Estate of Cooper

217 P.2d 499, 97 Cal. App. 2d 186, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1506
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 1950
DocketCiv. 17093
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 P.2d 499 (Estate of Cooper) 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
Estate of Cooper, 217 P.2d 499, 97 Cal. App. 2d 186, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1506 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

WILSON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying appellant’s petition for family allowance and her petition for termination of family allowance to Grace Zerbe Cooper.

Both appellant and respondent claim to be the lawful widow of decedent who left a will in which he appointed Grace Zerbe Cooper as his executrix and devised to her all his property. The trial court allowed her a family allowance as the surviving widow.

Decedent and appellant were married in New Jersey on January 10, 1910. They established their home in New York City where he practiced law. Decedent left New York about a year later, leaving his wife in New York, and went to Texas where in the same year he married for a second time. He left Texas shortly thereafter and came to Los Angeles. During World War I he enlisted in the United States Army, later transferring to the British Army, and while he was in England in 1919 his second wife filed suit and obtained a divorce from him in Los Angeles.

After the Armistice decedent returned to New York and lived for a time with appellant. He then proceeded west and established himself in the practice of law in Los Angeles. He married for a third time in Los Angeles but his third wife, Carolyn, was burned to death in 1926. In about 1928 decedent established a home in Los Angeles with respondent and on October 5, 1929, they were purportedly married under the provisions of section 79 * of the Civil Code. Decedent and respondent continued living together in Los Angeles until his death in 1948.

As grounds for reversal appellant contends that (1) she has sustained the burden of proving that she and decedent had never been divorced, (2) in any event the purported marriage between decedent and respondent was not a legal marriage since the requirements of section 79 of the Civil Code were not complied with, and (3) the court erred in admitting *188 into evidence a certified copy of the records of the county recorder as evidence of the marriage between decedent and respondent.

Respondent contends that appellant has failed to sustain the burden of proof that decedent had not obtained a divorce from her, citing Marsh v. Marsh, 79 Cal.App. 560 [250 P. 411], and Estate of Hughson, 173 Cal. 448 [160 P. 548],

Appellant testified that decedent told her when he returned to New York after his discharge from the service that he had never obtained a divorce from her; that he went to California to establish himself and wanted her and their child to join him as soon as possible; he did not, however, send her the money to come to California; in 1923 when she and decedent were together in Toledo, Ohio, where he had gone from Los Angeles to try a lawsuit, decedent told her he had married Carolyn but that he had never divorced appellant; that he was going to break off with Carolyn upon his return; that he wanted to put things right and appellant could come to the coast; that she came to California in 1925 and lived with him about two months and at that time he reiterated there had never been a divorce between them; again in 1927 she came to Los Angeles for a short time at which time he repeated there had never been a divorce; she never saw decedent again after 1927 and first learned of his death from a newspaper clipping she received from her sister-in-law; she did not know he had married respondent.

As proof of her assertion that she and decedent were never divorced, appellant offered in evidence letters which she had received from him between the years 1919 and 1944. In February, 1919, decedent wrote her from England and suggested she discuss with a member of the firm by which she was then employed the possibility of a connection for him. In this letter he states: “tell them that your husband is an American lawyer and that through a misunderstanding we separated . . . that we have cleared our misunderstanding up and are going back together . . . ” In another letter he stated that he felt better than he had ever felt in his life and that there “seems to be a load taken off my shoulders that I have been carrying for years—for now I feel that I am doing the right and honorable thing by comming back to you . . . Everything’s seems rosy—now that all the strain is over—I am comming back my life juring the past eight years hasn’t been a bed of roses but—I have had a lot of experience and—am a *189 much wiser man for it . . . ” This letter was apparently written about the time decedent’s second wife divorced him.

In 1923, when decedent went to Toledo to try a lawsuit, he wrote appellant urging her to join him there. According to his letters written after his return from Toledo, he separated from Carolyn but later went back to her. His letters indicate he had placed himself in a situation from which he was unable to extricate himself and he was fearful of a public scandal. He separated from Carolyn again in 1925 and appellant came to Los Angeles. After her return to New York decedent wrote her, in response to a letter from appellant, that the word which seemed uppermost in all the letters was “divorce”; that he was not interested in the matter at all; that if the family wanted her to get a divorce she should get it in New York; he did not want her to get a divorce in Los Angeles because of the scandal. Decedent wrote: “As for you being in Los Angeles I told you and me_nt it that I liked to have you here better than I did to have you in New York and the past few weeks have proven just how unpleasant and uncertain it is when you are away. So why not go ahead and get a divorce in New York, and let matters straighten themselves out here, and when you have sati—fied everybody you and I will be in a position to do just as we please and we can go off to ourselves and let the rest of the world go bye.

“Now I hope I have made myself clear—as I tried to do when you were here, as for your comming out here to try matters and if after staying here a year they are not entirely to your liking then to get a divorce—I don’t just exactly understand what the object is—you know the conditions out here and my proposition, and that is that we are already divorced, if you want to come here I welcome you, and if after staying here we want to live together we will—and if necessary to remarry we will—and that is the only proposition I have to make . . .

“So try and reason the matter out yourself and do just what you think is best—and I will agree to anything you say except you getting a divorce here.

“Prom the legal side—you would require a years residence here and new grounds—because you lived with me here. And sA-urely I would be a boob to give you the grounds upon which to ruin me here, so why think of such a thing.

“But if you want a New York divorce, just go ahead as if you had never been out here and name who you want to.”

*190 In 1928 decedent wrote appellant that as he understood her offer, he was to give her $5,000, she was to obtain a divorce and then he would be at liberty to do as he pleased. He stated: “As to the divorce why do you want one. You say I never obtained one and therefore you want it—may I ask for what purpose—you say you do not intend to marry—then why the divorce.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 P.2d 499, 97 Cal. App. 2d 186, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-cooper-calctapp-1950.