Farrar v. Farrar

182 P. 989, 41 Cal. App. 452, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 364
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2144.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 182 P. 989 (Farrar v. Farrar) 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
Farrar v. Farrar, 182 P. 989, 41 Cal. App. 452, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 364 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

Plaintiff brought his action in this case for a divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. The defendant, by her cross-complaint, alleged desertion and adultery. The judgment was for defendant on the ground of desertion. The appeal is taken by plaintiff and cross-defendant from the part of the judgment disposing of the property rights, and awarding to defendant alimony and attorneys’ fees.

The findings, so far as material to this appeal, are in , substance as follows:

That plaintiff and defendant accumulated as comm,unity property the following property, and none other, to wit: The household furniture; the wearing apparel and personal effects of plaintiff and defendant; one automobile; and a mining interest of some kind or character in the state of Colorado.

That the following is separate property of the defendant: Easterly 41 feet of westerly 48 feet of Lot 28 in Block B of West Los Angeles; Lot 102 of Exposition Park Square, of Los Angeles; $350 in cash in possession of defendant.

That defendant has no income, but that she has about $350 in money on deposit. That plaintiff is at present em *454 .ployed at a grocery-store in Barstow, California, at a monthly salary of $75, in addition to his hoard and room; that $35 per month is a reasonable amount for permanent alimony; that two hundred dollars' is a reasonable attorneys’ fee to be awarded defendant.

The judgment, as to the property rights, was in accordance with these findings, and divided the community property by giving to defendant the household furniture and her personal effects and wearing apparel, and to the plaintiff the automobile, the Colorado mining interest and his personal effects and wearing apparel; the court adjudging this to be an equal division in value of the community property. The defendant also had judgment for permanent alimony at $35 per month, and two hundred dollars attorneys’ fees.

[1] The main contention of appellant is that the evidence does not support the finding that the real property is the separate property of defendant. Most of appellant’s argument, however, is taken up with a discussion of the relative weight and credibility of the conflicting testimony on this point. That was a matter for the trial court. It may be conceded that defendant’s account of the resources from which she obtained title to this property is not very clear or convincing. She claims to have had three thousand dollars of which her husband was not aware at the time of their marriage, and as to the disposition of which, during the years previous to these real estate investments, she is very vague and noncommittal in her explanations. On the other hand, the only way appellant attempts to explain the purchase of these lots as community property, and which explanation is denied by respondent, is on the theory that a large proportion of the consideration paid for them was money saved by the respondent from an allowance of $50 per month, with perhaps one hundred dollars a year additional, which he paid to her for a period of several years. Incidentally it is conceded that she kept up all of the household expenses, and clothed herself out of this allowance. The consideration paid for the two properties was, $2,650 for the first described lot, on which the parties resided, and one thousand five hundred dollars for the other lot, aggregating $4,150. It is agreed that- Mrs. Farrar had at least six hundred dollars at her marriage, and from about seven hundred dollars to one thousand *455 dollars subsequently inherited from her parents, and she admits that she paid about five hundred dollars of the consideration of the last-described lot from savings from her allowance; but this would still leave an additional sum of from two thousand dollars to two thousand three hundred dollars to be accounted for, and we are inclined to believe that'respondent’s claim that she had three thousand dollars, instead of merely six hundred dollars, at the time of her marriage is a more credible explanation of the purchase money than the surmise of appellant that she saved a total of some two thousand five hundred dollars, or over $25 a month for eight years, from an allowance of $50 per month, after paying all the current expenses of the household therefrom. [2] In addition to this, we have the presumption of separate ownership, from the fact that this property has at all times stood of record in Mrs. Farrar’s name.

The defendant testified that the home place, which is all of the real estate that plaintiff in his complaint claimed as community property, “was purchased with money that was absolutely my own money. It was money that I had before I married Mr. Parrar. I had my own funds, and it was with these funds that I purchased this property.” Plaintiff’s complaint avers that aside from this lot which is therein alleged to be community property, “there is no other community property, excepting household goods and wearing apparel.” As to the sum approximating five hundred dollars which respondent admits went into the other lot from savings accumulated from her husband’s allowance to her and the cash in her possession, the court was not without evidence to justify treating these amounts as a gift from her husband. As has already been pointed out, title to this lot was taken and held in respondent’s name, and the complaint concedes that it did not belong to the community. We cannot see that the court erred in its findings regarding this property. The personal property and effects found to be community property seem to have been equally divided in point of reasonable value.

Appellant complains that there is no express finding of the trial court as to the community interest in the two hundred dollar building and loan stock, and shares of the par value of two hundred dollars in the Guaranty Building and Investment Company, of which evidence was introduced. *456 These items, however, are covered both by the admission of plaintiff in his complaint that aside from the alleged community interest in the home place and' in the household goods and wearing apparel, there was no community property, and the general finding of the court that the property enumerated as such in said finding, and none other, constituted the community accumulations of the parties. That the items above referred to were not enumerated in the judgment as sepárate property of appellant is in no way to plaintiff’s detriment.

Eelating to the Guaranty Building and Investment shares, counsel for appellant states in his brief that “there was no testimony given in regard to the matter, except, the testimony of Mrs. Farrar herself, . . . which reads as follows: Q. (By Mr. Thompson.) How much of the Guaranty stock have you? A. I have two hundred shares at one dollar per share.” Counsel further states that “it is not shown anywhere in the testimony that this stock is not worth its face value.” This is certainly a very misleading summary of the record. The typewritten transcript contains nearly three pages of testimony of Mrs. Farrar tending to show that this company was long since bankrupt ánd out of business; that she had not kept up her assessments on the stock; and that she had received notice some three years previously that her shares would be sold for delinquencies, and had abandoned the whole matter as valueless.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 989, 41 Cal. App. 452, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrar-v-farrar-calctapp-1919.