218 P. 756 | Cal. | 1923
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *73 Plaintiff in this case appeals. It appears that the parties to the action intermarried in and were residents of the state of California. After they had been married a number of years, the defendant went to Nevada and instituted an action for divorce against his wife, this plaintiff, on the ground of willful desertion, his complaint alleging, among other matters, that there was no community property of the parties. The defendant in that action, this plaintiff, being a nonresident, service upon her was directed to be made by publication, and a copy of the complaint and summons in this action was delivered to her personally in this state. Thereupon an agreement in writing was entered into by the parties settling "the question of alimony and support." In consideration of the sum of five hundred dollars paid by the husband, this plaintiff released him "from all obligations, past, present or future, support, alimony, or any other obligations of support arising from the marriage contract." Other provisions in the agreement related to the maintenance and support of the minor child of the parties. As part of the same transaction it was agreed that the defendant in the divorce proceedings should, and she thereafter did, appear in the action. In her answer she admitted the allegation that there was no community property. Subsequently the Nevada court gave its decision in favor of the plaintiff, there finding, among other matters, that there was no community property belonging to the parties. Judgment of divorce was thereupon entered in favor of this defendant.
The judgment of divorce was entered March 15, 1916. On March 6, 1920, plaintiff brought this action for partition, alleging that since "the _____ day of __________, 1916," she and the defendant, her former husband, had been and were tenants in common in equal shares of certain real property in this state. By the prayer of an amended complaint she sought to be let into possession with the defendant, and prayed for an accounting and for one-half of the accrued *75 rents, issues, and profits. Defendant, answering, denied the claim of plaintiff in and to the property, and by way of estoppel against plaintiff asserting any right or title therein, pleaded the divorce proceedings and the decree had and rendered in the Nevada court. He also prayed for a reformation of the agreement entered into by the parties pending the divorce action, to include "the property of the marriage," and to have inserted therein provisions to the effect that this plaintiff accepted the sum of five hundred dollars in full payment of all claims for alimony and support, and of "all rights and claims . . . to all property," and remitted, released, discharged, and satisfied all the rights and claims to the property which she might otherwise have. The trial court held defendant to be the sole and exclusive owner of the property. It also held that the plaintiff was estopped from asserting any claim to an interest therein by reason of the divorce proceedings had in the state of Nevada, and that defendant was entitled to have the contract between the parties reformed as prayed for. Judgment was entered in defendant's favor, and plaintiff has appealed.
[1] The first point involved in the appeal is as to the effect of the decree rendered by the district court of the state of Nevada in the divorce action between these parties. It is the contention of the appellant that the decree has no extraterritorial force outside the state of Nevada, and cannot directly affect the title to real estate in California. She also attempts to refute the claim of the respondent that she is estopped by the divorce proceedings from asserting an interest in the community property in this state. Her position is that no disposition of the community property was brought about in the divorce action, and that the parties became and have remained tenants in common therein. If that be true, and appellant be not estopped, their respective rights may be enforced in an independent action. (De Godey v. Godey,
[2] Appellant's first contention is unquestionably correct. That the courts of one state cannot make a decree which will operate to change or directly affect the title to real property beyond the territorial limits of its jurisdiction must be conceded. The doctrine that a court, not having jurisdiction of the res, cannot affect it by its decree is firmly established. (Title Ins. Co. v. California Dev. Co.,
Respondent argues that the judgment of a foreign court can act in personam, regardless of the locus of the property involved; that when plaintiff appeared in the Nevada court, and answered, that court had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter of the action; that plaintiff subjected herself and her property rights to the decision of the court. "Certainly, the Nevada court," he continues, "could have determined title to that property and have required a deed if necessary. It must then have had a species of jurisdiction over that property." In this connection respondent invokes the decision of the United States supreme court in Bates v. Bodie,
What respondent terms "a species of jurisdiction," therefore turns out to be only the jurisdiction of the court over the controversy between the parties, and its power to enforce obedience to its decrees by coercive measures so long as the parties are within its territorial limits. Title Ins. etc. Co.
v. California Dev. Co.
The decree in the Nevada action is invoked by the respondent against the appellant as an estoppel upon yet another ground. Starting with the proposition that a judgment is a contract in the highest sense of the term (Wallace v. Eldredge,
The evidence tending to show that appellant was fraudulently prevailed upon by the respondent to refrain from submitting an issue as to the existence of community property to the consideration of the court in the divorce action, and was deceived into accepting the sum of five hundred dollars in full settlement of all claims for support, led Mr. Justice Hart, who wrote the opinion in the district court of appeal reversing the case, to say: "There could be nothing clearer than that the foregoing testimony . . . plainly shows these facts: First, that the plaintiff, when signing the agreement [the alimony settlement], had absolutely no knowledge of the land in dispute or that the defendant owned the same or any land; second, that the defendant purposely concealed from the plaintiff the fact that he bought the land during their married life and owned it when the agreement in question was made; third, that the defendant, with a design to defraud the plaintiff of her community interest in the property, caused the same to be put in the name of his brother and to remain standing in the latter's name until after the Nevada decree divorcing him from the plaintiff was entered.
"That the designed concealment from the plaintiff by the defendant of the fact that the property in dispute belonged to him and to their community and not to his brother in whose name the property stood when the plaintiff signed the agreement in question was in fraud of her rights, cannot, of course, be questioned. Indeed, the conduct of the defendant with reference to said property — his repeated representations to the plaintiff on the occasions when he endeavored to urge her to institute an action for divorce that he owned no property and allowing the property in dispute to remain in his brother's name until after the entry of the Nevada divorce decree — amounted to positive or actual fraud. (Sec. 1572, subd. 3, Civ. Code.)"
[9] In the face of these convincing facts, the trial court merely found that the allegations and averments of the answer "pleaded by way of bar and estoppel of the plaintiff" were true. It made no express finding on the issue of fraud established by the evidence offered by the plaintiff. *81
The system of express findings (secs. 632 and 633, Code Civ. Proc.), which prevails in this state, requires a finding when there is a material issue. This applies not only to issues raised upon allegations of the complaint, but issues raised upon affirmative defenses in the answer. (2 Hayne on New Trial, rev. ed., sec. 240, p. 1319, and cases there cited.) If a replication were permissible, plaintiff, by such a pleading, could have set up the facts constituting the fraud alleged to have been committed by the defendant; but, under our system of pleading, a replication to the answer has no place. It is supplied by operation of law through the application of section 462 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that the statement of any new matter in the answer, in avoidance or constituting a defense, must, on the trial, be deemed controverted by the opposite party. Ordinarily, when a cause of action or a defense rests upon fraud, the facts constituting the fraud must be pleaded. But the necessity of proving fraud may appear only after the answer of the defendant is in. In such case, a plaintiff may introduce on the trial evidence which countervails or overcomes any new matter as if it were inserted in a replication and pleaded with all the precision and fullness which the strictest rules of law require. (Colton Land Water Co. v. Raynor,
[11] The finding of the trial court that the allegations and averments of the special defense, which merely set up the divorce proceedings and the rendition of the judgment *82 by the Nevada court, were true, did not, in the remotest sense, dispose of the issue of fraud relied upon by appellant to nullify such judgment in so far as it related to the existence of community property. The evidence bearing upon such issue has been brought here. Therefore, the court may not indulge in a presumption that, had findings been made on the subject of fraud, they must have been consistent with other findings actually made and relied on by respondent to support the judgment. It is only in the absence of such evidence that the presumption may be indulged in. In this case, if a finding favorable to the defendant on the issue of fraud had been made, it would have been contrary to the evidence.
[12] The trial court decreed a reformation of the agreement entered into by the parties prior to the Nevada divorce proceedings by inserting a provision whereby appellant not only accepted the sum of five hundred dollars in full payment of temporary and permanent alimony and support, but in like payment of all rights and claims to property, and released and satisfied all right and claim to property she might have. Of this portion of the decree the district court of appeal correctly said: "It necessarily results from the forgoing considerations that the finding to the effect that the agreement in question was intended by the parties to settle all their property rights of whatsoever nature is, in so far as the property described in the complaint is concerned, wholly without evidentiary justification and, therefore, that portion of the decree declaring that the agreement does not express the true intention of the parties and that the same should be so reformed as to embrace within its scope a provision whereby the plaintiff expressed an intention to release to the defendant her community interest in the real property involved in this controversy is entirely without support." No other conclusion would be warranted. We are unable to perceive how it can be seriously contended that the appellant intended by the contract to surrender her claims to community property, the existence of which it is conceded she had no knowledge, and which the evidence, without contradiction, shows was purposely concealed from her.
If it be contended that any of the findings tend to support the conclusion of law that the defendant is the sole *83
and exclusive owner of the land in controversy, they are contrary to the undisputed evidence, and to the admissions of respondent here, that whatever interest he had in the property at the time of the Nevada divorce was obtained from money acquired after his marriage with appellant. If no other facts can be developed upon a retrial, it would seem to necessarily follow that, the divorce of the parties having been granted without any disposition of the community property, appellant is the owner of one-half of such property as tenant in common with respondent. (Estate of Brix,
The judgment is reversed.
Myers, J., Kerrigan, J., Seawell, J., Lennon, J., Lawlor, J., and Wilbur, C. J., concurred.