Mann v. Mann

172 P.2d 369, 76 Cal. App. 2d 32, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 679
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 11, 1946
DocketCiv. No. 13050
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 172 P.2d 369 (Mann v. Mann) 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
Mann v. Mann, 172 P.2d 369, 76 Cal. App. 2d 32, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 679 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinions

NOURSE, P. J.

Plaintiff sued upon a promissory note. The cause was tried to a jury and at the close of the trial the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.

The note in suit was executed by defendant on December 22, 1939. The complaint pleads it in haeo verba. It calls for the payment on demand of $25,000 with interest at 6 per cent, [35]*35and, in case of suit for collection, the payment of “a reasonable attorney’s fee to be fixed by the court.” The defendant in his answer admitted the- execution of the note and set up seven special defenses which were attacked by the plaintiff in a pretrial motion to strike and to debar defendant from presenting evidence in support of them. Payments on principal and interest were admitted which reduced the debt to $16,238.54. Judgment was entered for that amount plus attorney’s fees fixed at 20 per cent of the recovery.

The facts are without material conflict. Plaintiff and defendant were married in November, 1931. Preceding the marriage they entered into a written contract settling their property rights. Defendant agreed that if plaintiff should obtain a divorce from him he would pay her the sum of $25,000 in full settlement of all claims. Plaintiff agreed to accept such sum in full satisfaction and discharge of all rights acquired by the marriage. In October, 1936, plaintiff obtained an interlocutory decree of divorce and defendant paid to her the sum of $25,000 in accordance with this agreement. In 1937 the parties were reconciled and another agreement was executed under which plaintiff was restored to her community property rights, given a joint tenancy in a home valued at $170,000, and “permitted ... to retain the said sum of $25,000.” In December, 1939, defendant executed the note in suit after plaintiff “restored” to him $19,000 in cash, the balance remaining of the original payment of $25,000. This transaction the defendant alleges was made on this basis: The plaintiff agreed to restore to defendant the sum of $19,000 “on a loan basis” “for his usage on a purported loan basis” on condition that he would execute a new note for the sum of $25,000.

In June, 1943, the plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce. The complaint in the present action was filed in December, 1944. In March, 1945, the defendant herein filed his answer and cross-complaint in which he alleged: ‘ ‘ Thereafter, in the month of June, 1943, without cause or provocation, plaintiff Vivian H. Mann left defendant and separated herself from his person, and George M. Mann, defendant herein, was made a defendant in a second action for divorce, the same being numbered 321,467, in the Superior Court of the State of California in and for the City and County of San Francisco; in the months of June and July, 1944, and continuing up to and including the present time, testimony was taken and is currently being taken in the premises of said action for di[36]*36vorce; from and ont of the matters and things revealed by the testimony in said action, defendant George M. Mann has discovered the falsity of the representations so made by plaintiff Vivian H. Mann as aforesaid. Defendant, George M. Mann, therefore alleges that the obligation which is purportedly evidenced by the document set forth in haec verba of paragraph II of plaintiff’s complaint herein was an obligation created and obtained by the fraud of said Vivian H. Mann upon him and that the instrument of December 1939 was signed by him upon his continued reliance upon said false and fraudulent representations of said Vivian H. Mann. ’ ’ Upon these allegations the defendant grounds his first defense of fraud, his second of no consideration, and his fourth of undue influence. His third defense is the statute of limitations, his fifth is incapacity of a wife to sue her husband, Ms sixth is estoppel of the wife to sue because of the award of alimony and counsel fees in the divorce proceeding, and his seventh is nonownership of the note because of her assignment to a bank for collection.

At the hearing of the pretrial motion to delimit the issues the court, upon stipulation of the parties, considered the first and fourth defenses, fraud and undue influence, as interrelated and dependent upon the validity of the reconciliation agreement. It was then agreed by counsel for the defendant:

That if the validity of the reconciliation agreement was determined in that other case, the prior divorce case, . . . that would be a bar to opening that up in this case now. ...” With the issue thus defined the argument on the pretrial motion was directed to the question of the effect of the decree in the divorce ease as determining the issue of the validity of the reconciliation agreement. Before the submission of this cause to the jury the defendant, in the presence of the jury, offered to prove by evidence discovered in the divorce case that the reconciliation agreement was procured by the fraud of plaintiff in order to restore her interest in the community property and to extract from him his promise to build her an expensive home. To the offer of proof plaintiff objected on the ground “that the matter of alleged fraud has already been adjudicated and made an express issue in the answer and cross-complaint in the divorce case, and in the judgment of his Honor Judge Conlan in the interlocutory decree of divorce.” To this statement counsel for defendant made no objection. Thereupon counsel for plaintiff asked that it be [37]*37stipulated that in ruling upon the motion to delimit the issues the court had before it the full record in the divorce case. No stipulation was made, but the trial judge stated: “That in offering the motions heretofore passed upon, the mover, the plaintiff, offered to the Court for consideration the complete file in the case of 1 The People For the Best Interest and Protection of George Richard Mann, Vivian Joye Mann and Virginia Diana Mann upon the petition of George M. Mann and Concerning Controversies between Petitioner and Vivian Mann, wife of Petitioner, Respondent. Vivian Mann, Plaintiff and Cross-Defendant versus George M. Mann, Defendant and Cross-Complainant. ’ No. 321,467 in the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco, State of California. And the Court had in mind at the time of passing on the motion, the matters presented in said action, as well as the arguments presented and the citations of authority.” To this statement counsel for the defendant made no objection. In his answer in the divorce action the defendant herein pleaded as a special defense that the reconciliation of 1937 was procured through the false promises of this plaintiff, that: “Said promises on plaintiff’s part were not made in good faith, and said return and resumption of marital relations by plaintiff were made in order to gain a financial advantage and without intent on the part of plaintiff to continue said marital relations except so long as it might suit plaintiff’s convenience so to do.”

On this showing the trial court herein granted plaintiff’s motion to strike the first, second and fourth defenses. They are all related and all rest on the basis of prior adjudication. These pleas are the gravamen of appellant’s case and they will be treated as presenting one question. Appellant’s preliminary objection to the ruling is that the interlocutory decree was not a final judgment and could not therefore create an estoppel. This requires a statement of the history of the divorce proceedings. The interlocutory decree was entered May 21, 1945, “nunc pro tune” as of July 26, 1944. The final decree was entered July 27, 1945. No appeal was taken from either decree.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P.2d 369, 76 Cal. App. 2d 32, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-mann-calctapp-1946.