This is an appeal from an order of the probate court adjudging a premarital settlement agreement invalid, holding an apartment house on Church Street in San Francisco, the chief asset of the estate, to be community property, and setting it apart as a probate homestead for the widow, the respondent, Lorraine Nelson. 1 The appellant, Evelyn King, a sister of the deceased, contends that the evidence does not support the trial court’s determinations.
Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the respondent, as we must on appeal, the material facts are as follows: the deceased, Carl Norman Nelson, and the respondent were married on February 21, 1949. About two weeks before the wedding, Nelson asked the respondent to sign an agreement providing that she would not seek alimony or support in the event of a divorce, that she would not seek a family allowance or assert any interest in her husband’s estate, and that her husband would be responsible for only $150 attorney fees and costs. Nelson, an experienced real estate broker, told her he wanted her to sign the agreement because he had had trouble with his first wife. He assured her when he asked her to sign the agreement that it did not mean anything during the marriage. Nelson was about 50 years old; the respondent was 22. The respondent did not understand the legal effect, contents or significance of the agreement but did not question Nelson about it because she trusted him. The agreement was not acknowledged as required by section 178 of the Civil Code. The respondent did not receive *142 a copy of the agreement until it was recorded in January, 1958.
At the time of the marriage, Nelson owned the Church Street property as his separate property, and he completed the 30-unit apartment building thereon shortly thereafter. Mrs. Nelson was inexperienced in business matters and her husband undertook to teach her about apartment house management and bookkeeping. Mrs. Nelson worked as her husband’s secretary and managed the apartment building during the marriage, and has continued to do so. After Nelson’s commitment to the state hospital in 1958, she was appointed as guardian of his estate and continued to take care of all business affairs. Nelson frequently referred to the property as belonging to both of them. The couple filed joint federal and state income tax returns. Nelson repeatedly expressed his affection for his wife and his intention to provide for her, both orally and in writing.
Nelson's holographic will dated December 30, 1958, named Mrs. Nelson as sole beneficiary. The will was admitted to probate and Mrs. Nelson appointed as administratrix with the will annexed. The appellant filed a contest which is the subject of another appeal. 2 3 After Mrs. Nelson filed her petition for the probate homestead, the appellant filed her objections.
The first contention on appeal is that the evidence does not support the trial court’s finding that the premarital agreement was invalid. There was ample evidence that Nelson misrepresented the agreement to his wife when he secured her signature and that he repudiated it by his acts and deeds and in writing thereafter. From the very date of the marriage to the date of the recordation of the agreement, the parties generally conducted their affairs as though no such agreement existed. The lack of Mrs. Nelson’s acknowledgment is, in itself, sufficient to make the prenuptial agreement ineffective (Civ. Code, § 178).
3
Furthermore, this contract tended to encourage and facilitate the dissolution of the marriage relationship and was contrary to public policy
(Whiting
v.
Whiting,
It was unfair and the consideration to Mrs. Nelson exceedingly insignificant. She waived all of her marital rights
*143
except the right to obtain a divorce, while Nelson reaped all of the benefits. Where the consideration to one party is so small as to shock the conscience of the court, the fact of inadequacy may be considered as a circumstance tending to support the claim of fraud
(Hilton
v.
Hilton,
The appellant argues that the trial court erred in finding that the apartment house was community property. The court found that, at the time of the marriage, the property was the separate property of the deceased but had subsequently been transmuted into community property by an executed oral agreement. The separate property of one spouse can be converted into community property by a mere oral agreement
(Woods
v.
Security-First Nat. Bank,
The final contention on appeal is that the trial court erred in setting apart the entire Church Street apartment house as the widow’s probate homestead. In selecting a probate homestead, the probate court has wide discretion and its order will not be disturbed unless there has been an abuse of such discretion
(In re Walkerly,
There are no creditors of this estate affected by the probate homestead except the appellant’s attorney and his claim, based on an alleged oral contract with the deceased, has been denied by the respondent. As to the value of the homestead, sections 661 and 668 of the Probate Code contain no limitations.
4
The right of the applicant for a homestead is paramount to all others even though its assertion would absorb the whole estate
(Estate of Kennedy,
Appellant argues that the apartment building was not a proper probate homestead because Mrs. Nelson could only live in a portion of it. The fact that the Church Street apartment house was occupied by Mrs. Nelson and the deceased in his lifetime and could have been declared a homestead by the deceased is a fair test of the appropriateness of its selection
(Estate of Levy, supra).
If a building is the actual bona fide residence of the widow, she may legally select it and the land on which it is situated as a homestead, no matter how large
(Heathman
v.
Holmes,
Appellant’s contention that Mrs. Nelson was not entitled to a probate homestead because she had at one time filed for divorce is likewise without merit. The widow’s right to a probate homestead is not conditioned upon the existence of family status at the time of death
(Estate of Henningsen,
Under the circumstances of this case, we have con- *146 eluded that the court in setting apart the probate homestead acted within the bounds of sound discretion and within the purview of section 661 of the Probate Code.
The orders appealed from are affirmed.
Shoemaker, P. J., and Agee, J., concurred.
Notes
The notice of appeal initially specified that the appeal was also taken from an order denying the appellant’s petition for removal of the widow as administratrix of the estate. This appeal has since been abandoned.
This court denied the appellant’s motion to consolidate the two appeals on September 10, 1963.
This section requires that contracts for marriage settlements must be executed and acknowledged in the same manner as grants of land.
The respondent received an 89.52 per cent fee simple interest in the apartment house which was appraised at approximately $244,000.
