264 P. 294 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
This is an appeal from that portion of an interlocutory judgment of divorce decreeing a certain house and lot standing in the name of appellant to be the community property of the respective spouses.
Appellant and respondent intermarried at Santa Barbara on July 29, 1909. In consideration of the sum of $100, the mother and father of respondent executed a deed of conveyance April 27, 1922, to lot two, block 102, of said city of Santa Barbara, to appellant, Hattie Genevieve Donze "as her separate property." A dwelling-house was thereafter constructed on this lot at a cost of $2,800, which was borrowed from the building and loan association on a note and mortgage executed by these parties as a lien upon said premises. This money was subsequently paid in installments from the earnings acquired during coverture. Domestic trouble arose. In August, 1924, respondent brought suit against the appellant for divorce, alleging that said lot was their community property. The appellant answered denying this allegation, and upon the contrary alleged that it *771 was her separate property, and in a cross-complaint she prayed for a divorce on her part. Upon trial a divorce was denied respondent, but appellant was granted an interlocutory decree on the ground of extreme cruelty, and she was awarded the custody of their two minor children, and $60 per month alimony and maintenance, together with the temporary right of occupancy of said premises. The court also found that the house and lot in question was community property, and awarded it to the spouses as "tenants in common." An appeal was taken from that portion of the decree which finds that this house and lot is community property, on the ground that this finding is unsupported by the evidence, and that oral testimony as to the title was incompetent to vary the terms of the deed.
The evidence is without conflict to the effect that all of the purchase price of said lot, together with the cost of construction of the dwelling-house was paid from community funds; the deed was executed by the father and mother of respondent to the appellant. Following the name of the grantee in this deed was the recital that the lot was conveyed "as her separate property." This deed was delivered to the appellant, who had it recorded, and afterward kept it among her private papers; the respondent never afterward saw the instrument. Over the objection of appellant that the evidence was incompetent and tended to vary the terms of a written instrument, the respondent was permitted to testify in effect that the deed was taken in the name of his wife as a matter of convenience. He said: "It was deeded to my wife just simply in case — in the work I am in — driving a machine around, in the event anything should happen — my death or anything, there would be nothing in the way of red tape or anything, of her going ahead and proving ownership of the property. . . . We talked it over and it was just simply signed in her name. . . . I didn't know that it was in her name as separate property. . . . We agreed that it would be put over (in her name) in case anything should happen. . . . If anything happened to me there would be no argument so far as red tape of her getting hold of the property — her and the children. . . . I think she said something to the effect that parents of the husband could come in on his half of the property if it was community property. . . . (I said) rather than have an *772 argument we would fix it so she and the children could have it all. . . . I told my father to have the property made out in her name."
Appellant said the respondent told her the reason he had the deed executed in her name was "just so the children and I could always have a home. . . . He said, if anything should happen to him, we would have it always. . . . He said he wanted the property in my name, and the children's so that his folks could never come in on it, or anyone else — that it would always be our property."
The evidence is undisputed that the deed was executed to appellant with the consent and at the request of respondent. There was no contention in this case that it was executed through fraud or mistake.
[1] Where land is conveyed from a husband to his wife the presumption is that it was intended as a gift. So, also, where property is conveyed to a wife, from a third party, with the knowledge and consent of the husband, whether the consideration is paid by the husband from his separate property or from their community property, the presumption is that it was intended as her separate property. (Civ. Code, sec. 164; Sanchez v. GraceM.E. Church,
In the case of Miller v. Brode, supra, it is said: ". . . The deed by which the ranch was acquired, conveyed it to the decedent as sole grantee, and described it as her separate property, and was so made with the consent of her husband, who participated in the transaction. This definitely establishes the character of the property as her separate property. In McComb
v. Spangler,
The foregoing language seems to fit the instant case exactly. This deed was made to the wife at the request of the husband, and it recited that the property was conveyed to appellant "as her separate property." There was no fraud or mistake charged with relation to its execution. Under such facts the house and lot in question is conclusively presumed to be the separate property of the appellant. *774
[2] The evidence as to the intent with which the deed was executed in the name of the appellant varied the terms of the written instrument, and in the absence of appropriate allegations, was incompetent. The objection to this evidence should have been sustained. No rule of evidence is more firmly established than the one that "parol evidence cannot be received to contradict, vary, add to or subtract from the terms of a valid written instrument." (10 Cal. Jur. 916, sec. 186; 10 R.C.L. 1016, sec. 208; Jones on Evidence, 3d ed., 656, sec. 434.) There are, however, equally well-recognized exceptions to this rule, as, for instance, where an instrument has been procured through fraud, coercion, undue influence, or mistake. (10 R.C.L. 1056, sec. 251.) [3] But he who seeks to set aside an instrument which is valid on its face, upon any of these grounds must specifically allege the facts upon which he relies. (12 Cal. Jur. 800, sec. 62; 10 Standard Ency. of Proc. 49, sec. 8; Hammond v.McCullough,
For the foregoing reasons the portion of the judgment determining property rights is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial upon the sole issue as to the property rights. Inasmuch as the trial court was of the opinion that although the legal title to the property was in the wife, yet she held it for the community, and that the equitable title was in the community, it is directed that the plaintiff be permitted to amend his complaint upon timely and proper application therefor adding appropriate allegations *777 of fraud, mistake, or undue influence, presenting the issue of the equitable ownership of the property, if he be so advised.
Sturtevant, J., and Koford, P.J., concurred.