Gossman v. Gossman

126 P.2d 178, 52 Cal. App. 2d 184, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 256
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1942
DocketCiv. 12796
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 126 P.2d 178 (Gossman v. Gossman) 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
Gossman v. Gossman, 126 P.2d 178, 52 Cal. App. 2d 184, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 256 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

SCHAUER, P. J.

This matter is before us on an appeal by plaintiff from (1) an order granting defendants’ motion for a new trial, and (2) an order denying plaintiff’s motion to vacate such order granting a new trial. As three judgments were successively entered in this case, the second superseding the first, and the third superseding the second after it was vacated on plaintiff’s motion, and as proceedings in connection with each of the three must be considered in disposing of the questions involved, a chronological epitome of such proceedings will assist in depicting the situation.

Chronology of Pertinent Proceedings

Findings of fact and conclusions of law filed. .August 18, 1939

First judgment entered.................. .August 21, 1939

Defendants’ motion for new trial (addressed to first judgment) filed...........August 28, 1939

Defendants’ motion for new trial denied, judgment being ordered modified........October 17, 1939

Second judgment entered.................October 19, 1939

Plaintiff files motion for new trial (addressed to second judgment) and notice of intention to move for different judgment under Code Civ. Proc., sees. 663 and 663a.............................October 30, 1939

Plaintiff’s motion for new trial denied and motion for different judgment granted ............................December 1, 1939

Third judgment entered.................February 7, 1940

Defendants’ motion for new trial (addressed to third judgment) filed........February 21, 1940

Defendants’ motion for new trial granted.....April 1, 1940

Plaintiff’s motion to vacate order of April 1 filed..................................April 23, 1940

Plaintiff’s motion to vacate order of April 1 denied................................May 1, 1940

*188 Plaintiff’s notice of appeal from order granting defendants’ motion for new trial and from order denying motion to vacate same, filed.........................May 9, 1940

Material Pacts

It is important to note that this is a divorce action; that there are no children of the union; that by the second judgment, which is not materially different from the first, plaintiff was awarded an interlocutory decree of divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty and that community property of aggregate value in excess of $50,000 was divided between plaintiff wife and defendant husband, plaintiff being given the family dwelling house and furniture, an automobile, some shares of stock in a corporation (value $1,800), $1,000 cash, and the defendant being ordered to pay plaintiff $100 per month for two years and until the further order of the court, and the defendant husband was awarded all of the remainder of the property of the spouses including his one-third interest in a partnership of which he was (and at the time of his marriage to plaintiff had been) a member. The third judgment entered on plaintiff’s motion, purportedly without taking additional evidence, was radically different from both the first and the second judgments. By it plaintiff was awarded substantially all of the community property (of a value in excess of $50,000) including the husband’s interest in the business and assets of the partnership, his sole source of income, and the husband was awarded property of the value of only $1,600 and was also ordered to pay plaintiff’s attorney’s fees in the sum of $790.

The order granting a new trial on defendants’ (certain other parties were joined as defendants) motion after entry of the third judgment limited the issues for the new trial “to the matter of community property. ’ ’ Such order was by minute entry timely entered, and recited that “motion for new trial is granted on the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence and errors of law made during the trial. ...” This order, so entered in the minutes, meets the requirements of Code of Civil Procedure, section 657, as amended in 1939 (Cox v. Tyrone Power Enterprises, Inc., (1942) 49 Cal. App. (2d) 383 [121 P. (2d) 829]). It was made by the Honorable Emmet H. Wilson, Judge of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, the previous trial and new trial proceedings having been had before the Honorable Raymond McIntosh, *189 Judge of the Superior Court of Sierra County, who had been temporarily assigned to Los Angeles County but who was absent from that county at the time of the presentation of defendants’ motion for a new trial as addressed to the third judgment. From the facts recited it seems likely that one of the purposes in making the new trial order was to afford the court an opportunity to re-examine the issue of fact as to what constituted a fair and equitable division of the community property. Furthermore, it may be that the court felt that the evidence should be re-examined on the issue of fact as to whether defendant husband’s interest in the partnership, which plaintiff admitted he owned before his marriage to her, was of community or separate character in whole or in part. On defendants’ first motion for a new trial such motion may well have been denied as to this issue because the defendant husband was not prejudiced thereby since under the decision then outstanding and the judgment (first judgment) based thereon that property was awarded to him. But on the hearing of the motion addressed to the third judgment the situation was different; all of this property had been awarded to plaintiff.

Appellant’s Contentions

Plaintiff contends (1) that the trial court was without jurisdiction to entertain or determine defendants’ motion for a new trial made after the third judgment was entered, her theory being that the court’s jurisdiction to consider and grant a motion of defendants for a new trial was exhausted when it entertained and denied defendants’ motion made after the first judgment was entered; (2) that the decision on defendants’ first motion for a new trial became the law of the case and was binding on the court. Plaintiff amplifies her position by pointing out that the trial court filed only one set of (formally entitled) findings of fact and conclusions of law—that which preceded the first judgment—and asserts that the second and third judgments were predicated upon the same original findings and conclusions except as the conclusions were altered (Roberts v. Hall, (1905) 147 Cal. 434, 437 [82 Pac. 66]) as evidenced by the judgments. Therefore, the plaintiff argues, since the findings of fact remained the same, and since the court determined on defendants’ original motion for a new trial that defendants were not aggrieved by the facts found and were not entitled to a re *190 examination of any issue of fact involved therein, the power of the court to consider that matter has been exhausted and it is rendered res judicata.

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Bluebook (online)
126 P.2d 178, 52 Cal. App. 2d 184, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gossman-v-gossman-calctapp-1942.