Lundgren v. Lundgren

238 Cal. App. 2d 88, 47 Cal. Rptr. 538, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1116
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1965
DocketCiv. 29221
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 238 Cal. App. 2d 88 (Lundgren v. Lundgren) 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
Lundgren v. Lundgren, 238 Cal. App. 2d 88, 47 Cal. Rptr. 538, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1116 (Cal. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

In July of 1948 plaintiff obtained (by default) an interlocutory judgment of divorce from defendant; thereunder the latter was ordered to pay $50 a week for the support of the parties’ three children. No provision was made for alimony, nor was there any award to plaintiff of her share of the scant community property acquired during the marriage. The final judgment of divorce, entered in February of 1950, incorporated the above support provisions. In October of 1964, allowance being duly made for the fact that the children had since become emancipated (by marriage) or were otherwise self-supporting, the total accumulated sums for their support aggregated almost $21,000 of which only $1,284 had been paid by defendant over the intervening years. Learning that defendant had been named a beneficiary under the will of a deceased relative, plaintiff applied for a writ of execution, directed to the executor, as to those installments ($5,047.82) which had accrued within 10 years immediately last past; this was of right under section 681, Code of Civil Procedure (Lohman v. Lohman, 29 Cal.2d 144, 150 [173 P.2d 657]) and execution accordingly issued. The following day, October 7, plaintiff noticed a motion under section 685, Code of Civil Procedure, for permission to levy execution as to those installments accruing more than 10 years prior thereto. The matter having been submitted on *90 plaintiff’s supporting declarations and defendant’s in opposition, 1 the court granted plaintiff’s motion and ordered execution to issue in the sum of $14,393.22, being the balance of $19,441.04 after the giving of credit for the amount ($5,047.82) realized by the earlier execution. The present appeal is from such order.

The governing statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 685) provides in part that a judgment “may be enforced or carried into execution after the lapse of 10 years from the date of its entry, by leave of the court, upon motion, and after due notice to the judgment debtor accompanied by an affidavit or affidavits setting forth the reasons for failure to proceed in compliance with the provisions of Section 681 of this code.” Implicit in the above language, and the decisions so hold, is the requirement that the judgment creditor must have used diligence in attempting to enforce the judgment prior to the expiration of the statutory period (formerly five years but, since 1955, ten years). He is not required, however, to make a showing of extreme diligence but only due diligence. (Shapiro v. Cahill, 219 Cal.App.2d 772, 775 [83 Cal.Rptr. 601].) This distinction is recognized by defendant, his first assignment of error being that plaintiff has not shown “ ‘due diligence ’ in endeavoring to collect her judgment. ’ ’

Prom the declarations, pro and eon, the following facts emerge: During the marriage, defendant was employed in the “Grip” department of a motion picture studio. Shortly after the entry of the interlocutory judgment, he was admitted to a sanitarium as a tuberculosis patient. Until 1951 defendant was treated there, and at another sanitarium for pulmonary tuberculosis; upon his release, he again became employed at the motion picture studio earning a total salary of $13,686.59 during the four-year period ending in 1955. (As appears below, the studio at this time was beset by strikes.) In November of the year last mentioned, he was once more admitted to Olive View Sanitarium, remaining there until his discharge in July of 1957 as an arrested case eligible to receive disability insurance benefits under Social Security amounting to $101.30 monthly; such benefits have since increased to $108.

During defendant’s four productive years (1952 through 1955) plaintiff resided in Banning. “ [A]t least twice a month” on her “days off” she visited her mother in Los *91 Angeles, and on “many of these occasions” the parties’ younger son accompanied her and spent part of the day with his father. During this period, according to plaintiff, defendant paid her approximately $300 in sums averaging $20 per payment; he told her he was then giving her all “he could afford” because “the studios were having [labor] difficulties” which sometimes placed defendant “on call.” Plaintiff declared that she did not “feel justified” in incurring court expenses and accepted defendant’s statements. She further declared: ‘‘ [N] o prior attempt has been made to satisfy said judgment or any part thereof because defendant has never owned any property, real or personal, and never had any money. Therefore, any attempt to levy execution would have been an idle act.” Finally, there is this statement in her supplemental declaration: “After his release from the sanitarium my only information was that he worked off and on at different studios and continued the excessive use of alcohol which impaired his ability to maintain steady employment.”

Defendant in his declaration denied the excessive use of alcohol. There is no denial by him, however, that, except for the limited funds contributed by him (totalling $1,284) and except for plaintiff’s second marriage lasting one year, she was the sole support of the three children for the balance of the time material to this controversy.

Both sides agree that whether a creditor, such as the plaintiff here, has exercised due diligence is for the determination of the trial court whose decision will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of a clear abuse of discretion. (Georgison v. Georgison, 43 Cal.2d 550, 552 [275 P.2d 3].) But if the facts show of a certainty that, had the judgment creditor exercised even slight diligence in making inquiry concerning the circumstances of the judgment debtor, he would have discovered property subject to execution, the exercise of sound discretion requires the court to deny the motion.” (Beccuti v. Colombo Baking Co., 21 Cal.2d 360, 363 [132 P.2d 207].) The above pronouncement governs here and accordingly the order under review must be reversed.

The only basis urged by plaintiff in support of the trial court’s decision is that she relied on defendant’s repeated representations of his inability to comply with the support order and, even had she not done so, it would have been an idle act to levy on the wages earned by him during his productive years. As to the first of the above grounds, the *92 parties were then no longer husband and wife; the final decree of divorce, therefore, terminated the confidential relationship by virtue of which each party had the right to expect the other to exercise the highest degree of good faith in the course of their dealings. (O’Melia v. Adkins, 73 Cal.App.2d 143, 150-151 [166 P.2d 298].) As for the second, that execution prior to the expiration of the 10-year period would have been futile because defendant could not have made the payments, the same contention was made in James v. James,

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Bluebook (online)
238 Cal. App. 2d 88, 47 Cal. Rptr. 538, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lundgren-v-lundgren-calctapp-1965.