Opinion
Plaintiff appeals from judgment dismissing his action for declaratory and other relief entered after the trial court sustained defendants’ demurrer to the complaint without leave to amend.
The terms of the “cohabitors agreement” alleged in the first cause of action are incorporated into each of the subsequent causes of action other than the sixth and seventh causes of action. The second and third causes of action seek payment of plaintiffs creditor’s claim rejected by defendants. The fourth cause of action seeks half of the “cohabitors’ equitable property” on the theory of a constructive trust. The fifth cause of action alleges an implied in fact agreement between plaintiff and Daly for the equal division of all assets standing in Daly’s name. The sixth and seventh causes of action are common counts which seek $300,000 as the reasonable value of plaintiffs services to Daly.
Defendants demurred specially to the first cause of action on the ground of uncertainty, and demurred generally to all causes of action. The trial court sustained the demurrer to each cause of action without leave to amend
1
“per moving points and authorities.” One of the arguments advanced by defendants in support of their demurrer was that under
Marvin
v.
Marvin
(1976)
In
Marvin
v.
Marvin, supra,
In determining whether the “cohabitors agreement” rests upon illicit meretricious consideration, we are guided by the following principles: “[A] contract between nonmarital partners, even if expressly made in contemplation of a common living arrangement, is invalid only if sexual acts form an inseparable part of the consideration for the agreement. In sum, a court will not enforce a contract for the pooling of property and earnings if it is explicitly and inseparably based upon services as a paramour.”
(Marvin
v.
Marvin, supra,
Plaintiff argues that the complaint is not subject to the foregoing interpretation because the “accepted California concept of cohabitation is the mutual assumption of those marital rights, duties and obligations which are usually manifested by married people, including but
not necessarily dependent upon sexual
relations”
(Boyd
v.
Boyd
(1964)
Marvin
states that “even if sexual services are part of the contractual consideration, any
severable
portion of the contract supported by inde
Since plaintiff’s right to relief under the second through the fifth causes of action depends upon the validity of the “cohabitors agreement,” the trial court properly sustained the demurrer thereto.
Appellant argues that the sixth and seventh causes of action (labelled, respectively, common counts in quantum meruit and for labor and services rendered) incorporated therein neither the “cohabitors agreement” nor any of the other allegations of the first cause of action relating to sexual services rendered by plaintiff to Daly, thus they are not subject to general demurrer. However, the common counts which are here sufficiently pleaded (see 3 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Pleading, §§ 431, 436, 440, pp. 2088, 2093, 2094-2095) are so permeated with the same reason for the rendition of the “services rendered” by plaintiff, i.e., the sexual cohabitation of the parties, that it cannot be said that the agreement by Daly to pay for those services does not also rest upon illegal meretricious consideration.
We note that the period covered by the services rendered by plaintiff alleged in the common counts—March 1976 through July 1978—is the same time span covered by the “cohabitors agreement” alleged in the first cause of action; that the $300,000 prayed for in the common counts as the reasonable value of such services is alleged to be “equivalent approximately to one-half of the total estate of Daly,” and that it is a one-half interest in the “cohabitors’ equitable property” acquired during the cohabitation of the parties that is prayed for under the “cohabitors agreement” in the other causes of action; and that incorporated into the common counts are allegations of the first cause of action relating to plaintiff’s presentation of his creditor’s claim to Daly’s estate (a copy of which is attached to the complaint and incorporated therein by
While the simple pleading of the common counts standing alone would appear to be innocuous enough to withstand defendants’ challenge, a common sense reading of the entire complaint promptly dispels any notion that the same element of illegal meretricious consideration that so infects the “cohabitors agreement” as to render it unenforceable does not as well dominate the common counts; and the reality of the situation dictates the conclusion that the recovery under the sixth and seventh causes of action is based on the exact set of circumstances specifically pleaded in the first cause of action. It is true that common counts are not subject to a general demurrer
(Auckland
v.
Conlin
(1928)
The only remaining question is whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying leave to amend.
2
Ordinarily it is an abuse of discretion to sustain a general demurrer to a complaint without leave to amend if there is a reasonable possibility that the defect in the complaint can be cured by amendment.
(Harman
v.
City and County of San Francisco
(1972)
A complaint for declaratory relief is sufficient if it sets forth facts showing the existence of an actual controversy relating to the legal rights and duties of the respective parties under a contract and requests that those rights and duties be adjudged by the court.
(Bennett
v.
Hibernia Bank
(1956)
The judgment is affirmed.
Spencer, P. J., and Hanson, J., concurred.
Notes
It is an abuse of discretion to sustain a special demurrer without leave to amend since it is directed to a defect of form rather than of substance.
(Zumbrun
v.
University of Southern California
(1972)
Plaintiff moved for reconsideration of the order sustaining the demurrer without leave to.amend, and for an order overruling the demurrer or granting leave to amend the complaint. The motion was denied.
