Dolliver v. Dolliver

30 P. 4, 94 Cal. 642, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 739
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1892
DocketNo. 13140
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 30 P. 4 (Dolliver v. Dolliver) 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
Dolliver v. Dolliver, 30 P. 4, 94 Cal. 642, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 739 (Cal. 1892).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

Action for the rescission of a contract. The court helow rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed from the judgment, bringing the case here upon the judgment roll alone.

The court finds that the parties are husband and wife, having been married in 1873, and that the plaintiff, at the time of their marriage, was the owner of certain real estate as her separate property, at that time of the value of one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars, and that after her marriage with the defendant she acquired certain other property, which was also her separate estate. On the 27th of August, 1885, the defendant abandoned the plaintiff, and thereafter ceased to live with her, and on the evening of that day, after leaving her, he caused her to be served at her residence with a sum[644]*644mons and copy of a complaint in a suit for divorce, brought by him against her. The court finds that at that time, and for some time previously, the plaintiff was a sufferer from general nervous prostration, and that the abandonment by the defendant, and the nature of the charges in the complaint for divorce, caused her great agitation and distress of mind, and greatly aggravated her bodily infirmity; and that while so distressed in mind and sick in bod}', she almost immediately sought out the defendant and urged him to dismiss the suit and return to her; and that on the 31st of August they met by appointment at the office of Mr. A. N. Drown, who was his attorney, and to whom he introduced the plaintiff, with the statement that they had come to make a settlement. At that interview certain memoranda of the settlement were prepared by Mr. Drown in the presence of both parties, and signed by them, and on the next day formal instruments of settlement, wdiich in the mean time had been prepared by his attorney, were executed by them.

By these instruments, the plaintiff made to the defendant her promissory notes, amounting to thirty thousand dollars, and secured their payment by a mortgage upon certain of her real estate, and a memorandum of agreement was signed by both parties, reciting that “ all of the property belonging to both of said parties has hitherto been and is now held by Mary W. Dolliver,” and that differences have arisen between said parties relating to such property, and the respective rights of each concerning the same,” and that “in mutual consideration of the premises,” it was agreed by them that the property that day conveyed by him to her should be her separate property, and that the property transferred by her to him, together with the aforesaid promissory notes and mortgage, should be his separate property. It is for the rescission of these agreements, and the restitution of the plaintiff to the property so conveyed, and the surrender of the notes and mortgage, that this action was brought.

[645]*645The court finds that the above recitals in the memorandum of agreement had no foundation in fact; that no property of the defendant had been held by the plaintiff, and that he had no property; that there had been, in point of fact, no differences in the sense assumed in the memorandum; that the claim set up by the defendant, and which the settlement purported to adjust, was not a bona fide claim on his part; and that the memorandum purported to give to the plaintiff nothing which was not in point of law and fact already hers, and effected nothing for her pecuniary advantage. The court also finds that the abandonment of tbe plaintiff was without just cause, was made in bad faith, and the suit instituted by him, ostensibly to obtain a divorce, was brought by him merely to harass and vex the plaintiff, and as a means of coercing her into a surrender to him of a portion of her separate estate, and for no other purpose ”; that the matters set forth in his complaint as substantive grounds for divorce were untrue in point of fact, and known by the defendant at the time to be untrue, and that the allegations inserted therein as to the amounts of money which had been turned over by him to his wife were not true in point of fact, and that those amounts were grossly and purposely exaggerated for the purpose of alarming her, and influencing her to make a settlement; that the plaintiff executed the instruments in manner and form as they had been prepared by the attorney for the defendant; that she had no independent advice concerning them or their legal effect and operation, and did not in fact comprehend their effect in point of law upon her property rights; that she was constrained to their execution bjr considerations of the immunity she hoped to obtain from the personal disgrace apprehended by her from the trial of the suit for divorce upon the charges made against her in the complaint, and that it was under the moral pressure exerted upon her by these various considerations that she acted in executing the said instruments.

[646]*6461. Upon the record before us, we cannot consider the proposition made on behalf of the appellant, that the court has failed to make findings upon certain material issues presented by the pleadings. Upon an appeal from a judgment taken upon the judgment roll alone, if the judgment is supported by the findings which are made, the failure of the court to make findings upon other issues presented by the pleadings is not a ground for reversal, unless it shall appear from the record that evidence was offered upon such issues in the court below, and that a finding thereon from such evidence would countervail the findings actually made to such an extent as to invalidate the judgment. (Winslow v. Gohransen, 88 Cal. 450.) Nor does the fact that the court has made findings of fact which are not within the issues presented by the pleadings invalidaté its judgment, if that judgment finds support in the findings which are within the issues, independent of such extraneous findings.

2. An action for the rescission of a contract may be maintained whenever the consent of the party seeking to rescind was obtained through any fraud or undue influence of the other party. (Civ. Code, sec. 1689.) “ Undue influence ” is defined in the Civil Code (sec. 1575) to consist,—“1. In the use, by one in whom a confidence is reposed by another, or who holds a real or apparent authority over him, of such confidence or authority for the purpose of obtaining an unfair advantage over him; 2. In taking an unfair advantage of another’s weakness of mind; or 3. In taking a grossly oppressive and unfair advantage of another’s necessities or distress.”

The plaintiff and defendant were husband and wife, and by virtue of that relation a personal trust and confidence had been created between them, which imposed upon the defendant the obligation of exercising the highest good faith towards the plaintiff in any dealings between them, and precluded him from obtaining any advantage over her by means of any misrepresentation, [647]*647concealment, or adverse pressure. (Civ. Code, sec. 2228.) This relation and the obligation arising from it were not destroyed by the mere fact that an action for divorce was pending between them. They were still husband and wife, and so long as that relation existed between them, the law would not permit any inquiry into the extent of the trust and confidence which is presumed to be placed by one in the other; nor can the husband, by bringing an action for divorce against his wife, divest himself of the obligations which are imposed upon him by virtue of such relation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 P. 4, 94 Cal. 642, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolliver-v-dolliver-cal-1892.