Dandini v. Dandini

303 P.2d 556, 146 Cal. App. 2d 193, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1440
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1956
DocketCiv. 17114
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 303 P.2d 556 (Dandini v. Dandini) 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
Dandini v. Dandini, 303 P.2d 556, 146 Cal. App. 2d 193, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1440 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

DRAPER, J. pro tem. *

This is an action by plaintiff wife for 253 shares of the stock of Remillard-Dandini Company alleged to he community property fraudulently concealed at the time the property rights of wife and husband were determined in an earlier separate maintenance action. After non-jury trial, plaintiff had judgment determining that the stock is community property of plaintiff and defendant husband, that it is held by the defendants Sesenna (father, mother and two children) as constructive trustees, and awarding all the stock to plaintiff. Money judgment was also ordered against all the' individual defendants. Defendants appeal.

The principal defense is based upon the doctrine of res judicata. It therefore becomes necessary to review some of the many actions which go to make up a saga of litigation already rivalling the fictional case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce.

The Dandinis were married in 1932 and separated in 1938. In 1942 plaintiff commenced an action for separate maintenance. She alleged that the same shares of stock here in issue were community property of her husband and herself, hut had been fraudulently transferred to defendants Sesenna, who were joined as defendants in that separate maintenance ■action. In one cause of action she asserted that husband had become indebted to the Sesennas, and that the transfer of the • stock to them was merely as security but that he and the Sesennas had conspired to make the transfer appear absolute. In a second count, she asserted that the transfer was wholly without consideration, was made in the course of a conspiracy to- conceal this community property from her, and that the *195 Sesennas in fact held the stock solely for the defendant husband. At the trial, there was testimony that Dandini had borrowed money from defendants Sesenna to finance the display of a “hydrosphere” at the San Francisco World Fair in 1939. He gave promissory notes and assigned a half interest in the device to be displayed. The Sesennas filed suit upon the defaulted notes, and their claims were settled by Dandini’s transfer to them of the disputed shares of Remillard-Dandini Company.

Plaintiff wife had decree for separate maintenance, but the court found that the transfer of the stock was not fraudulent and was made upon consideration. The prayer to set aside that transfer was therefore denied. She appealed from the latter portion of the judgment, but it was affirmed. (Dandini v. Dandini, 82 Cal.App.2d 263 [186 P.2d 41].) In that opinion the evidence in the separate maintenance action is fully reviewed. The wholly adversary and contradictory nature of the action and the evidence is pointed up by the statement (p. 269) “We cannot say that we would not have arrived at a different conclusion had we sat in judgment in the trial court. ’ ’ But the evidence was held not, as a matter of law, insufficient to sustain the judgment. The trial court had before it the fact that a judgment based upon misappropriation of funds of the corporation had been entered against defendant Dandini in the Superior Court of Alameda County (see 82 Cal.App.2d 263 at 265; Remillard Brick Co. v. Dandini, 98 Cal.App.2d 617 [220 P.2d 927]), and the decision on appeal noted the fact that defendant Dandini and defendant Julianna Sesenna, after judgment in the separate maintenance action, were married. This marriage was in violation of a restraining order (Dandini v. Dandini, 86 Cal.App.2d 478 [195 P.2d 871]).

In 1949, the wife filed an action alleging that her husband had, at the time of the separate maintenance decree, owned several parcels of real property acquired with community funds. He had purchased them in the name of The Montreal Corporation, an instrumentality used by him and the Sesennas (who were defendants in that action also) to effect a fraudulent concealment from his wife of his title to these items of community property. In the separate maintenance action, defendants had testified that the only business dealings had among them were those relating to the hydrosphere. The trial court found in favor of plaintiff, determined the property to be community in character, and awarded it to plaintiff. This judgment was affirmed on appeal. (Dandini v. Dandini, 120 *196 Cal.App.2d 211 [260 P.2d 1033].) It was there determined that the fraud so perpetrated upon plaintiff in the separate maintenance action was extrinsic, and thus warranted the intervention of equitable jurisdiction. This court said of defendants’ fraud: “Had it been limited to false or perjured testimony in the separate maintenance action another question would be presented, but here the conduct of the parties went beyond the giving of false or perjured testimony in the action itself. Under the findings of the court they engaged in an elaborate and active conspiracy to conceal the facts from the plaintiff so that she was thereby prevented from litigating the question of her rights in this [real] property in the separate maintenance action.”

The trial court there had found that the defendants in the separate maintenance action had falsely and fraudulently testified that “they had never had any other business transactions . . . except a business transaction involving investment by them in a certain hydrosphere invention . . . which transaction had nothing whatsoever to do and was in no way related to the conspiracy here involved ...”

That “Montreal action” had been tried January 31 and February 9, 1951. Judgment was entered May 4, 1951. The present action was filed September 16, 1952.

In this action, respondent wife alleges almost exactly the same matters included in the complaint in the Montreal action, and avers that such “fraudulent conspiracy, acts, representations and conduct” of appellants were designed to and did induce and cause the findings and judgment against respondent in the separate maintenance action. Appellants’ answer set up the judgment in the separate maintenance action as res judicata. The evidence at the trial consisted principally of the transcript of testimony taken in the separate maintenance action, the court file in that action, and the findings, conclusions and judgment in the Montreal action. Upon this evidence, the trial court found that the stock was community property of respondent and appellant husband, having been fraudulently conveyed by him to appellants Sesenna, and awarded it to respondent.

It is apparent, as is conceded by respondent’s brief, that “this same cause of action had been tried before and judgment rendered adversely to plaintiff in . . . the separate maintenance action. ’ ’ The question here is whether that prior judgment bars this action.

“. . . [W]hen equitable relief from a final judgment is *197 sought, it makes an important difference whether the fraud or mistake is intrinsic or extrinsic to the issues involved in the case in which the judgment was entered.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Simmons v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.
62 Cal. App. 3d 341 (California Court of Appeal, 1976)
Adoption of Bonner
260 Cal. App. 2d 17 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)
Lubeck v. Lopes
254 Cal. App. 2d 63 (California Court of Appeal, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
303 P.2d 556, 146 Cal. App. 2d 193, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dandini-v-dandini-calctapp-1956.