Court Opinion

ID: 4732567
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:56:58.235592+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:08:06.845639
License: Public Domain

Fullerton, J.
— The respondents brought this action against the appellant to quiet their title to an undivided one-half interest in certain real property. They had judgment in the court below, and this appeal was taken therefrom.
The property in question consisted of two lots, situated in the city of Centraba, on which there was a building used as a rooming and boarding house. The property was acquired by the appellant while she was a single woman. Subsequent to its acquisition, she intermarried with one George N. Munson, and after the marriage, deeded to Munson, by a quitclaim deed, an undivided one-half interest in the property subject to two certain mortgages, the one for $400, and the other for $100. The deed was executed on October 23, 1909, and recited that it was made for a “valuable consideration and one dobar.” Subsequent to the execution of the deed, Munson resided on the premises with the appellant for some one and one-half years. The court found that the deed was a gift from the appebant to her husband., The evidence, however, we think would have justified a different finding. The appebant testified that Munson agreed to pay, as a consideration for the deed, the mortgages on the premises and certain *236other obligations then due the nature of which was not made clear, possibly certain back taxes, and overdue insurance premiums. A portion of these obligations he did pay, but whether all that was due or not, the evidence does not show. But whether the deed is founded on a good or a valuable consideration is not very material. A good consideration is sufficient to its validity, it being otherwise regular.
On July 8, 1911, George N. Munson, for a consideration of $800, conveyed by warranty deed, to the respondent Charles R. Powers, his undivided one-half interest in the property. In this deed the appellant did not join, and when the respondent sought to exercise ownership in the property, she forbade him access thereto, and refused to account to him for the rents, issues, and profits thereof.
The appellant defended the action on the ground that the deed of conveyance from her husband to the respondent passed no interest in the property sought to be conveyed. She contends that the property, on the execution of the deed from herself to her husband, became the community property of herself and her husband, and she invokes the rule, heretofore announced by this court, to the effect that a deed of conveyance of community real property executed by only one of the spouses passes no interest in the property to the grantee named in the deed. But we think the appellant mistakes the effect of the deed from herself to her husband. The title to property acquired by deed, whether separate or community, is determined, not from the form of the deed by which it is conveyed, but from the manner of its acquisition. Property acquired by gift, or purchased with the separate funds of the spouse to whom it is conveyed, is the separate property of that spouse. So this property, whether it was a gift from the wife to the husband as the court found, or whether it was purchased by the husband’s individual funds as the court might have found, became the separate property of the husband, and the husband and wife held it thereafter, not as property belonging to them as a community, but as tenants *237in common; that is to say, each of them held a separate estate in an undivided half thereof.
There is no objection under the statutes, as the appellant seems to contend, to the form of the conveyance. The statute relating to conveyances between husband and wife of community real property, Rem. & Bal. Code, § 8766 (P. C. 95 § 47), has no application to conveyances of this character. The wife may convey to her husband the whole or any part of her separate property, by any of the recognized forms of conveyances, as fully and freely as she may convey the same to any other person. Id., §§ 5916, 5925, 5926, 5927 (P. C. 93 § § 9, 1, 5, 21). Since, therefore, the deed from the appellant to her husband vested in him as his separate property an undivided half interest in the land conveyed, it follows that the husband could, without his wife joining him, make a valid conveyance of the same to the respondent. Id., § 5915 (P. C. 95 § 25).
It is contended in the brief of counsel that the property was the homestead of the appellant and her husband, and hence no part of it could be conveyed without both of them j oining in the conveyance. But there is no suggestion, either in the pleadings or the evidence, of this nature, and were it possible that a homestead could be claimed in property situated as this property is situated, we must decline to enter upon a discussion of the-question, since it was not among the issues submitted to the trial court.
The judgment will stand affirmed.
Main, Morris, and Ellis, JJ., concur.