Kyle v. Craig

COOPER, C.

This action was brought by one Robert Bright to have it adjudged that the defendant holds the legal title to certain real estate, described in the complaint, in trust for plaintiff, and that defendant be required to execute and deliver to plaintiff a good and sufficient deed to said real -estate, and also to recover certain moneys that are alleged to -be the property of plaintiff, and held by defendant in trust for him. The facts, as shown by the record -and found by the court, are in substance as follows: The original plaintiff, Robert Bright, and the defendant were brother and sister, and for many years prior to June 7, 1895, they had lived together in the same house and on the most friendly and confidential relations. The plaintiff was then about seventy-eight years -old and the defendant about seventy-six. About the 31st of May, 1895, the original plaintiff was afflicted with a severe stroke of paralysis and became so ill -that on the seventh day of June following he was in danger and expectation of immediate death, and while in such condition he assigned to defendant deposits amounting to about seventeen thousand dollars in certain savings banks, and also executed and acknowledged a deed to defendant of certain real *110estate in the city and county of San Francisco particularly described in the complaint. The assignment and deed were made with the understanding that defendant should, after the death of the original plaintiff, dispose of the property according to certain instructions given to defendant by said plaintiff. The deed was n'ever delivered to defendant, but was placed in a drawer of a table in a room -then occupied by said plaintiff, and afterward, without the knowledge or consent of said plaintiff, defendant took the deed from the said drawer, and on January 7, 1896, placed the same of record with the county recorder of the city and county of San Francisco. There was no consideration for the said deed or the transfer of said bank accounts. After the ninth day of June, 1895, the plaintiff ceased to be in danger of immediate death, and afterward he demanded of defend ant that she deed, assign, and transfer the said property back to plaintiff, all of which she refused to do. She not only refused to reconvey the property, but claimed to be the owner of it and seised in fee of the real estate. The plaintiff, on the second day of March, 1897, and before the trial of this case, died, and on the eighth day of March, 1897, the present plaintiffs, as special administrators of his estate, were substituted, and plaintiffs are now the executors of the last will and testament of the original plaintiff. After the date of the transfers of said real and personal property, and prior to the death of the original plaintiff, defendant had laid out and expended two thousand dollars for taxes, insurance, nursing of plaintiff, et cetera. Upon these facts the court below deducted two thousand dollars from the amount of the said deposits, and gave judgment against defendant for the balance, and that the defendant has no right, title, or interest in said real estate, and that defendant deliver up the said deed to be canceled and be enjoined from setting up any claim to the lands therein described. A motion was made for a new trial, which was denied, and this appeal by defendant is from the judgment and -order. The record is quite voluminous, and counsel for appellant has filed a brief of thirty-four printed pages. Counsel for plaintiff Have not seen fit to file a reply, and thus the full labor of investigating all the questions raised in appellant’s brief is thrown upon this court with no assistance from plaintiff’s counsel.

*111Defendant’s counsel urges that the demurrer to the amended complaint should have been sustained upon several different grounds. The complaint sets forth what is claimed to be the facts in two counts, the first count being in regard to the real estate and the second count in regard to the deposits in the bank. The main facts are set forth by the pleader “as having occurred June 7, 1895, as a part of the same transaction.” The principal ground of demurrer, and the one first urged, is “that said complaint sets up two counts for one cause of action.” This is not one of the grounds of demurrer laid down in the code (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 430), and no others can be considered. (Hentch v. Porter, 10 Cal. 558; Bernero v. South Bend etc. Co., 65 Cal. 386.) The cases cited in appellant’s brief relate to where a single act or transaction is made the subject of separate actions. Here we have only one action in regard to one transaction, although the same is set forth in two separate counts. The counts might be' both considered together as a narration of the facts upon which plaintiff relies for a recovery. If the facts are fully set out, although given in what the pleader calls separate counts, each numbered into separate paragraphs, it can make no difference and cannot injure or prejudice the defendants in any way. It is next claimed that the first count does not state a cause of action because it is an attempt to have the court declare a transaction in regard to real property to have been donatio causa mortis, and that a gift in view of death applies to personal property only.

The answer to this is that the pleader states that the deed^ was without consideration and was never delivered to defendant. If a grantee named in a deed, to whom the deed was never delivered, and for which there was no consideration, wrongly/ gets possession of the deed and places it upon record, and then' claims to own the property therein described, it seems to us that; the grantor, upon stating and proving these facts, would be en-j titled to relief. The point is further urged that the complaint ¡ is uncertain and ambiguous in that it avers that the defendant would dispose of the real and personal property in accordance with certain written instructions, and that the same are not set out and it is impossible to determine what they were. The complaint sets forth that as the transfers were made in view of *112immediate death, that defendant was to carry out certain written‘instructions in case plaintiff should die. As the plaintiff did not die, but lived to claim his property, and as the gist of the action is to compel a reconveyance, the written instructions are immaterial. There is no claim that any written instructions should be enforced, and no claim as to anything caused by the want of such instructions being carried out. We think the demurrer was properly overruled. For the reasons given in regard to ruling upon the demurrer it was not error for the court to refuse to compel the plaintiff to proceed upon one count only of his complaint. It is claimed that the court committed many errors in overruling defendant’s objections to testimony. There are eighty-seven of these assignments of errors in the transcript, argued under twenty-seven different assignments in appellant’s brief. In the first assignment it is said that the court erred' in overruling the defendant’s objections to three questions asked of the witness, Dr. Mays. The witness had attended Robert Bright more or less for five years. He was .called in to see him professionally about May 21, 1895, and attended him about twice a day until June 17th. The questions were then asked of the witness:

“Q. Did you find him in the same condition during that time?” The 'witness answered: “His condition varied, improving slightly after a few months; during the first week following the 30th of May his condition became worse.”
“Q. As a matter of fact, doctor, was Robert Bright in danger of death at that time?” The witness in answer said: “There was considerable danger of death. For some time I thought death might ensue at any time.” ....
“Q. Did he take these opiates in sufficient quantities to impair his capacity?” The witness answered: “Ho, simply sufficient to allay the pain.”

All these questions were objected to upon the sole ground that they were leading, and the objection overruled. This court would not reverse a case for error in the matter of admission of testimony unless the errors were in regard to a material matter affecting the substantial rights of the parties. (Kiler v. Kimbal, 10 Cal. 267.) It is a well-settled rule in this state that the allowance of leading questions is in the discretion of the trial *113court, and that a case will not he reversed on such ground unless there is a manifest abuse of discretion. (White v. White, 82 Cal. 452.)

We think, while the questions were leading, that there was not such an abuse of discretion as would warrant us in holding the rulings to be reversible error. One Capp had been for many years, and was on the 4th of June, 1895, the agent and business manager of the said Robert Bright. He was sent for by Bright on said day and for the purpose of having some disposition made of his property in case he should die. When called as a witness, after some preliminary questions, and after stating that in response to a call from a messenger he went to the house where Bright was staying, this question was asked: “Q. State what conversation you had with Mr. Bright on this occasion.” The question was objected to upon the ground “that is was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial.” The objection was overruled and exception taken. It is said that this ruling was error, for the reason that the conversation was not had in the presence of defendant, and that even if she had been present it was irrelevant and immaterial, and, further, that a deed cannot be invalidated by subsequent declarations of the grantor. We think the evidence was relevant and material as a part of the res gestae. The witness had 'been called upon to make certain arrangements about Bright’s property in case he should die. It seems Bright wanted to make a will and at first talked about that, but afterward concluded to make a deed to his sister, and gave the witness a statement of what he wanted his sister to do with the property in case he should die. It was alleged in the complaint that the transfers were made without consideration and in expectation of immediate death. The answer took issue upon this. It was, therefore, necessary to inquire fully into the acts done by Robert Bright, and his motives and intentions. The very question to be determined was as to whether or not the transfers were made with a belief on the part of Robert Bright that he was nearing the presence of the monster, Death. The testimony was not as to what Bright said after the transfers, but what he said before he made them, and as a part of what was to be done.

Where it is necessary to inquire into the motive of a particular *114act, and the intention of the person who did the act, proof of what the person said at the time of doing it is admissible in evidence for the purpose of showing its true character. (1 Green-leaf on Evidence, sec. 108; 1 Rice on Evidence, sec. 211b; 1 Phillips on Evidence, 233.) In the case of Lund v. Tyngsborough, 9 Cush. 43, the court, in a very learned and exhaustive review of the law as to the admissibility of hearsay evidence, said: “Perhaps the most common and largest class of cases in which declarations are admissible is that in which the state of mind or motive with which any particular act is done is the subject of inquiry,” and after discussing the many rules and exceptions laid down the rule "When the act of a party may be given in evidence, his declarations, made at the time, and calculated to elucidate and explain the character and quality of the act, and so connected with it as to constitute one transaction, and so as to derive credit from the act itself, are admissible in evidence. The credit which the act or fact gives to the accompanying declarations as a part of the transaction, and the tendency of the contemporary declarations as part of the transaction to explain the particular fact, distinguish this class of declarations from mere hearsay.”

It is earnestly contended that the court erred in allowing Bright to testify, under the objections of defendant, as to his intentions when he executed the deed and transfers of property to defendant. We think the testimony was competent and material. The intentions and motives of Bright were the material matters being investigated. In such cases the universal rule is to receive the witnesses’ testimony as to his intentions. (Wharton on Evidence, secs. 482, 508, 955; Snow v. Paine, 114 Mass. 526; Barnhart v. Fulkerth, 93 Cal. 499.) The objections and exceptions in the transcript from the seventh to the eighty-seventh, inclusive, are to questions asked in the deposition of the plaintiff, which was admitted and read in evidence. A large number of questions are objected to upon the ground that they are leading. It does not appear from the record whether or not the objections were made at the time of taking the deposition, but it does appear that counsel for defendant attended at the examination. The code (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 2032) lays down the rule that in taking a deposition, if the par*115ties attend at the examination, no objection to the form of an interrogatory shall be made at the trial unless the same was stated at the time of the examination.

We have examined all the assignments as to errors in receiving testimony under the objections of defendant, and we do not find any one of sufficient importance that we think we would be justified in holding the rule prejudicial error.

The deposition of Robert Bright was offered in evidence, and counsel for defendant objected to it being read upon the ground “that if was taken in shorthand by a shorthand reporter not appointed by the court, and transcribed into longhand by such reporter against the objections of defendant’s counsel made at the time.” The court below asked counsel for defendant if there was any claim that the deposition was not correctly transcribed, and counsel said: “That as to that he could not say.” The certificate of the notary shows that when the deposition was transcribed into longhand it was by the notary carefully read to the witness, and, being by him first corrected, was subscribed by the witness in the absence of the notary. It is claimed that the words of the witness must be written down by the notary unless the parties agreed upon a different mode. (Citing Code Civ. Proc., sec. 2006.)

Counsel says in his brief: “It is not claimed that the notary might not have employed a clerk to write down the questions and answers with a pen or machine, but it was improper to employ the sister of counsel for plaintiff.” It does not appear, except in the brief of counsel, that the sister of counsel for plaintiff was employed as shorthand reporter. If the notary could employ a clerk to write down the questions and answers with a machine, we fail to see why a reporter could not take down the questions and answers. When a witness gives an answer and it is written out in longhand, it could not be a valid objection that the answer remained in the memory of the writer until he committed it to paper. But clearly when an answer is given by a witness it remains with the person writing and in his memory until it is transferred to paper. If the writer should take it. down in characters only known to himself, and thus preserve the memorandum of each question and answer until he afterward had time to write it down in longhand, we fail to see why, *116when finally transferred to longhand, it is not written down as completely as if done as the words fell one by one from the lips of the witness. We think the code clearly contemplates this course. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 2038.) The language is, “Upon the appearance of the witness the judge or justice must cause his testimony to be taken in writing,” et cetera. It is also provided that the deposition, when completed, must be carefully read to the witness and corrected if desired and then subscribed by him. This makes the reading, correcting, and signing the necessary and material thing to be done, and it was done in this case. The object of requiring the witness to sign the deposition is to make him responsible for its phraseology, for by signing he adopts the language as his own. (Weeks on Law of Depositions, sec. 321.) It is claimed that the court failed to find on some of the material issues. -Our attention is not called to any material issue upon which there is no finding, and as counsel has not seen fit to point out in his brief the particular issue or issues upon which there should have been a finding, it cannot be expected that we will go through the record on an independent voyage of discovery.

Defendant’s counsel assigns some fifteen errors in which he claims the evidence is insufficient to justify the findings. The only specification wherein the evidence is alleged to be insufficient is, “The evidence is insufficient to justify,” et cetera. Unless the particulars in which the evidence is said to he Insufficient to justify any particular finding or part thereof are pointed out in the assignment of error, we cannot notice the assignments here. (Code Civ. Proc., see. 659; De Molera v. Martin, 120 Cal. 544.)

And even if the specifications in the assignments of error were sufficient, counsel has not pointed out in his brief and called our attention to the particular finding or findings claimed to have no support in the evidence, and the particulars In which such finding is not supported by -the evidence. In such case we do not deem it our duty to investigate the questions as to the- insufficiency of the evidence,

We advise that the judgment and order be affirmed.

Chipman, C., and Britt, C., concurred.

*117For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are affirmed.

Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Dyke, J.

Hearing in Bank denied.