Estate of Raynor

332 P.2d 416, 165 Cal. App. 2d 715
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 1958
DocketCiv. No. 9428
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 332 P.2d 416 (Estate of Raynor) 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 Raynor, 332 P.2d 416, 165 Cal. App. 2d 715 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

165 Cal.App.2d 715 (1958)

Estate of CLAYTON ASHLEY RAYNOR, Deceased. KAY RAYNOR, Appellant,
v.
STOCKTON SAVINGS AND LOAN BANK (a Corporation), Respondent.

Civ. No. 9428.

California Court of Appeals. Third Dist.

Dec. 5, 1958.

Walter McGovern and Wadsworth & Souza for Appellant.

Jacobs, Cavalero & Dietrich, D. R. Jacobs and Mark S. Bray for Respondent.

WARNE, J. pro tem. [fn. *]

This is an appeal from an order appointing Stockton Savings and Loan Bank, the nominee of Cora Raynor, administrator of the estate of Clayton Ashley Raynor, deceased.

The actual contest in this matter is between two women, Kay Raynor, hereinafter referred to as Kay, and Cora Raynor, hereinafter referred to as Cora, each of whom claims to be the surviving spouse of the decedent, hereinafter referred to as Cal. Each sought letters of administration.

Cal and Cora were married in 1927 and 18 years later on June 4, 1946, Cal obtained a divorce from Cora in Nevada. The following day, June 5, 1946, Cal married Kay in Nevada and they then drove to California where on June 20th Cal entered into a contract to purchase an apartment house in Tracy. The purchase of the apartment house was completed on July 6, 1946. On June 21, 1946, Cal returned to Nevada, where on June 27, 1946, just 22 days after marrying Kay, he obtained a Nevada judgment of divorce from her. He then returned to California and continued to live with Kay, whom he held out as his wife until his death, although he remarried Cora on November 30, 1946, which according to Kay was unknown to her. This latter marriage was never dissolved. Kay contends that the Nevada judgment of divorce dissolving her marriage to Cal was invalid.

A few days after Cal returned to Nevada, Kay received a letter from Cal's attorney enclosing a document entitled "Appearance and Waiver," which was later filed in the divorce action. The document, after reciting the title of the court and the cause, reads: *717

"Appearance and Waiver"

"The undersigned, named as defendant in the above entitled action, hereby consents that when a complaint is filed by the above named plaintiff seeking an absolute divorce from the undersigned in the above named Court, this instrument will constitute an appearance in that action by the undersigned, and that the undersigned does hereby submit herself to the jurisdiction of the Sixth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Humboldt."

"Said defendant hereby waives all time to demur, answer or otherwise plead in any such action ..."

This document was signed and acknowledged by Kay before a notary public in Stockton, California, and then mailed to Cal's attorney. It was filed in the divorce proceedings.

In his deposition Sanford C. Bunce, Cal's attorney, who in 1946 maintained a law office in Lovelock, Nevada, testified that he represented Cal in the divorce proceedings filed in the month of June, 1946, and that said "Appearance and Waiver" was mailed to Kay, with a one dollar bill to defray the expense of notary fees and a self-addressed stamped envelope for the return of said instrument after it had been executed by her. A carbon copy of his letter was produced and a photostat thereof is in evidence. The letter, after advising Kay that Cal had retained Attorney Bunce as his counsel in a divorce proceeding to be instituted in the near future, and of the above mentioned enclosures, requested her to sign the "Appearance and Waiver" before a notary public and that she then have the notary public complete the acknowledgment, affix his or her official seal thereto. The letter then stated: "You may then return said instrument to me and I will cause same to be filed at the time Mr. Raynor institutes his divorce proceedings." While Kay claims she signed the "Appearance and Waiver" without reading the document and that her signature was procured by the fraud of Cal, there is substantial evidence in the record from which a reasonable inference may be drawn that Kay signed the Appearance and Waiver knowingly and voluntarily with full understanding of the effect of her act. She testified that she received a "Letter" from Attorney Bunce from Lovelock, Nevada; that she then took a bus from Tracy to Stockton, carrying the unopened letter with her; that upon arrival in Stockton she found a notary public a short distance from the bus depot; that the notary public showed her where to sign the document, and upon her (Kay's) request, mailed the Appearance and *718 Waiver to Attorney Bunce. Kay denied reading the Appearance and Waiver. Concerning the transaction, Kay further testified: "Q. Now, when you received the letter from Mr. Bunce, or the envelope from Mr. Bunce, would you state that the original of this letter definitely was not in that envelope? A. I don't know. Q. You don't know? A. Because I didn't open it--I opened it and she took--she gave it to me like this and she said 'Sign here' and she had it. I don't remember how she had it. She said 'Sign here' and that was all. She didn't say anything and I didn't say anything. And I said 'Would you mail this for me?' because I had to take the next bus back." Her reason for going to Stockton to acknowledge the instrument is not shown in the record.

On cross-examination she denied seeing a dollar bill and envelope returned self-addressed to Attorney Bunce or the letter of transmittal enclosed from Attorney Bunce, all of which were contained in the envelope according to the deposition of Attorney Bunce. However, when she was confronted with the envelope addressed to Attorney Bunce, she admitted that she personally crossed out the words "Tracy, California" and had written the words "Stockton, Calif., Gen. Del." thereon as a return address. The notary public before whom Kay executed the Appearance and Waiver was deceased at the time of the trial and this fact was known to Kay. Obviously, the trial court did not believe Kay's testimony concerning her claimed lack of knowledge of the contents of the letter or that she did not know she was signing an Appearance and Waiver to be filed in the divorce proceeding.

Further, statements made to Wallace Raynor and Patricia Whittemore, the son and daughter of Cal, a few days after Cal's death, are of some significance. The record discloses that both children had known of the relationship between their father and Kay for some time and out of concern for their mother had kept this information from her. After their father's death, Wallace and Patricia traveled to Tracy to arrange to have their father's body sent to Utah for burial and while there contacted Kay in reference to their mission. Wallace testified: "I mentioned to her once that I had intended to bring the body back to Utah, and Kay acted a little reluctant. And, I said 'Well, Kay, you know I can do it.' And she said to me 'Yes.' " Further recognition of knowledge by Kay that Cora was the wife of decedent is found in the testimony of Patricia: "I told Kay Raynor that my mother had instructed me to bring home the income tax reports that my *719 father had ready because she had to file her Federal Income Tax and Kay told me, she said 'Yes, I know, Pat, I have them and I will give them to you.' ... But she said 'if you love a man as much as I love your father, Pat, you could live with him no matter how it had to be.' "

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Bluebook (online)
332 P.2d 416, 165 Cal. App. 2d 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-raynor-calctapp-1958.