Keller v. Keller

204 P.2d 361, 91 Cal. App. 2d 39, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1178
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1949
DocketCiv. 13835
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 204 P.2d 361 (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, 204 P.2d 361, 91 Cal. App. 2d 39, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1178 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying appellant’s motion to vacate an interlocutory judgment of divorce which had been entered in her favor.

The parties were married in Honolulu in December, 1943, while respondent was stationed there as an army officer. Appellant owned and operated a children’s nursery and also owned a piece of residential property in Honolulu and certain personal property. Respondent was transferred to San Francisco in 1945 and several months later, after appellant had sold her business and real estate, she joined him in San Francisco, where they settled. These sales realized about $30,000 and out of the proceeds investments were made in two pieces of San Francisco real estate, one a house of two flats on Clay Street, the other a home on San Felipe Avenue.

On February 21, 1947, the parties separated and on March 1, appellant filed suit for separate maintenance. Respondent was ordered to pay $200 a month as temporary support, $250 to appellant’s attorney and $150 for costs. Respondent shortly before had made quitclaim deeds to appellant of the two parcels of San Francisco property, and soon after she filed suit he sued her to set aside these two deeds and recorded a lis pendens.

While the separate maintenance suit was pending appellant changed lawyers and her new attorney received a proposal from respondent’s attorney for a settlement of the property matters, and that the action be changed from one for separate maintenance to one for divorce. A property settlement was entered into on May 22, 1947, the complaint was so amended, and the divorce case was tried without contest. On June 7, 1947, an interlocutory judgment was entered in appellant’s favor incorporating the terms of the property settlement, which were that respondent would pay appellant $100 a month for 14 months.

Respondent had paid only $75 on the temporary support order, which sum he had borrowed. When the formal settlement agreement was made a separate agreement was signed by the parties which admitted respondent’s arrearages of $475 for temporary alimony, $250 attorney fees and $150 costs, and that he was indebted to appellant for the amounts expended and to be expended by her for attorney fees and court costs in the litigation then pending. Respondent therein *41 agreed to pay appellant $1,200 in cash, and she therein acknowledged that snch payment would release him from the several precedent and current obligations so admitted. This $1,200 was paid when the interlocutory judgment was entered, and it was raised by respondent borrowing $1,000 from his parents and $200 on his insurance. It was also part of the settlement that respondent would dismiss (with prejudice) the suit which he had brought to set aside the quitclaim deeds. This he did.

A few days before the statutory six months would have run appellant moved under section 473, Code of Civil Procedure, to set aside her interlocutory judgment of divorce. Those proceedings were brought by her present counsel, who did not represent her in her divorce ease. After a full hearing the motion was denied.

The law is well settled that an application for relief under section 473 is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and that an appellate court will not interfere with the exercise of such discretion unless there is a clear showing of an abuse thereof. (Morton v. Morton, 117 Cal. 443, 446 [49 P. 557]; Clark v. Clark, 56 Cal.App.2d 324, 325 [132 P.2d 527]; Estate of Rabinowitz, 67 Cal.App.2d 840, 841 [155 P.2d 915]; Wetzel v. Wetzel, 71 Cal.App.2d 168, 170 [162 P.2d 299]; Trujillo v. Trujillo, 71 Cal.App.2d 257, 260 [162 P.2d 640].)

Section 473 provides for relief “from a judgment, order, or other proceeding taken against” a party. Assuming that the interlocutory judgment in this case was taken against appellant,—although, on the contrary, it was in her favor— there was no showing of “mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect.” The divorce case was tried on respondent’s, not appellant’s, default, after the amendment had been deliberately made and the settlement deliberately reached, based on consultations by appellant not only with her attorney but with at least one family friend (as in Clark v. Clark, supra) who was a business man, and with their advice that it was the thing to do. At the divorce trial the judge, after developing the fact that appellant had “entered into a property settlement with the defendant covering all . . . community property” asked her “And you are satisfied with that agreement?” to which she answered “Yes.” On the statutory grounds quoted above, taken by themselves, no sufficient showing was made.

*42 The courts, however, on motions under section 473, seem to have gone into broader questions. The other grounds of the motion are fraud, coercion and duress. The coercion relied on is economic pressure claimed to have been exerted by respondent by taking advantage of appellant’s straitened circumstances during March, April, May and June when the case was pending.

Appellant contends that the evidence shows beyond dispute that by such economic coercion she was forced into amending her complaint and that this was a fraud on the court, making it mandatory that the interlocutory judgment be set aside, relying on Lake v. Lake, 124 App.Div. 89 [108 N.Y.S. 964]. She claims that during those four months she was practically indigent, was threatened with losing her property, and had been forced to borrow money from friends for living expenses and that respondent when he offered her the $1,200 in cash, the dismissal of his suit, and $100 a month for 14 months, if she would amend her complaint and obtain a divorce, used her financial distress as a leverage.

The only question presented for decision is whether the court abused its discretion in denying the motion.

There is ample evidence that from the time respondent left Honolulu until the separation, a period of about a year and a half, appellant advanced considerable money to him from her own funds, including money used for the furnishing of his office, which advances were never repaid. The record shows that during that period, and up to the time of the hearing, respondent’s earnings were inconsiderable. He testified that his income tax return for the year shows net earnings “of a little better than a thousand dollars. ’ ’ It was for this reason, respondent claims, that he was unable to make the payments initially ordered by the court. His ability or inability to make these payments was pertinent to the issue presented on the motion only insofar as it bore on the possibility that he had in fact the ability to make the payments, but had wilfully withheld them as a weapon to force appellant to accept his terms. Respondent’s testimony respecting his small earnings was not contradicted, and appellant admitted that she had no way of questioning his figures.

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Bluebook (online)
204 P.2d 361, 91 Cal. App. 2d 39, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-keller-calctapp-1949.