Baldwin v. Baldwin

187 P.2d 429, 82 Cal. App. 2d 851, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1282
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1947
DocketCiv. No. 15342
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 187 P.2d 429 (Baldwin v. Baldwin) 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
Baldwin v. Baldwin, 187 P.2d 429, 82 Cal. App. 2d 851, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1282 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

DORAN, J.

The matter here presented has had a long judicial history and has previously been before the Supreme Court on three occasions, namely in Estate of Baldwin, 21 Cal.2d 586 [134 P.2d 259]; Lissner v. Superior Court, 23 Cal.2d 711 [146 P.2d 232]; and in Baldwin v. Baldwin, 28 Cal.2d 406 [170 P.2d 670].

Rowena Schneider Baldwin and Baldwin M. Baldwin were married on October 21, 1937, and on October 25, 1939, Anita M. Baldwin, the defendant’s mother, died, bequeathing to Baldwin M. Baldwin the sum of $1,500 per month. Two days later his wife, Rowena Schneider Baldwin, instituted a divorce action, and secured, ex parte, the appointment of Louis *853 M. Lissner as receiver. The appointment of a receiver was predicated upon the wife’s verified complaint alleging in substance that the parties were possessed of a large amount of community property, and that the husband had so commingled community and separate property that the same could not be segregated; that the defendant “threatened to secrete, sell and encumber the community property . . . threatened to take out of the State of California all the community property, . . . threatened to hypothecate, assign and secrete his properties both real and personal so that he would be judgment proof ... all for the purpose of embarrassing, hindering and delaying the satisfaction or payment of any orders . . . for the support of the plaintiff, and for the support and maintenance of plaintiff’s minor children” (by a former marriage). It was further alleged that defendant intended to assign any and all interest in Anita M. Baldwin’s estate; that defendant had fraudulently established a pretended residence in Nevada for the purpose of evading the California laws and defrauding the plaintiff; and that the wife “should have her just share of community property and he allowed a lump sum settlement of at least $250,000.”

On June 1, 1940, the receiver petitioned the probate court for a ratable distribution seeking payment to the receiver of $1,500 per month from commencement of the probate proceedings in the Anita M. Baldwin estate. This petition was contested by the executors, of which Baldwin M. Baldwin was one; the petition was denied but upon the receiver’s appeal in 21 Cal.2d 586, a reversal was obtained. Upon a further petition for ratable distribution, Judge Stutzman in the superior court refused to assume jurisdiction; a writ of mandate was issued by the Supreme Court in 23 Cal.2d 711 compelling the lower court to take jurisdiction. Eventually the receiver’s petition was granted and the Baldwin executors ordered to pay to the receiver the sum of $82,500 plus $1,500 per month until distribution.

In the divorce case, on August 3, 1944, Judge Henry M. Willis ordered judgment for the defendant Baldwin M. Baldwin. The trial court found that at no time prior to the appointment of the receiver and the confirmation thereof, did the court “have jurisdiction of the person of the defendant . . . or of his property, either by service of summons, process, order to show cause, notice or by his voluntary appearance, of seizure of said defendant’s property, or otherwise.”

*854 These findings further recite that the defendant was a bona fide resident of Nevada; that there was no community property and consequently no commingling thereof with separate property; that defendant had not threatened to sell, secrete or encumber either separate or community property, or to take any property out of the State of California, etc.; and that “It is not true that any threats, acts or conduct of defendant required the appointment of a receiver. ’ ’ An appeal from that judgment resulted in an affirmance thereof by the Supreme Court on June 25, 1946, in 28 Cal.2d 406. The reviewing court there held that allowances made to the wife pendente lite without notice to the husband, and ordered paid by the receiver, “are ineffectual as personal judgments against him where he has neither voluntarily appeared in an action nor has been duly served with process”; and that “Inasmuch as service had not been had on defendant herein nor had the receiver taken into possession property of the defendant at the time of the issuance of the order of January 5, 1940, such order was correctly held by the trial court to be void and of no effect.”

Thereafter, the defendant filed a motion to discharge the receiver, and the receiver filed a report and petition for payment of fees out of the defendant’s share in the Baldwin estate. The defendant’s objections to the receiver’s report and petition alleged that the ex parte appointment of receiver was made in reliance upon plaintiff’s false allegations, and that the receivership was unnecessary, improvident, wrongful and inequitable. On September 20, 1946, Judge Willis sustained the defendant’s contentions, ordered discharge of the receiver, and found that “it would be unjust, inequitable and unlawful to charge the defendant with any of the fees, costs or expenses of the receiver or of the receiver’s attorneys, or to require that any of such fees, costs or expenses be paid out of property belonging to said defendant”; and that the receiver should “look to plaintiff for his compensation.” It is from this order that the receiver now appeals.

The appellant argues that “A receiver whose appointment is not void is entitled to compensation out of the property in his custody,” and that the appointment of the receiver in this case was not void or irregular. According to the respondent’s brief, however, the following question is squarely presented: “When a plaintiff has induced a court of equity to appoint a receiver by making false and unwar *855 ranted allegations of fact in a verified pleading, and when it has been determined that plaintiff’s action was wholly without merit, upon whom should the costs of such receivership be imposed!”

To sustain the appellant’s contentions herein, would, in effect, amount to a holding that once a plaintiff secures the appointment of a receiver, even by the making of totally false and unwarranted allegations, such receiver possesses an absolute right to saddle a defendant’s property with the burden of paying the receiver’s fees, the fees of attorneys for the receiver and all expenses connected with the receivership. The cases cited by appellant by no means support such a proposition and to countenance such a rule would place in a plaintiff’s hands a weapon which might easily result in the complete ruin of an innocent defendant.

Certainly, a trial court making an ex parte appointment of a receiver as in the present case, may assume that the sworn statements of the applicant justifying such a drastic remedy, are true, and that the application is made in good faith. Such allegations cannot be regarded as mere formal statements. But in the instant litigation, Judge Willis, who heard all of the evidence in the divorce case as well as that relating to the receivership, has stated that “substantially all of the material allegations . . . have been found and determined to be untrue; that the false allegations . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 P.2d 429, 82 Cal. App. 2d 851, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-baldwin-calctapp-1947.