Deacon v. Deacon

281 P. 533, 101 Cal. App. 195, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 251
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 14, 1929
DocketDocket No. 3653.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 281 P. 533 (Deacon v. Deacon) 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
Deacon v. Deacon, 281 P. 533, 101 Cal. App. 195, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 251 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This is an action for an accounting and partition of certain property described in the plaintiff’s complaint. The record shows that on and prior to the fourteenth day of July, 1923, the plaintiff Clara E. Deacon and the defendant Daniel A. Deacon were husband and wife; that on said date an agreement settling and adjusting their property rights was executed and aelmowledged. This agreement recited that the parties had separated on the thirteenth day of March, 1923, were living apart, and that an action for divorce had been instituted; and for the purposes of settling and adjusting the property rights of the respective parties it was agreed, among other things, that the defendant Daniel A. Deacon should pay to the plaintiff certain sums of money for her support and for the support of the children, the issue of said marriage. Said agreement also provided that there should be set apart, and said agreement purported to set apart and convey to the plaintiff, as her separate property, a certain dwelling-house, the furniture therein, and the lot upon which it is situated, the lot in question being described as the south fifty feet of the north 100 feet of lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 in block number 456 of Seaman’s Addition to the city of San Diego. The agreement further provided that the mortgage encumbrance on said property in the sum of $2,500 should be assumed and paid by the defendant Daniel A. Deacon. The. agreement then provided for the setting aside to the defendant Deacon of certain property known as the south twenty-five feet in block 59, Horton’s Addition to the city of San Diego, and the store situated thereon, and the stock of merchandise then in said store building. The agreement then described other real property belonging to the parties entering into the agreement, and described the same as the community property of Daniel A. Deacon and Clara E. Deacon. It was further provided that the community property should be disposed of and applied to the payment of the community debts, and the excess, if any, divided equally between the parties entering into the agreement. The record shows that within a short time after the execution of this agreement, a divorce was granted to the plaintiff Clara E. Deacon from *198 the defendant Daniel A. Deacon. It does not appear that any mention was made of the community property in the decree of divorce, nor does it appear that the property settlement to which we have referred was considered by the trial court, or adopted as a settlement of the property rights of the respective parties in the decree of divorce granted as aforesaid. The record shows that the community property referred to remained in the possession of the defendant Daniel A. Deacon for about two years, during which time he collected the rents and profits thereof, and according to the findings of the court, did not render any account of the same to the plaintiff in this action. In this connection, however, it may be stated that the defendant Daniel A. Deacon, during said two years, applied the sum of approximately $16,000 toward the payment of the community debts existing on the fourteenth day of July, 1923. Upon the hearing of the action the trial court determined that ■ an accounting should be had and appointed a referee to take such an accounting and report to the court the condition of the accounts between the parties and the status of the community property. This report shows that at the date of the execution of the agreement referred to the community debts aggregated the sum of $36,945.43; that at the same date the possible community assets were of the value of about $29,300; that during the two years intervening between the execution of the property agreement and the beginning of this action the defendant Daniel A. Deacon had advanced out of his own property toward the payment of community debts the sum of $16,355.43, which was a charge against the community property. The record thus shows that at the date of the execution of the property settlement the liabilities of the community exceeded the assets in the sum of $7,645.43.

In the agreement settling the property rights there was listed as community property the undivided half of the westerly half of lots 7 and 8, block 60, Middletown, city of San Diego, upon which there was situated an apartment house known as the “Ivy Apartments,” including as well a like interest in the furniture and furnishings in said apartment house. After the beginning of the action' herein, as just mentioned, the defendant and cross-complainant, A. T. Roark, filed a complaint in intervention setting forth *199 his interest in said property, by which it appears, and also, as found by the court, he owned a one-half interest subject to the payment by him of a mortgage existing on said property in the sum of $6,500, which he had assumed and agreed to pay. The court in its decree, after finding the status of the property, among other things, directed that the property which we have mentioned, and known as the “Ivy Apartments,” be sold; that from the one-half interest of the said A. T. Roark in and to said property and the proceeds, there be deducted, first, the sum of $6,500 on account of the mortgage thereon which he had assumed and paid. It was further provided in the decree that said property should not be sold unless there could be obtained therefor a price of at least $14,000 in excess of the existing mortgage of $6,500 thereon, and the discharge and cancellation, in addition thereto, of the mortgage existing thereon in the sum which we have mentioned. The decree further provided that out of the proceeds of the sale of said Ivy Apartments, the mortgage existing upon the homestead setting aside to the plaintiff in the sum of $2,500 should be paid and discharged, being the mortgage which the defendant Daniel A. Deacon had assumed and agreed to pay in the agreement adjusting the community rights of the parties entered into on the fourteenth day of July, 1923. The decree then provided that all of the community, real and personal property other than the Ivy Apartments should be set over and awarded to the said Daniel A. Deacon, subject to the obligations and liens existing thereon, and that the plaintiff Clara E. Deacon should forthwith execute a good and sufficient quitclaim deed or deeds and bill of sale conveying and transferring to said Daniel A. Deacon all of said community property, and that the acceptance by said Daniel A. Deacon should be an assumption by him of the community indebtedness referred to in the decree, and that he should thereafter save harmless the said Clara E. Deacon from all liability arising therefrom. The decree then provided for the appointment of a referee to sell the Ivy Apartments and the proceeds of the sale of said premises apportioned as directed in the decree, and then further ordered “that there be allowed and adjudged and paid as attorney’s fees to Sloane & Sloane as attorneys for the plaintiff in this action the sum of $1500.00; to Wright & McKee, as attorneys for *200 defendant Daniel A. Deacon, and the defendant The First Trust & Savings Bank of San Diego, the sum of $1500.00.” Costs were allowed the referee in the sum of $490. Likewise, there was allowed and made a charge against the community property, the sum of $200 for an abstract of title obtained by the plaintiff. The record further shows that Sloane & Sloane as attorneys for the plaintiff had obtained the sum of $607.29 on account of attorney’s fees, out of the community property, which should be charged against them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 P. 533, 101 Cal. App. 195, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deacon-v-deacon-calctapp-1929.