257 P. 119 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1927
The judgment, from which defendants appeal, covers eighty per cent of the value ($500) of a tractor, which was sold by the sheriff in execution of a judgment against the respondent's husband.
It is conceded that the tractor as originally purchased by respondent's husband was community property of the husband and wife. It was found by the court that said tractor had been purchased under a sales contract, in the name of the husband, and that eighty per cent of said purchase price was paid by the plaintiff with her separate earnings. Said earnings were deposited in a joint bank account of the plaintiff and her husband, and that account was checked upon in making the payments for the tractor. The remaining twenty per cent of the purchase price "was paid out of *553 community funds belonging to plaintiff and her husband." The court found, also, that until seized by the sheriff the tractor had remained "in joint possession" of the plaintiff and her husband.
Section 168 of the Civil Code says: "The earnings of the wife are not liable for the debts of the husband." In this case the wife had earned certain money by her personal industry. That money went into the joint bank account, and was checked out by the husband to pay for the tractor. How far may funds, thus obtained and invested, be pursued and defended by the wife as against creditors of the husband who have given him credit in the purchase by him of community property? Suppose the tractor had been sold by the husband, and suppose the proceeds had been re-invested in other merchandise, or in real property. May the wife, at any time thereafter, hold such property as against creditors of the husband (the seeming owner of the property) by proving that the original investment, years before, was made with funds earned by her?
Reasonable justice would appear to require that there be some limit to the assertion of such claims, if the "community property" laws under which we live are to continue in force.
[1] The wife's right to hold exempt from execution for her husband's debts moneys classed as "earnings of the wife" is within the class of rights which "may be waived by any party entitled thereto, unless such waiver would be against public policy." (Civ. Code, sec.
The views herein stated are in harmony with those expressed long ago by Professor John Norton Pomeroy, who made a careful study of the community property laws. (4 West Coast Reporter, 305 et seq.) See, also, McKay on Community Property, 2d ed., sec. 298.
[3] In addition to respondent's claim that her original interest in the tractor was exempt from levy under the attachment, she further contends that the judgment should be sustained for the reason that, as found by the court, respondent's husband prior to the sheriff's levy upon the tractor had executed to her a bill of sale of said tractor "in consideration of love and affection and ten dollars," and that on the same day the bill of sale was received in the recorder's office of San Bernardino County, California. Appellant, on the other hand, contends that said transfer to the plaintiff was void, under section
The judgment is reversed.
Houser, J., concurred.
York, J., dissented.