Ayoob v. Ayoob

168 P.2d 462, 74 Cal. App. 2d 236, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1150
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1946
DocketCiv. 7197
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 168 P.2d 462 (Ayoob v. Ayoob) 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
Ayoob v. Ayoob, 168 P.2d 462, 74 Cal. App. 2d 236, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1150 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

PEEK, J.

By this action Adele Ayoob, plaintiff and appellant herein, seeks to recover upon an alleged oral contract evidenced by a written memorandum executed by her husband, Tom D. Ayoob, now deceased, wherein he agreed that the sum of $5,000 of his estate should be left to her in the event of his death.

Tom D. Ayoob, a native of Syria, had resided in Quincy, California, for a considerable number of years, and had amassed an estate which upon his death was appraised at $89,934.64. He had been married before, and left surviving him seven children, all residents of Quincy, as the issue of the former marriage. Subsequent to the death of his first wife, he made a trip to Lebanon, Syria, and there met Adele Malouf. He returned to the United States and sometime prior to 1939 made another trip to Syria, during the course of which he proposed marriage to Adele. According to her testimony he told her that if she would marry him, leave her family and friends, leave her native country, go to America with him, and care for him for the remainder of his life, he would pay her $5,000 from his estate after his death. She agreed to do all of these things, and on September 6, 1939, at Zahleh, Lebanon, they were married. About eighteen months elapsed after the marriage before arrangements could be made for passports so that Mr. Ayoob could bring his wife to the United States. Shortly after the passports were granted, and approximately a week prior to their leaving Lebanon, Tom Ayoob asked his wife to accompany him to the American Consul at the city of Beirut to have their contract reduced to writing. And on April 26,1941, decedent, in the presence of the American Consul at Beirut, Syria, signed and acknowledged a writing which reads as follows:

“I, the undersigned, Tom David Ayoob, American citizen ... of Quincy, California, declare that in the event of my death, the sum of U. S. $5000.— (Five Thousand U. S. Dollars) of my estate should be left to my wife Mrs. Adele Ayoob, nee Adele Malouf, born at Niha Lebanon, on March 15, 1908, to whom I was married on September 6, 1939, at the Greek Orthodox Church of Mar Nicolo at Zahleh, Lebanon.”

After the instrument was executed, the Consul handed the paper to appellant, saying “this is yours, keep it.”

*240 Shortly thereafter, deceased with appellant returned to Qiuincy, where they resided as husband and wife until his death on December 17, 1943.

Appellant testified that during December, 1941, the decedent requested that she give him the writing he had executed in Syria, with the remark that his daughter Olga had raised some question as to his will, although he thought the will was satisfactory. On the following day he handed the writing back to her, saying, “You keep it, you want to need it some day.” At the same time he told her he had changed the beneficiary in his $5,000 life insurance policy, which was still in the name of his former wife, and made it payable to herself. He also gave her a copy of a will which at the trial was received in evidence as his last will and testament and bears the date December 16,1941. By said will, decedent left all his property to his children. The only paragraph relating to appellant, and pertinent to the issues herein, is as follows:

“I declare that all property which I now own, wherever situate was acquired before my marriage to my present wife, Adele Ayoob, and that I have made provision for her, and which is acceptable to her, by naming her as beneficiary in an insurance policy on my life, which insurance policy has been in effect for a great many years, and if such is necessary, I hereby give, devise and bequeath to my said wife, Adele Ayoob, all payments to become due under such policy of insurance, and all accumulations thereof.”

After the death of decedent, appellant as beneficiary received from the insurance company the proceeds of said policy, which, with accumulated dividends, amounted to approximately $6,400.

Within the time provided by law appellant filed with respondent as administratrix of the decedent’s estate a claim for the payment of the obligation evidenced by the aforesaid writing of April 26, 1941, and upon its rejection filed suit to establish the same and recover the amount thereof. Her complaint alleged among other things the agreement of September 6, 1939, the written instrument or memorandum of April 26, 1941, the performance by herself of the obligations under the agreement, and the refusal of the respondent to approve or allow the claim.

Respondent answered, admitting the formal allegations of the complaint including the solvency of the estate, and also admitted that “Tom D. Ayoob, . . . , died . . . , testate, *241 without leaving the said sum of $5,000.00 of his estate to the said plaintiff . . . but denied the averments with regard to the alleged agreement of September 6, 1939, and the writing of April 26, 1941. By way of an affirmative defense, the answer then set up what in legal effect would be a novation, to wit:

“. . . That said deceased and said plaintiff, long prior to the death of said deceased, agreed as follows, to-wit: The said decedent agreed to change the beneficiary in a policy of Life Insurance, in the principal sum of $5,000.00, payable on his death, from his estate to said plaintiff and to keep all of the premiums thereon paid from proceeds from his separate property, the said plaintiff to receive not only said principal sum but all dividends thereafter accruing, and that in addition thereto the said deceased agreed that he would, during his life time, provide the said plaintiff with reasonable support and care, and the said plaintiff thereupon, and in consideration of the said agreement of said deceased, agreed to waive all other claim against the estate of said deceased and all other claim or interest in any of his property; that said deceased, in compliance with said Agreement, changed the beneficiary under his policy of Life Insurance from his said estate to the said plaintiff, and otherwise complied fully with all of the terms of said Agreement on his part, and defendant is informed and believes, and upon such information and belief alleges that plaintiff has since the death of said deceased received from the Insurance Company, by which said policy of insurance was issued, payment thereunder in excess of $6,000.00, as the beneficiary under said policy, because of the death of said deceased. ’ ’
“That prior to the marriage of plaintiff and said Tom D. Ayoob the said Tom D. Ayoob was the owner of a life insurance policy in the New York Life Insurance Company, the beneficiary of which said policy being at said time the former *242 wife of said Tom D. Ayoob who had died several years prior to the marriage of plaintiff and said Tom D. Ayoob; that in compliance with the said instrument executed by the said Tom D. Ayoob on September 6, 1939, the said plaintiff was made the beneficiary of said life insurance and upon the death of said Tom D. Ayoob the plaintiff received and accepted under the terms of said policy the sum of $6400.00, in satisfaction and payment of the agreement hereinabove referred to.

*241 Appellant was the only witness to testify with respect to the obligation sued upon.

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Bluebook (online)
168 P.2d 462, 74 Cal. App. 2d 236, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayoob-v-ayoob-calctapp-1946.