Avnet v. Bank of America

232 Cal. App. 2d 191, 42 Cal. Rptr. 616, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1453
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1965
DocketCiv. 28238
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 232 Cal. App. 2d 191 (Avnet v. Bank of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avnet v. Bank of America, 232 Cal. App. 2d 191, 42 Cal. Rptr. 616, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1453 (Cal. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

FOX, J. *

This is an appeal by the defendant-husband 1 from an order pendente lite which awarded the plaintiff-wife temporary alimony and attorneys’ fees. The husband challenges the power of the court to award any support or attorneys’ fees to the wife pendente lite, and also challenges the necessity of any such awards, and the amounts thereof.

The primary basis of the husband’s challenge to the power of the court to make any award in either of these respects is that the wife’s Alabama divorce from her former husband was void and that, therefore, his marriage to the plaintiff is invalid.

At the conclusion of the hearing on an order to show cause the court found that (1) plaintiff and defendant are husband and wife; (2) defendant is estopped from attacking the validity of the Alabama decree between plaintiff and her former husband Robert M. Heininger; and (3) defendant is estopped from asserting his claim that his marriage to plaintiff is invalid.

In support of these findings the wife produced a divorce decree by an Alabama court from her prior husband which shows on its face that the court had before it the “answer and waiver of respondent” (wife’s first husband), and based thereon “the court is of the opinion and finding that the court has jurisdiction of the parties and the cause of action,” and thereupon granted wife a divorce with the sole restriction *194 that neither party could remarry within 60 days after the date of the divorce, which was November 22, 1954. Plaintiff also produced the marriage certificate between her and defendant which showed that they were married on January 30, 1955, the marriage license showing on its face that wife obtained an Alabama divorce from her former husband on November 22, 1954. The parties lived together as husband and wife until August 7, 1963. It was further shown that plaintiff and defendant filed joint income tax returns; that they joined a religious Temple as husband and wife; that they showed on their passport applications that they were husband and wife; that on S.E.C. statements it appeared that defendant was married to plaintiff; that they traveled together and entertained together; that they purchased property as husband and wife; that they made wills in which they referred to each other as husband and wife; and that a child was born to this union October 8, 1957. In addition, the court had before it a file of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County which revealed the adoption by plaintiff and defendant of a minor child in July 1957. This record contained the allegation and finding based thereon that plaintiff and defendant herein were, in fact, husband and wife. It was essentially on this evidence that the court found that plaintiff and defendant are husband and wife.

With respect to the Alabama decree, plaintiff testified that prior to her taking any steps whatever toward filing a divorce action in Alabama, Avnet told plaintiff that he wanted her to go to her attorney and find out where she “could go and secure the fastest divorce.” She thereupon consulted her attorney who advised that she file her suit in Alabama and arranged counsel for her there. She further testified to the effect that defendant knew that she went to Alabama to get a divorce, that defendant offered to pay for the same but that she refused the offer, that defendant did pay her transportation to Alabama from New York and for her return ticket, that he knew she got a divorce in Alabama, that he talked to her on the telephone while she was there, that he took her to the airport to go to Alabama for the purpose of securing a divorce, that he picked her up at the railroad station in New York upon her return, that he read and discussed the divorce decree with her, and that on January 30, 1955, after the expiration of the 60-day period required by the Alabama decree, defendant married her in a public ceremony which was attended by some 300 guests, and they had lived together *195 as husband and wife for approximately eight and one-half years.

Defendant made an elaborate offer of proof consisting of some 30 items in which he sought to prove, inter alia, that neither plaintiff nor her former husband resided in Alabama at the time of the decree in question, that they were guilty of fraud upon the Alabama court, that plaintiff was only in Alabama one night, that she did not actually appear in court, that the Alabama court acquired no jurisdiction of either the res or the parties, that plaintiff’s divorce from her former husband was, therefore, void, and her subsequent marriage to him was invalid. And, as a consequence, the court had no jurisdiction to make any award pendente lite for either the plaintiff’s support or counsel fees for her attorneys.

The court sustained the wife’s objections to the husband’s offer of proof, except for the items dealing with defendant’s knowledge of, assistance to, and cooperation with plaintiff in procuring the Alabama decree and his knowledge of its terms, on the theory that he was estopped: (1) to challenge the validity of plaintiff’s Alabama divorce decree; and (2) to claim that his subsequent marriage to plaintiff was invalid.

In making its rulings, findings and order the trial court relied upon Dietrich v. Dietrich, 41 Cal.2d 497 [261 P.2d 269], In that case the Supreme Court adopted and applied these principles: (page 504) “ ‘ “. . . Where an actual marital relation has been admitted or shown, and its existence in law is sought to be avoided by some fact set up by the husband, and it devolves upon him to show that fact, there alimony will be granted until that fact is shown; for the relation actually exists upon which the right to alimony depends, and the object of the litigation is to annul that actual relation by showing some other fact, the existence of which is denied. It may be said, too, that for the purposes of an application for temporary alimony there will not be need that the fact of marriage be so conclusively established as for the purpose of permanent alimony, or any other ultimate purpose of the action. It is for the interest of society and in aid of public policy that, where the married relation has been in fact assumed . . . and where it is averred by the putative wife and denied by the alleged husband, if she makes a reasonable plain case of its existence, she should be furnished with means of temporary support and of conducting the suit until the truth or falsehood of her allegations can be ascertained by *196 the proofs formally taken in the case.” ’ (See, also, 35 Am. Jur. 226, 227, § 70.)

“Applying the above stated principles, which we adopt, to the present case, since it appears that there was a ceremony of marriage coupled with an actual and bona fide assumption of marital relations, and considering the character of the attack on the validity of the marriage, it is obvious that the exclusionary ruling was proper and may be sustained at this stage of the proceedings on this ground alone.”

In sustaining the trial court’s exclusion (in Dietrich v.

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Bluebook (online)
232 Cal. App. 2d 191, 42 Cal. Rptr. 616, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avnet-v-bank-of-america-calctapp-1965.