Gopcevic v. Gopcevic

178 P. 734, 39 Cal. App. 306, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2551.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 178 P. 734 (Gopcevic v. Gopcevic) 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
Gopcevic v. Gopcevic, 178 P. 734, 39 Cal. App. 306, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 53 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BEASLY, J., pro tem.

This is an action for damages for breach of an alleged contract to support plaintiff for life, which plaintiff claims was made verbally with him by the defendant, his brother. The court found that no contract existed and gave judgment for the defendant, from which he appeals. This exceedingly voluminous record, consisting of over five thousand folios of closely printed transcript, seems to us to present but a single vital question, namely: Whether or not there was a conflict of evidence upon the question of the making of this contract.

The evidence of the alleged contract consisted of two conversations between plaintiff and defendant, one had in the year 1904 and the other in the year 1911. The plaintiff’s testimony as to the first of these conversations is as follows:

“Q. Now, then, did you go then to Europe at the request of Judge Davis and your brother Petar Í
“A. I did. Before I went to Europe Milos came right after them in the same place, in the dining-room. I was living there. He said, ‘You go and try to do what you can, you don’t need to work or anything else any more, you will be provided for all right. You will live with me as long as you live, everything what is mine is yours. ’ ”

In a second version of this conversation, the plaintiff testified as follows:

“ . . . they come before I went to Europe and he told me that, ‘Now,’ he said, ‘you go to Europe and do what I ask from you.’ And Pete and Judge Davis was there before. After that he said, ‘After everything will be settled and you will live here and you will be provided for and everyone of the family. ’ That was the conversation with me before I left for Europe the second time.”

Plaintiff’s counsel in their brief assert that ‘‘the defendant did not deny that this conversation took place,” but the defendant testified as' follows:

“Q. You heard the testimony, did you, given by the plaintiff, when he testified that you came to him in the house on *308 Sacramento Street and you said ‘ Go and do what you can, you don’t have to work, everything that is mine is yours,’ you heard that testimony, did you?
“A. Yes.
1 ‘ Q. Will you state whether or not you ever had such a conversation with the plaintiff?
“A. Never.
“Q. Did you ever have any conversation with him getting any information about the family in Europe?
“A. No, never.”

John F. Davis, mentioned by plaintiff in his first version of this conversation, testified:

"I never had any interview with plaintiff in which I asked him to get testimony or evidence at any time.”

The following facts will shed light upon the breadth of meaning of this denial of Mr. Davis. It seems that the defendant was engaged at the time of the conversation in 1904, above quoted, in a legal controversy of a somewhat sensational •character over the estate of his deceased wife, and that Judge Davis was his attorney. The plaintiff claimed that a part, at least, of the services which he was to perform, in return for his support for the remainder of his life, was to proceed to Dalmatia, of which country the brothers were natives—and there procure evidence as to the lineage of his family for use in controverting certain allegations as to misrepresentations which the opponents of the defendant in the litigation above named asserted the defendant had made to his wife. The defendant did proceed to Europe at that time and did attempt, at least, to procure this testimony. The denial by Judge Davis that he asked the plaintiff to get such testimony, or that he had any interview with him on this subject, was practically a complete denial of the conversation so far as it referred to him. Further, Judge Davis testified that the best of his recollection was that he had not met plaintiff until a later date. It will thus be seen that the defendant positively denied the conversation and the agreement as testified to by the plaintiff, and that he was corroborated in this assertion in an important particular by Judge Davis.

Petar Gopcevie, mentioned in, the testimony of plaintiff, died before this action was tried.

The evidence of the second alleged contract is the conversation which plaintiff testified took place in San Francisco *309 in May, 1911. It is as follows: “A. Milos see me and tried to run across the street. I met him and I said, ‘Why you want to run away ? ’ He said, ‘No.’ I said, ‘What you mean, what you promised to me?’ ‘Oh,’ he said, ‘I never did.’ I said, ‘You discharged me’; and he said he didn’t, and I said, ‘You did,’ and I said, ‘What you order Mathews to do that?’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I will give you one hundred dolíais.’ I say, ‘No, I want you to settle'down with me right now. ’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I will see.’ I said, ‘One hundred dollars is not enough for me.’ ”

The defendant contradicted this evidence in the following language: “ . .'. We met there. Bozo comes up. We stepped in front of the saloon. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘ I am without money and ain’t got nothing to do.’ I say, ‘Well, that ain’t my fault.’ He said, ‘I haven’t got anything.’ I walked in the saloon. I said, ‘Who told you to go out of the house?’ We went in the saloon, we three went in the saloon and had some talk that don’t concern anybody but me Millan, and we took three drinks, and he wanted to talk more to me and I went away.”

This latter conversation of 1911 may be disposed of briefly by the statement that, even taking the plaintiff’s own testimony at its full value, it constitutes no contract between the parties. For it will be evident, from reading it, that if the offer was made by the defendant at all, it was an offer to give the plaintiff one hundred dollars, and that plaintiff refused to accept this offer. But defendant’s reply to this testimony certainly raises a conflict as to whether this conversation was correctly stated by the plaintiff.

Perhaps this matter will be made a little more clear by a brief history of the relations of the parties. The brothers, Milos and Bozo, were working as gripmen on the San Francisco cable cars in 1903. The defendant in that year met and married an American girl who possessed considerable property. From the time of this marriage, the wife seems to have been very generous with her husband, and the husband seems to have been equally generous with the plaintiff, his older brother. For instance, Milos’ wife gave him one thousand dollars as a Christmas present. He promptly handed this entire one thousand dollars over to Bozo, so that the latter might take a trip to Europe. From that time until some time after the death of Milos’ wife, the defendant seems to have *310

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Bluebook (online)
178 P. 734, 39 Cal. App. 306, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gopcevic-v-gopcevic-calctapp-1918.