proceeding or that it was instituted and consummated without her knowledge.

In so far as is concerned the knowledge of the defendant Frances Broome of the petitions for partial distribution and the proceedings had thereon from their very inception until the making and entry of the decree, it will be noted further that the decree itself recites that all of the parties were represented in court by their respective counsel, and that due notice of the hearing of the petitions had been given to all of the parties interested, and in this behalf it will be further noted, that the answer of the defendant Frances Broome does not allege that the notices required by law of the pendency of the petitions and of the proceedings had thereunder were not given. In the absence of an allegation and a showing to the contrary, the presumption that the notices required by law were given must prevail. Moreover, upon this phase of the case, the record shows that the notice required by law on the hearing of all the petitions for partial distribution was given, and, in addition, the record contains much evidence to the effect that the defendant Frances Broome was in court on every occasion when there was any hearing in reference to the estate of William Richard Broome, deceased. In short, the evidence, direct and presumptive, upon this phase of the case, preponderates in favor of the finding of the trial court in this action that the defendant Frances Broome had "notice of all matters pending which culminated in the making of said decree of partial distribution," and that she was not in "any *Page 645 manner imposed upon or misled in connection with the obtaining of said decree of partial distribution or in connection with a reliance upon the finality and conclusiveness of the same, or imposed upon or misled at all." This view compels the conclusion that the decree of partial distribution constituted a sufficient muniment of title and disposes of the further contention that the action was prematurely brought. A determination of the latter question involved but a conclusion of law unnecessary, immaterial, and improper, therefore, to be found as a fact.

It is apparently conceded that the finding of the trial court relative to the allowance of attorneys' fees is not supported by the evidence, but in any event the finding of attorneys' fees had no proper place in the interlocutory decree, and therefore the judgment must be modified in that particular, leaving the subject of fees and costs to be determined by the final findings and judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 796;Harrington v. Goldsmith, 136 Cal. 168, [68 P. 594]; 30 Cyc. 301.)

Concerning the sufficiency of the description of the property sought to be partitioned to confer jurisdiction upon the court below to hear and determine the action, it is the contention of appellant, concisely stated, that the description of the land contained in the complaint, summons and lis pendens in a suit in partition must so describe the land sought to be partitioned as to render possible its location by a competent surveyor without the aid of extrinsic evidence. This contention is, in effect, rested largely upon the assumption that the statutory direction (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 755, 756), that the summons in partition shall contain "a description of the property sought to be partitioned," and the lis pendens "a description of the property to be affected thereby," calls for more particularity in the description of the property to be partitioned than is ordinarily required in other and different actions involving the title to the real property. No good purpose would be subserved by following the refinements of reasoning which permeate an elaborate and admirable brief presented in support of this contention, and we think it will suffice to say that, having in mind the language of the code sections under consideration, certainly no greater or less effect need be accorded descriptive words in the pleadings and preliminary process and proceedings in partition than that required to be accorded *Page 646 to descriptions and descriptive phrases in other actions involving the title to real property. "There is, indeed, authority for the position that the description in a complaint in partition may properly be less precise than elsewhere." (30 Cyc. 218.) Ordinarily, only reasonable certainty in description of property sought to be partitioned is required in the pleadings and proceedings in an action in partition, and this is primarily for the purpose of showing that the property is within the jurisdiction of the court so as to permit the defendant, if need be, to properly traverse the plaintiff's title, and enable the court to definitely determine and define the mode and extent of the partition to be made; and finally, to aid the commissioners upon an interlocutory decree to ascertain the estate ordered to be distributed in keeping with the terms of the partition. Consequently, only such a general description in limine is required as will lead to an identification of the property upon which the partition prayed for, if granted, will operate. (Sumner v. Hill, 157 Ala. 230, [47 So. 565]; Thruston v. Minke, 32 Md. 571.) In the case ofSumner v. Hill, supra, which was an action for partition, it was held that under the authorities there could be no question but that the designation of the property which was the subject matter of the action as the "Hancock Place" was a sufficient description when supplemented by proper parol identification. To the same effect is the case of Bogan v. Hamilton, 90 Ala. 454, [8 So. 186], which involved the sufficiency of a description which designated the property sought to be subjected to a vendor's lien as "well known as the Shook farm or place on the Coosa River." See, also, the case of Thruston v. Minke, supra, wherein it was held that the property to be partitioned was sufficiently described when described "as all that piece or parcel of ground situated in the city of Cumberland, called and known as the 'St. Nicholas Hotel property.' " While no authorities from California have been cited to us, and we have found none bearing directly on the precise question under consideration here, still the two cases of Baird v. Monroe, 150 Cal. 560, [89. Pac. 352], and Houghton v. Kern Valley Bank, 157 Cal. 289, [107 P. 113], which deal with the sufficiency of descriptions embodied in actions to enforce street assessments and tax sales, enunciate principles and rules readily applicable, we think, to the question presented in the case before us. The case of Baird v.Monroe, supra, although primarily *Page 647 an action to quiet title, nevertheless had for its basis a proceeding in invitum to the extent that it involved the sufficiency of the description of the property in suit as set forth in an assessment proceeding for the opening and widening of a city street, and there this court said, in effect, that a description "sufficient to identify the land" involved is one which, in conjunction with the knowledge presumptively possessed by property owners of the community in which the land is situated, operates to give notice of the exact property to be assessed and that, therefore, "a description of a tract of land by name is prima facie sufficient in an assessment, as it is presumed that the tract of land is well known by name . . . and, further, that the question as to whether the description is sufficient to identify the land is a question of fact to be determined from the evidence presented upon that issue." The case of Houghton v. Kern Valley Bank, supra, held that the question of whether or not a description in an assessment for taxes was sufficient was a question of fact to be determined by the trial court upon such evidence as may be presented to show its sufficiency to identify the land. Surely no greater strictness in description should be required in an action in partition than that applied to descriptions involving the validity of proceedings in invitum, and, consequently, we think there can be no question but that the designation in the complaint, summons, and lis pendens in the action before us of the land sought to be partitioned "as a tract of land known as the Broome Estate ranch," together with a general description of its extent and location, and coupled with the allegation of the complaint, summons, and lis pendens, that it was all situate in the county of Ventura, constituted a prima facie description sufficient, within the meaning of sections 755 and 756 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to warrant and support the institution of the action and which, when ultimately supplemented at the trial of the action, as was done, by proper parol identification, was amply sufficient to enable the court to hear and determine the merits of the action.

The appeal from the order appointing a receiver is founded in the contention that the trial court was without jurisdiction to entertain the action at all. This appeal is, therefore, disposed of by our conclusion previously stated concerning the jurisdiction of the trial court. *Page 648

The decree appealed from is modified by striking therefrom the allowance of attorneys' fees, and, as so modified, the decree and the order appointing a receiver will stand affirmed.

Wilbur, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.

Hearing in Bank denied.

All the Justices concurred.