Axell v. Axell

250 P.2d 182, 114 Cal. App. 2d 248, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1167
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1952
DocketCiv. 15268
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 250 P.2d 182 (Axell v. Axell) 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
Axell v. Axell, 250 P.2d 182, 114 Cal. App. 2d 248, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1167 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Plaintiff brought contempt proceedings against defendant for alleged failure to comply with the provisions of an interlocutory divorce entered in 1940, and a final decree entered in 1941. While cross-appeals were filed from the whole of the court’s "Order Fixing Amount of Moneys Payable by Defendant Under Property Settlement Agreement and Decrees of Divorce,” each party is questioning only certain portions of the order.

Questions Presented

1. The interpretation of the property settlement agreement and the decrees based thereon, particularly the meaning of “net profits” and whether income tax and agreed payments to plaintiff are deductible from gross receipts. 2. Is plaintiff barred by laches from claiming that income tax payments were excessive. 3. The character of certain payments to plaintiff claimed as “offsets” which the court found to be “gifts.” 4. Is interest allowable?

Facts

The interlocutory decree of divorce granted plaintiff a divorce on the ground of cruelty, approved the property settlement agreement, and specifically ordered defendant to comply with its terms . (The final decree follows the terms of the interlocutory decree.) The terms important here follow: I. Defendant was required to pay plaintiff for her support $100 per month and $25 per month for the support of their child. Defendant at all times has made these payments. In fact, after the child reached majority defendant continued the monthly $25 for almost one and a half years—an overpayment of $425. 2. Defendant was to pay all interest, taxes and insurance on the home ocupied by plaintiff until the present encumbrance was liquidated and thereafter and until plaintiff remarries, taxes and insurance only. Defendant met this requirement. 3. This is the crux of the appeals. De *250 fendant, on January 15 in each year, “in addition to the payments to be made monthly to Wife, and in addition to the payments” * for the son, is required to furnish plaintiff a complete financial statement “of all Ms assets and businesses” and shall “pay to said Wife 25% of any and all net profits in excess of $4,800 net ...” Defendant did not comply with any of these requirements. Although there were oral demands for a statement, plaintiff first made written demand in December, 1948. Defendant furnished no statement until thereafter. Defendent testified that this 25 per cent provision was in-' tended to apply only to money that both had invested in a “seat adjuster” and from which they expected to make a lot of money. Plaintiff testified that there was no such understanding. (The court, in effect, found that “all his assets and businesses” meant more than the seat adjuster business.) In 1944 the money invested in that venture was lost. In August, 1941, defendant remarried. His new wife, Margaret, is an accountant, and during the marriage received a substantial income from her work as such and from other property she owns. Defendant entered into an agreement with Margaret that all her earnings should be her separate property. Prior to and at the time of the divorce, defendant was in the wholesale florist business. In January, 1942, Margaret went into partnership with defendant in that business, contributing $2,500 of her separate funds. In 1945 the business was taken over by a new partnership consisting of defendant’s brother, who owned a half interest, defendant and Margaret, each owning a quarter. To this partnership Margaret contributed $7,500 of her separate funds, the brother $15,000, and defendant $7,500. The latter was money received by defendant from the business during 1944. Apparently the share of defendant and Margaret in the operating profits of the florist business has increased to 33 per cent each. In making income tax returns for 1943-47 (the court restricted the evidence to the period ending December 31, 1948), Margaret and defendant filed separate tax returns, each reporting one-half their combined incomes. In 1948 they filed joint returns. The result of splitting their joint incomes was that defendant’s “net income” as shown on the returns was greater than his “net profits” from the business.

In determining “net profits” under the agreement and decrees the court took defendant’s gross income from the *251 business and deducted therefrom the federal and state income taxes paid by him. Plaintiff’s appeal is based on her contention that this deduction was error. In any event, contends plaintiff, the amount deducted was too high. By adding together defendant’s income which was only from the florist business and Margaret’s income which from that business was equal in amount to that of defendant, and her separate income, and splitting the total in half, defendant was paying more tax than he would have paid had the tax been based solely on his income. In reaching the amount of which plaintiff is to receive 25 per cent, plaintiff’s share is reduced improperly by deducting this larger sum from defendant’s true income. In effect, says she, she is paying a portion of Margaret ’s income taxes. The court found that by failing to assert her rights until it was too late for defendant to be able to obtain a tax refund by filing returns limited to his actual income, plaintiff was guilty of laches and cannot now contest the method of computing his income tax adopted by defendant for the years in question.

Defendant’s appeal is based on his contention that in arriving at his net profits, in addition to reduction for income tax he is entitled to have deducted the amounts paid plaintiff for alimony and child support, and certain sums hereafter discussed which the court found were gifts to plaintiff.

1. Interpretation of Agreement.

The agreement first states that defendant is annually to provide plaintiff with a statement of his “assets and businesses.” It then provides that he is to pay her “25% of any and all net profits in excess of $4,800.00 net per annum, in addition to the payments to be made monthly to Wife, and in addition to the payments to be made to or for said minor son. ’ ’ A reasonable interpretation of the agreement is that he was to pay 25 per cent of the net profits (over $4,800) as shown on the statement of his assets and businesses (subject, of course, to a true statement being made). In construing the provision, the situation of the parties at the time of making the agreement must be considered. They owned a seat adjuster patent that both thought was going to make a lot of money. Had it done so, and had the agreement meant that defendant could not deduct income taxes to arrive at his net profits, defendant’s share of his income, after paying plaintiff her 25 per cent, would be almost wholly eaten up by income taxes. The result then would be that plaintiff’s 25 per cent *252 share would be much greater than defendant’s 75 per cent share. Surely no such result could have been intended by the parties. Again at the time of the execution of the agreement, payments to the wife by way of alimony or property division were not subject to deduction by the husband, and therefore income tax on her share was payable by the husband. It could not have been contemplated that defendant was to pay plaintiff 25 per cent of the amounts he paid on her income tax.

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Bluebook (online)
250 P.2d 182, 114 Cal. App. 2d 248, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/axell-v-axell-calctapp-1952.