Brown v. Butler

39 P.2d 244, 3 Cal. App. 2d 11, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1131
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1934
DocketCiv. 5259
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 244 (Brown v. Butler) 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
Brown v. Butler, 39 P.2d 244, 3 Cal. App. 2d 11, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1131 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This cause is before us upon the plaintiff’s appeal from a judgment of dismissal entered after granting motions to dismiss and sustaining demurrers interposed by the defendants to the plaintiff’s complaint without leave to amend.

The record shows that the plaintiff and Cooley Butler intermarried in the state of Minnesota, on or about the twelfth day of August, 1900, and thereafter continued to be husband and wife until on or about the nineteenth day of May, 1923, when a decree of divorce was entered in the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, purporting to dissolve the marriage relation then and theretofore existing between the plaintiff and the said Cooley Butler. Preceding the entry of this decree, an agreement was entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant Cooley Butler, purporting to settle, all and singular, their property rights, making provision for the appellant by setting over to her, together with advances theretofore previously made, property of the value of approximately $220,000. The agreement also provides for the dismissal of a certain action for the sum of $80,000, begun by the plaintiff against the defendant Cooley Butler. The agreement also contained, among other things, a stipulation to the effect that the second party to the agreement (being the plaintiff in this action), promised and agreed on behalf of herself, her heirs, executors, administrators, etc., that neither she, nor they, nor any of them would ever at any time whatsoever commence, bring, maintain, prosecute or defend any suit, action, proceeding, or otherwise, against the first party (being the said Cooley Butler, defendant in this action), his executors, personal representatives, etc., or any other person, for the purpose of establishing, or attempting to establish, that she, her executors, etc., had, from and after the execution of this agreement, any right, title, interest or estate in and to any of the property, through or by reason of any alleged fraud, misrepresentation, deceit, undue influence or duress, or otherwise, practiced on her by the first party (being the defend *14 ant Cooley Butler), or any person acting in his behalf, in obtaining her consent to the execution of the -agreement.

The agreement further sets forth and details the character of the property turned over to the appellant in this action in the settlement as therein agreed upon. This agreement appears to have been referred to and made a part of the decree of divorce.

Subsequent to the execution of this agreement, and some time during the year 1924, the plaintiff began an action in the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles, praying for a divorce from the defendant Cooley Butler, alleging, among other causes of actions, that the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada had no jurisdiction of the action, by reason of the fact that the plaintiff Cooley Butler, who began the action, was not a resident of the state of Nevada, and had not been a resident thereof for the statutory time required to give the District Court of Nevada jurisdiction of the cause. Upon motion of the defendant Cooley Butler, in the action for divorce so begun by the plaintiff in the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles, judgment of dismissal was entered therein.

In May, 1932, the present action was instituted by the plaintiff, -in the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles. In addition to interposing a demurrer raising the statute of limitations, and a number of other grounds which we need not specify, the defendants interposed motions to dismiss the action, setting forth thirteen separate grounds upon which the motions were based, four of which we may mention, to wit:

1st. That the action is without merit;
2d. That said action is brought for the purposes of harassing and vexing the defendants, and each of them;
3d. That the filing of said action is an imposition and fraud upon the above-entitled court;
4th. That said action was not instituted in good faith.

It appears that the trial court, upon the hearing of the demurrers and motions interposed by the defendants, permitted the introduction of a number of affidavits, together with certified copies of all the proceedings had in the divorce action prosecuted to judgment in the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, and likewise, all the proceedings had in the action praying for a divorce, insti *15 tuted by the plaintiff against the defendant Cooley Butler, in the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles. The complaint in the action for divorce filed in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County contains an allegation to the' effect that the plaintiff is informed and believes that the defendant, Cooley Butler, and the plaintiff had accumulated property of a value in excess of ten millions of dollars during the time of the continuance of their marriage relation.

The present action prays for a division of property alleged to have been accumulated during the existence of the marriage relation of the plaintiff and the defendant Cooley Butler, alleging that prior to, and on the nineteenth day of May, 1923, said property was of a value in excess of eighteen millions of dollars, $15,179,000 thereof having been accumulated in the state of Minnesota, and then and there being in the state of Minnesota, and $3,477,537.60 having been accumulated in the state of California, and then and there being, on the nineteenth day of May, 1933.

While the briefs of counsel have been both learned and exhaustive in considering the objections raised by the defendants on their motions to dismiss the action, which briefs have been given careful consideration, by reason of views hereinafter expressed upon the subject of the statute of limitations, it is unnecessary to consider the merits of the motions, or the alleged errors of the trial court in relation thereto, further than to state that for the purposes of considering questions raised by demurrer, the allegations of the complaint are taken to be true, which would lead to the conclusion that where a wife’s interest being a one-third interest in the property accumulated in the state of Minnesota, and a one-half interest in the property accumulated in the state of California, the total property being valued in excess of eighteen millions of dollars, and a settlement had with the wife by which she receives only the sum of $220,000, an action prosecuted to secure a further portion of the property so accumulated would not on the face of it appear to be prosecuted either without merit or for the purposes of harassing the defendant, or an imposition of fraud upon any court, or that such an action could not be considered as instituted in good faith. We may also add that the actions to which our attention has been called and the certified copies of the pleadings and judgments therein *16 show, that there has never been an adjudication of the issues tendered in this action.

As to the agreement, a portion of which we have set forth herein, it is sufficient to call attention to the case of Normile v. Denison, 109 Wash. 205 [186 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 244, 3 Cal. App. 2d 11, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-butler-calctapp-1934.