3 P.2d 599 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
The parties to this action, in contemplation of divorce proceedings, entered into a property settlement evidenced by an agreement in writing dated January 5, 1920, which read in part as follows: "Said party of the first part [defendant herein] agrees to pay said party of the second part [plaintiff], so long as sheremains unmarried to any other person, the sum of Fifty Dollars per month, . . . on the first day of each month, commencing with the first day of January, 1920. Said monthly payments to be made in full payment for the support of said party of the second part and their minor children Lucile Sanders and Doris Sanders. In the event of a divorce being granted to either party and theremarriage of said party of the second part, said party of the first part agrees to continue the payment of said sum of Fifty Dollars per month, to said children for their support and maintenance until such time as they are self-supporting or married." (Italics ours.) Defendant agreed also to pay to plaintiff at least one-half of the medical expenses incurred by her in the event of serious illness of either of said children, provided the total amount of said expense incurred exceeded $25. Following the execution of the agreement defendant obtained a divorce and paid the monthly installments called for by the agreement up to and including November 1, 1929, at which time he refused to make any further payments; and after a lapse of several months plaintiff instituted this action to collect the delinquent installments and also one-half of the amount of medical expenses incurred by her in caring for one of the children. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and defendant appeals.
Defendant admits that plaintiff never remarried and that he has not paid the sums for which suit is brought; and he concedes, therefore, that the judgment rendered conforms to the terms of said agreement. But he claimed at the trial that the attorney employed by him to prepare said agreement made a mistake in drafting the clause relating to the termination of the monthly payments; and that consequently, as executed, said agreement did not truly express the intention of the parties, all of which was set up in his answer by way of an affirmative defense. In this regard it was *233 alleged "that when said agreement was executed plaintiff and defendant supposed said agreement to mean and said agreement was intended to mean and the legal consequences of said agreement were intended by plaintiff and defendant to be that the defendant was to pay the sum of fifty (50) dollars per month . . . onlyuntil such time as said minor children become self-supporting ormarried" (italics ours); that one of the children became self-supporting on September 1, 1925, and the other on September 1, 1929; and the prayer of the answer was: "1. That plaintiff take nothing by her action; 2. That said written agreement be revised so as to express the intention of the parties thereto; and that it be adjudged that said agreement is fully performed and that it be delivered up and cancelled. 3. That defendant have such other and further relief as the equity of the case may warrant." Plaintiff filed an "answer to the affirmative defense" denying that any mistake had been made in the preparation of the agreement, and alleging that "the cause of action set out in said affirmative defense" was barred by the statute of limitations. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 338, subd. 4.) Upon the ground last mentioned the trial court excluded certain evidence offered by defendant in support of said affirmative defense; and in conformity with such ruling found that the relief asked for in said affirmative defense was barred by the statute.
[1] The question presented for determination is, therefore, whether a plaintiff may invoke the statute of limitations against an affirmative defense based on allegations of mistake, wherein the defendant is seeking reformation and cancellation of the instrument sued upon, the contention of defendant herein being that a party may bide his time and, when enforcement is sought against him, interpose such defense and obtain such relief, regardless of lapse of time. The decision in the case ofBradbury v. Higginson,
The case of California Packing Corp. v. Larsen,
The judgment is affirmed.
Tyler, P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on October 29, 1931, and a petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on November 27, 1931. *236