Prewett v. Dyer

107 Cal. 154 | Cal. | 1895

Henshaw, J.

Appeals from the judgment and from ' the order denying plaintiff a new trial.

Plaintiff, the divorced wife of James L. Prewett, commenced this action against his personal representative after his death, asking the court to set aside the judgment and decree of divorce obtained by Prewett, upon the ground that the same were procured by fraud. Judgment in that case was rendered upon July 10, 1882. Plaintiff’s action was commenced upon April 8, 1893, but she pleads that she was in ignorance of the divorce proceedings until December, 1892.

Defendant, besides denying the material allegations of the complaint, pleads the statute of limitations. The court finds against plaintiff upon the issues of fraud, and for defendant upon her plea that plaintiff’s cause *157of action is barred by the provisions of subdivision 4 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure. If this finding is justified it is determinative of plaintiff’s right to maintain this action, and renders superfluous any examination and discussion of the evidence upon the charges of fraud.

The finding of the bar of the statute is, therefore, first to be considered, and herein as to the facts: James L. Prewett and plaintiff intermarried in January, 1877, and thereafter lived at the Wilkins House in Santa Cruz, though the husband’s ranch and home were in Monterey county. The wife separated from her husband in December, 1878. This separation she testifies was by mutual agreement, reduced to writing. She was to return to her former home in Philadelphia, which she did after the lapse of a year, most of which she spent in Santa Cruz, the rest being passed in Sacramento. She remained in Philadelphia until 1886. While there she wrote some letters to her husband with her address upon the envelopes. She never heard from her husband, but none of the letters were ever returned to her.

Prewett’s action was to obtain a divorce from his wife upon the ground of her desertion. It was verified and averred that the last known place of residence of his wife was the city of Philadelphia. In due course service of summons was had by publication, and in the affidavit for such publication, made by Prewett three months after filing the complaint, he swears that, according to his best information, defendant resides in the Fifth Avenue Hotel in the city of Hew York.” At that time plaintiff had never been to that hotel, nor in Hew York. Upon June 26, 1882, Prewett, testifying in the matter of his divorce, swore that he did not know where his wife resided; that the last he heard of her she was living in Philadelphia.

The divorce was obtained in the county of Monterey, but a short time after the date of it Prewett took up his residence in Santa Cruz, and there abode until his *158death in January, 11 93. Prewett was a man well known in Santa Cruz. He had lived there with his wife in 1877-78, and upon his return the fact that he had obtained a divorce from her was one of common knowledge, and the subject a matter of common conversation. Prewett himself discussed it openly.

During this time one or more of the sisters of Mrs. Prewett were living in Santa Cruz. Alfred Fitch, son of one of these sisters, visited Mrs. Prewett in Chicago. This was in 1887. Fitch at the time he saw his aunt knew of the divorce. Mrs. Prewett testified that they discussed family matters, but nothing was said of the divorce. She corresponded with her three sisters in Santa Cruz. In 1888 Mrs. Prewett came again to Santa Cruz and went to the home of a sister. She remained there from July until October. She came, she says, thinking she might have a reconciliation with her husband. “I changed my views from public opinion. I heard from public report the way he was living, and I concluded there was no need of my attempting it and I went back to New York.” She had, she testifies, quite a large circle of acquaintances in Santa Cruz. Of that circle was Mrs. Wilkins, the principal witness for Mr. Prewett in his divorce suit. Mrs. Wilkins visited Mrs. Prewett several times during this period, and was at the time living near by in Mr. Prewett’s house, he making his home in her family. Mrs. Prewett saw her husband once or twice upon the street in his buggy. She knew he was suffering from cancer of the. eye. In fact, he was then mortally afflicted and afterward died of the disease. She never sought out her husband nor had any manner of communication with him. From “public opinion” she concluded that efforts toward a reconciliation would be futile. The fact of the divorce was seemingly known to the relatives of Mrs. Prewett in Santa Cruz. It was certainly known to some of them, and was “mentioned in the families.” Many witnesses of Santa Cruz testified to their knowledge and to the general knowledge of the community of the divorce; but *159there is no positive evidence that Mrs. Prewett was ever directly informed of it. She swears she had no knowledge of it, until she was informed by a letter from a sister in 1892.

In this state of the evidence was the court justified in rejecting her testimony and finding that she had knowledge in 1888, and that, therefore, her cause of action is barred?

Under the circumstances it became necessary for plaintiff to aver, as she did, her discovery of the alleged fraud within three years of the time of the commencement of her action for relief. The burden of proof to support the averment was upon her. Her evidence upon this point was an assertion of her ignorance. To meet this it was proper for defendant to prove facts and circumstances tending to discredit this assertion by showing its unlikelihood or improbability. This she attempted to do by proof of the facts above set forth. Any fact may be proved from which the fact in issue is presumed or is logically inferable. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1870, subd. 16.) Such facts frequently form the basis of argument against a party’s contention.

A judge, no more than a jury, has the right arbitrarily to reject evidence, but as a jury may be instructed that it is not bound to decide in conformity with the declarations of any number of witnesses which do not produce conviction, against a presumption or other evidence satisfying the mind, so should a judge be governed in his determinations by the same rule. Applying it to the facts of this case, a strong presumption is raised against the statement of Mrs. Prewett. She spent months in Santa Cruz, living but a short distance away from her husband, to become reconciled with whom she came to California, yet she held no intercourse with him. He was mortally afflicted, yet she did not offer to minister unto him. She lived in a community and among relatives who knew her husband had divorced her, yet no one told her of this all-important fact. She learned from public rumor that it was useless to try to become *160reconciled with him, yet that same reckless gossip refrained from carrying to her ears news that she was a divorced wife. It is a natural presumption that what she did and did not do during these months was prompted by knowledge of the fact that she was no longer the wife of Prewett.

To the mind of the trial judge, before whom the witnesses appeared, the presumption thus raised was more . satisfactory than the declaration of plaintiff. It was his province to decide, and it cannot be said that his decision was error.

The judgment and order are affirmed.

McFarland, J., and Temple, J., concurred.

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