Keller v. Keller

22 P.2d 798, 132 Cal. App. 343, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 385
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 1933
DocketDocket No. 4669.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 798 (Keller v. Keller) 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
Keller v. Keller, 22 P.2d 798, 132 Cal. App. 343, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 385 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

*345 THOMPSON, J.

The respondent secured a decree of divorce from the appellant on the ground of extreme cruelty. The real and personal property possessed by the spouses was divided between them. It was all held as community property. In a cross-complaint the defendant also asked for a divorce from the plaintiff on the ground' of cruelty. This was denied. From the interlocutory decree which was entered the defendant has appealed.

A reversal of the judgment is sought on the grounds that the interlocutory decree is not supported by the evidence chiefly because it is asserted the alleged acts of cruelty are not adequately corroborated; that the court erred in assigning to the plaintiff lots 5, 6, 7 and 8 of Bijou Park, a subdivision in El Dorado County, which tract is claimed as the separate property of the defendant; that the family homestead known as “ ITomecrest, ” which was assigned to the defendant was her separate property and should not have been taken into account in distributing their community property, and that the court erred in denying defendant’s plea for a divorce as set out in her cross-complaint and in denying the motion for a new trial.

The evidence respecting the charges of cruelty on the part of both the plaintiff and the defendant is conflicting. The plaintiff was previously married and divorced. The plaintiff and defendant were married at Goldsboro, North Carolina, September 19, 1909. They lived together as husband and wife for twenty-one years. Two sons were born as the issue of the marriage. Both are fully grown. It is conceded that it is impossible for the spouses to continue to live together as husband and wife. Their differences are irreconcilable. The chief controversy on this appeal is concerning the distribution of the property.

At and prior to their marriage the plaintiff and defendant were engaged in the profession as actors on the public stage. For several years they traveled together and appeared upon the same programs. There is satisfactory evidence that for a year prior to their marriage their earnings were commingled in the same bank account. The defendant took charge of this bank account and had possession of the passbook. The plaintiff had implicit confidence in her ability and honesty. She appears to have been the business manager of their joint enterprise. During this early period *346 no account was ever rendered between them. Joint accounts were kept in a Brooklyn bank and subsequently in a Kansas City bank. The defendant failed to produce at the trial the pass-books covering several years during which these accounts were maintained. The court was unable to obtain an accurate statement of these accounts.

As soon as the divorce from plaintiff’s first wife was secured these parties were' married. About the time of their marriage it was contemplated they might ultimately settle in Brooklyn, where the mother of the defendant resided. With this in view they purchased a lot adjoining the home of Mrs. Keller’s mother. It was purchased subject to a mortgage which was subsequently paid from their community funds. The defendant contends this lot was purchased with her separate money, and that this lot furnished a nucleus from which the Placerville homestead was afterwards purchased. Reasonable inference, however, may be drawn from the evidence indicating that the initial payments upon this Brooklyn property were made from the joint funds of the spouses, which account was in charge of the defendant.

In 1919 the spouses abandoned their profession of acting and settled in Placerville, where they established a real estate business which prospered. They were successful in disposing of several subdivisions. They accumulated considerable real and personal property. It was their custom to take deeds to many parcels of land which they acquired in the name of the defendant. Deeds of reconveyance of these properties were, however, immediately executed by her to the plaintiff. These deeds were not recorded. This appears to have been solely for business convenience. During the many years of their married life the defendant made no claim to any of these parcels of land as her separate property. It would be futile and arduous to attempt to trace the title to these many tracts of land through the intricate details of a multitude of transactions covering over twenty years of married life. It is unnecessary to say that the five hundred page transcript on appeal in this ease contains an inexorable conflict of evidence respecting the title to both real and personal property. It is sufficient to say there is substantial evidence derived from facts, circumstances and necessary inferences disclosed by the record to support the court’s findings to the effect that all *347 of the real and personal property which is distributed between the parties hereto, including the Bijou Park tract and the Placervillc homestead, were the community property of the spouses. The decree is therefore adequately supported' by the evidence so far as the title to the property is concerned.

The complaint charged the defendant with extreme cruelty toward plaintiff consisting of acts which caused him grievous mental suffering. No acts of physical violence were charged. The court found that the defendant wrongfully accused plaintiff with having been intimate with other women; that upon numerous occasions, without previous notice, the defendant left home and remained away for several days at a time without informing plaintiff of her whereabouts; that the defendant often visited the real estate office of the plaintiff and abused and quarreled with him in the presence of customers and employees to his great embarrassment and the detriment of their business, and that the defendant frequently used opprobrious language toward the plaintiff in the presence of their children and others.

All of these findings are adequately supported by evidence on the part of plaintiff by the recital of numerous incidents which occurred frequently during a period of about three years prior to their separation. Many of these incidents are corroborated by other disinterested witnesses. The findings and decree are sufficiently corroborated. Both sons were witnesses at the trial and corroborated' their father generally regarding the defendant’s disrespectful and abusive treatment of her husband. Howard Keller confirmed his father’s charge that his wife had wrongfully accused him of having been intimate with another woman whose name she mentioned. At least half a dozen witnesses corroborated plaintiff’s testimony to the effect that the defendant was generally abusive, quarrelsome and critical of him. A number of specific incidents were also corroborated. .At least two employees in the real estate office related circumstances which occurred on several occasions when she engaged in quarrels with the plaintiff in the presence of customers, degrading, belittling and criticising him without cause. We are satisfied the court’s findings that the defendant was guilty of extreme cruelty as above specified are sufficiently supported by the evidence. There is proof that this conduct *348 on the part of the defendant caused the plaintiff grietous mental suffering. A disinterested witness testified that plaintiff’s health was impaired and that he became sick and extremely nervous on that account and that he was therefore unable to properly attend to his business.

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Bluebook (online)
22 P.2d 798, 132 Cal. App. 343, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-keller-calctapp-1933.