Cohen v. Cohen

166 P.2d 622, 73 Cal. App. 2d 330, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 839
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1946
DocketCiv. 14894
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 622 (Cohen v. Cohen) 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
Cohen v. Cohen, 166 P.2d 622, 73 Cal. App. 2d 330, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 839 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

Respondent, Joseph Cohen, commenced this litigation by filing in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County a complaint for divorce. Appellant wife, in addition to her answer denying the charges of cruelty set forth by respondent, filed a cross-complaint seeking separate maintenance and a division of the community property. Respondent also filed a second action by which he sought to set aside certain transfers of real and personal property theretofore made by him to appellant. The two cases were consolidated for trial. On April 29, 1943, respondent, by leave of court, filed a “supplemental” complaint for divorce which set forth 58 alleged acts of cruelty on the part of appellant. Appellant failed to answer the supplemental complaint, and on September 21, 1943, her default was duly entered. On September 28, 1943, Attorney John E. Glover, who had previously represented appellant (but who was not her counsel at the time her default was entered), filed a petition for the appointment of himself as a guardian ad litem of appellant, alleging that she “is totally incapable of conducting the defense or prosecution of the within action”; and upon presentation of this petition to the court (not the department of the judge who tried the ease), an order was made appointing Mr. Glover guardian ad litem of appellant and substituting him as defendant in the cause. So far as appears from the record, this petition was filed and the order was made without notice to or appearance by appellant personally.

At the opening of the trial, appellant being now represented by Mr. Glover, it was stipulated that her default be set aside, and Mr. Glover thereupon filed in her behalf an amended *332 cross-complaint for divorce and a “supplement to amended cross-complaint.” The allegations of these pleadings were by stipulation deemed denied by respondent.

Following submission of the case, but before entry of judgment, the record discloses that appellant, through her attorney and guardian ad litem, Mr. Glover, moved to vacate the order of submission, withdraw her amended cross-complaint (for divorce) and reinstate her original cross-complaint (for separate maintenance). This motion, submitted upon the affidavit of Attorney Glover, was denied. Thereafter, on March 13,1944, the court made findings of fact and conclusions of law, and adjudged that appellant was entitled to a divorce upon the ground of desertion (the ground stated in her “supplement to amended cross-complaint”). The court further ordered that respondent pay to appellant the sum of $7,732.50 plus $200 per month for 24 months, and pay to appellant’s attorney a fee of $2,500. Certain real property of respondent was impressed with a lien to secure the payments required by this interlocutory judgment.

Mrs. Cohen, having obtained new counsel (her fourth or fifth change of attorneys), filed notice of appeal from (1) the interlocutory judgment; (2) an order of April 20, 1944, “which order struck from the files all the affidavits and attached exhibits filed by defendant and cross-complainant in support of her motion for a new trial”; and (3) an order of April 24, 1944, “which denied the motion of the defendant and cross-complainant to be relieved of her default for failure to file her supporting affidavits on motion for a new trial within the time allowed by law. ’ ’

After the filing of the notice of appeal Mrs. Cohen discharged her counsel and appeared in propria persona. Upon the lodging of the record on appeal in this court, she appeared by her present counsel and filed an application for leave to produce additional evidence, consisting of (1) the judgment, now final, in favor of appellant in the consolidated action whereby respondent sought to set aside certain transfers of property to her, and (2) evidence as to additional assets of respondent not disclosed at the trial. Since the ease must be reversed and retried, the additional evidence would serve no useful purpose in this court.

Appellant’s contentions on appeal may be divided into two categories: (1) An attack upon the validity of the appointment of the guardian ad litem, the granting of a divorce upon the *333 cross-complaint signed by the guardian, and the refusal of the court to permit the withdrawal of the cross-complaint for divorce and the reinstatement of the cross-complaint for separate maintenance only; and (2) an attack upon the findings and judgment of the court with respect to the property rights of the parties. The second group of contentions need not be considered, as the conclusions reached by this court on the first group require that the judgment be reversed and all issues set at large for retrial.

Ás heretofore indicated, defendant wife by her pleadings originally sought separate maintenance and a division of the community property. About the time that plaintiff husband filed his supplemental complaint for divorce the wife had discharged her attorneys and was appearing in propria persona; she failed to answer the supplemental complaint and her default was entered. Shortly before the trial she reengaged her former counsel, who presented to the court his verified petition, alleging “that said Kathryn B. Cohen, since the inception of said proceedings, has had five separate and distinct law firms or attorneys representing her in connection with said proceedings, and she now appears in propria persona. . . . That your petitioner is informed and believes . . . that said Kathryn B. Cohen, from the causes set forth in the affidavit of Dr. David Harold Fink hereto attached and made a part hereof, is unable unassisted to properly manage and take care of her property, and is totally incapable of conducting the defense or prosecution of the within action, which action involves substantial property interests. ...” The affidavit of Dr. Fink stated that the wife was “suffering from severe situational neurosis, caused in part, according to her statements, by her husband’s desertion for another woman.

. . . That the said Kathryn B. Cohen, by reason of the aforementioned situational neurosis, coupled with an emotional upset, is unable unassisted to properly manage and take care of her property, and totally incapable of conducting the defense or prosecution of the aforementioned litigation.” During the course of the trial Dr. Fink was called to the stand by Mr. Cohen’s counsel, and he then testified in part as follows:

“THE COURT: Would you say she was sane or insane?
“A. Well, I would say she was on the border line. She is sane enough so that no court in this country would ever declare her insane, and yet she is not sane enough to take any kind of *334 professional advice. . . . She requires psychiatric care under sanitarium conditions. ’ ’

The trial of the cause occupied from October 7 to October 13, 1943. On December 30, 1943, Mrs. Cohen’s guardian ad litem, moved the court to vacate the order of "submission and allow the withdrawal of the cross-complaint for divorce and the reinstatement of the cross-complaint for separate maintenance. This motion was submitted upon an affidavit of the guardian ad litem as follows:

“That your affiant has been requested by said Kathryn B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 622, 73 Cal. App. 2d 330, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-cohen-calctapp-1946.