Gilb v. Gilb

339 P.2d 176, 170 Cal. App. 2d 379, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2225
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1959
DocketCiv. 23042
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 339 P.2d 176 (Gilb v. Gilb) 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
Gilb v. Gilb, 339 P.2d 176, 170 Cal. App. 2d 379, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2225 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

SHINN, P. J.

Eva sued Frank for divorce. Frank filed a cross-complaint in which he sought an annulment or, in the alternative, a divorce. After a trial lasting 32 days, the court made findings and entered judgment denying Frank an annulment and awarding each spouse a divorce upon the ground of *381 mental cruelty. The judgment also contained provisions for the custody and support of the minor daughter, for a division of the community property, and for the payment from community funds of Frank’s reasonable expenses in defending an action for attorneys' fees brought by his former attorneys and to enable Eva to pay her costs and attorneys’ fees in the present action.

The court tried first the annulment issue and announced its decision; it then tried separately the divorce issues which included the community property issues. Certain of appellant’s contentions in his brief related to the community property issues. He furnished a record of the oral proceedings upon the annulment issue but none as to the divorce and community property issues. Upon respondent’s application for augmentation of the record the court gave appellant a choice between providing an adequate record or abandoning those points. He failed to provide such a record; he abandoned some of his points and others were stricken from his brief by the court for failure to provide an adequate record with respect thereto.

Although the appeal is from the judgment in its entirety, it is limited by appellant’s brief, and the only contentions requiring decision are that appellant should have been granted an annulment on his cross-complaint and that the, court erred in provisions of the judgment relating to allocations made to the parties from community funds.

We shall first consider appellant’s contention that the court erred in denying him an annulment.

The parties were married in Tijuana, Mexico, on September 2, 1939; they separated in June 1952. Eva had previously been married to Marcus P. Kennedy. The theory of Frank’s count for an annulment was that Kennedy was living in September 1939 and that the prior marriage was still in force. (Civ. Code, § 82, subd. 2.) In her answer to the cross-complaint Eva alleged that she obtained a valid decree of divorce from Kennedy in Las Vegas, Nevada, on May 28, 1937, and she alleged as affirmative defenses that appellant had waived his right to contest the Nevada decree, that he was estopped to do so, and that he was guilty of laches. These defenses were pleaded orally in open court and were tried as if they had been pleaded in formal fashion.

The court found: (1) Eva was not a bona fide resident of Nevada at the time of her divorce from Kennedy. (2) *382 Knowing that Eva went to Nevada for the purpose of divorcing Kennedy and having knowledge of the nature and duration of her sojourn in Nevada, appellant married her in reliance on her divorce and is estopped to attack the Nevada decree. (3) The parties cohabited from 1939 to 1952, working together and cooperating in the acquisition of community property and in the raising of their minor daughter, in reliance upon the validity of their marriage. Pursuant to these findings the court made conclusions of law to the effect that Prank is estopped to attack Eva’s Nevada decree, that he is without legal standing to attack it, that he has waived his right to attack it, and that his claim is barred by laches.

In urging that he should have been granted an annulment, appellant argues that the court erred in determining that he was guilty of laches and had no standing to attack the Nevada decree and that the findings of waiver and estoppel are without support in the evidence.

The transcript of the annulment proceedings consists of over 800 pages of testimony and argument. The parties were questioned at inordinate length as to the circumstances of Eva’s divorce from Kennedy. The following undisputed facts were developed in the evidence. Eva resided in San Diego, California. She married Kennedy in January 1936 but never lived with him. She met appellant in June 1936. Prank was a “sales engineer” in the laundry and dry cleaning business, traveling a regular route through California, Arizona and Nevada. In March or April 1937, he drove plaintiff to Las Vegas where she initiated divorce proceedings and obtained a divorce from Kennedy on May 28th; she left Nevada a few days later and never returned there to live.

Eva testified that she did not change her residence from California to Nevada solely in order to divorce her former husband. Appellant suggested that she go to Las Vegas; “He knew that I was going to get a divorce and I wanted a complete change of residence and to make a complete, all around change, and it was on his suggestion that I went to Las Vegas, Nevada, to establish my residence.” Appellant paid her hotel bill for the first week or 10 days of her stay in Las Vegas. He visited her three or four times and they went out socially; they also corresponded. On his last trip to Las Vegas, Prank brought with him Eva’s sister, a Mrs. Dilley. Appellant drove the sisters back to Los Angeles after the entry of the divorce decree.

*383 Mrs. Dilley testified that either on the way to Las Vegas or shortly after their arrival appellant told her that her sister was “there getting a divorce” but she paid no attention to his statement until her sister confirmed it. On the day of the trial, Frank drove the sisters to the courthouse but he did not attend the proceedings. Immediately after the trial respondent packed all her belongings and the three drove away and spent a week together before returning to their homes.

Appellant's testimony was in sharp conflict with that of Mrs. Gilb and her sister. He allowed Eva to accompany him on a business trip to Arizona in October 1936 and at that time she told him she had been married and divorced. When he told her in March or April 1937 that he was going to Las Vegas on his regular business route she asked to come along and he drove her to Las Vegas; the trip took 15 days during which he stopped overnight in various cities to call on customers. Eva did not tell him she was planning to get a divorce in Las Vegas or to change her residence. He left Las Vegas on the third day following their arrival. He did not pay Eva’s hotel bill but he stayed in a separate room in the same hotel. He visited her three times while passing through Las Vegas on his regular route. He did not pay the expenses of her divorce. He took Mrs. Dilley with him on his last trip to Nevada at her request; she told him she was going on a vacation. He denied having driven the sisters to the courthouse. He drove the sisters back to Los Angeles at their request. He first learned that Eva had obtained a divorce in Nevada in November or December 1939, when Eva told him that she had gone to Nevada for the sole purpose of divorcing Kennedy and not in order to establish a bona fide residence.

We have concluded that the evidence amply supports the challenged finding that appellant is barred by estoppel from asserting the invalidity of respondent’s divorce from her former husband. Since this finding, having support in the evidence, compels an affirmance of the judgment denying Gilb an annulment, we deem it unnecessary to discuss the question of laches and waiver of the right to sue.

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Bluebook (online)
339 P.2d 176, 170 Cal. App. 2d 379, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilb-v-gilb-calctapp-1959.