Barham v. Barham

202 P.2d 289, 33 Cal. 2d 416, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 203
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1949
DocketL. A. 19988
StatusPublished
Cited by127 cases

This text of 202 P.2d 289 (Barham v. Barham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barham v. Barham, 202 P.2d 289, 33 Cal. 2d 416, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 203 (Cal. 1949).

Opinions

SPENCE, J.

Defendant appeals from those portions of the interlocutory decree of divorce effecting awards of alimony and property in favor of plaintiff. He contends that such awards run counter to a purportedly complete adjustment of all property matters theretofore made by contract, between plaintiff and himself, and that the limitations of such settlement are binding upon the court herein. However, the evidence bearing upon the agreements executed by the parties in the light of their marital history, as well as settled public policy pertinent to the marriage relationship, sustains the trial court’s findings in determination of this divorce action, and defendant’s points of challenge therefore cannot prevail. Accordingly, the portions of the judgment here subject of appeal must be affirmed.

The record discloses that plaintiff and defendant were first married on October 8, 1928; that plaintiff was granted an interlocutory decree of divorce on August 12, 1940; and that the final decree of divorce in dissolution of the 1928 marriage was entered on January 13, 1942. On May 11, 1945, plaintiff and defendant remarried, neither having contracted a marriage in the meantime. There were no children the issue of either marriage.

On January 21, 1946, plaintiff instituted the present litigation originally as a separate maintenance action and sought a declaration of rights with regard to certain agreements previously executed by the parties: viz., an antenuptial agreement made on October 1, 1928, just prior to their first marriage, and several property agreements dated respectively June 28, 1935, November 16, 1936, December 16, 1936, November 1, 1937, December 2, 1937, and August 24, 1943. Defendant countered with a cross-complaint for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. Thereupon plaintiff, with leave of the court, amended her complaint to seek a divorce, alleging extreme cruelty on the part of defendant. At the trial defendant did not oppose a dissolution of the marriage, and he offered [420]*420no proof of his charges of cruelty in his cross-complaint. Plaintiff made proof of her allegations of mental cruelty and was awarded a decree of divorce, whereupon the court declared that it would “take up the question of the property rights as joined by the pleadings.”

The antenuptial agreement of October 1, 1928, recited that “in anticipation of [their forthcoming] marriage, the parties desire [d] ... to fix and determine the rights of each of them in any and all property . . .”; and “in consideration of said marriage,” each party specifically “waive[d] any and all rights, claims and demands ... in and to [the] property,” of the other, “both during . . . life and after .. . death.” The agreement of June 28, 1935, made while the parties were “living separate and apart,” was executed “in consideration of the premises and of the mutual covenants” therein “contained and for the purpose of finally adjusting and settling all rights, present or future, including property rights, rights. of second party [the wife] to support and maintenance, and any other rights of whatsoever kind or nature arising out of the marital status of first and second parties, irrespective as to whether there may be a subsequent reconciliation, suit for separate maintenance or divorce.” Expressly included in second party’s release and waiver were future claims of “interest in community property,” “right to . . . homestead,” and “any and all claims and rights, present and future, to support . . . saving and excepting such as are provided for by this instrument” ($200 per month to “continue until the death of first party or second party, or until the marriage of second party to another, whichever shall first occur”). Specifically recognizing “the possibility of a future reconciliation,” the “parties declare[d] their intention to be that a reconciliation, either temporary or permanent, between first and second parties, or a restoration of the former relations of said parties, or a further separation, temporary or permanent, after any reconciliation” should “not render this agreement or the ‘Ante-Nuptial Agreement,’ hereinabove ratified, reaffirmed and confirmed, or any provision hereof or thereof, invalid, inoperative, rescinded or revoked,” and “particularly agreed” that “the monthly payments ... to be paid by first party to second party” should “continue as in this agreement provided, notwithstanding resumption of former relations, reconciliations or subsequent separations.”

Each of the various property settlement agreements subsequently executed by the parties was denominated “amend[421]*421ment to agreement.” The first of these, that of November 16, 1936, increased the “monthly payments” in favor of “second party” to $300 per month “subject to the contingencies” and conditions, however, provided in the “agreement of June 28, 1935.” Bach of the succeeding amendments ratified and reaffirmed all those preceding it. On August 12,1940, when plaintiff was awarded her interlocutory decree of divorce with regard to the first marriage, she presented those agreements which had been executed up to that date, which would include the first four amendments, and they were approved by the court in that decree. The last or “fifth amendment to agreement” was that of August 24, 1943, some 19 months after the entry of the final decree of divorce in the first action. It provided that “second party” should “be entitled to a claim against the estate of first party to the extent of” $60,000 “in the event that second party” was “living at the time of the death of first party and [had] not married another,” said sum to be payable in monthly payments of $300 “for the support and maintenance of second party.” And again “the parties” ratified and reaffirmed “all of the . . . agreements and amendments” theretofore executed and agreed that “the same [should] continue in full force and effect as herein clarified.”

In the present action the trial court found that all of the aforementioned agreements, including that of August 24,1943, “are now and were at all times valid and subsisting and have not been cancelled, rescinded or annulled” but “since the marriage” of the parties “on May 11, 1945 . . . their rights and duties towards each other as husband and wife are controlled by the laws of the State of California and not by the said agreements as to all things occurring since said marriage on May 11, 1945.” Accordingly, the interlocutory decree of divorce adjudged the aforesaid agreements to be “in full force and effect and that the plaintiff is entitled to receive from the defendant, by virtue of said agreements, the sum of $300.00 per month . . . [but] that the said agreements are not binding on this court in awarding support to the plaintiff,” it being “further adjudged” that “beginning August 1,1946,” and “until the plaintiff remarries,” she shall receive “in addition to the moneys required to be paid . . . under the aforementioned agreements” the “sum of $600.00 per month for her support and maintenance,” as well as “the community property of the parties acquired after” their second marriage —“May 11, 1945”—amounting to $11,101.01: $6,836.01 in cash, war bonds valued at $3,365, and 100 shares of stock val[422]*422ued at $900. The court also “ assign [ed] to the plaintiff, for the remainder of her natural life, ’ ’ a portion of the homestead theretofore declared by her upon defendant’s separate property known as the Santa Ynez ranch. It is solely from these last-mentioned portions of the decree—the award to plaintiff of $600 per month for support, the community property, and the homestead—that defendant has appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P.2d 289, 33 Cal. 2d 416, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barham-v-barham-cal-1949.