Milekovich v. Quinn

181 P. 256, 40 Cal. App. 537, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 150
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2709.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 181 P. 256 (Milekovich v. Quinn) 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
Milekovich v. Quinn, 181 P. 256, 40 Cal. App. 537, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 150 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

Plaintiff and respondent in her suit sought to be relieved of that portion of a prior decree of divorce by which the property rights of the partiesi to the *539 divorce suit are claimed by the appellants to have been finally adjudicated. The essential facts are admitted. In the interim between the divorce decree and the commencement of this action the plaintiff had remarried. When the divorce action was brought, a restraining order was made on the ex parte application of the plaintiff prohibiting the defendant in the divorce action, Patrick P. Quinn, from disposing of any portion of the community property. On the following day, Quinn, upon an ex parte application, caused the restraining order to be set aside. Immediately thereafter he withdrew from his safe deposit box bonds of the par value of forty-five thousand dollars and delivered them to one Brady for the purpose of secreting-them from the knowledge of Mrs. Quinn, her attorneys, and the court in which the divorce action was pending.

In her complaint for divorce the plaintiff made allegations concerning the community property and among other things, upon information and belief, that the defendant had securities of the value of sixty thousand dollars, a part of the .community property. In his answer, the defendant denied all the substantial allegations of the complaint and denied that he had securities of the value of sixty thousand dollars, or of any sum or amount in excess of about two thousand dollars, admitting, however, the ownership of other community property, to which further reference will be made. In the cross-complaint the defendant set up a cause of action against the plaintiff for divorce qn the ground of willful desertion, and a second cause of action based upon alleged cruelty of the plaintiff. Upon receiving notice of the application for alimony during the pendency of the suit, Quinn made an affidavit expressly referring to the statements set forth in his answer and cross-complaint in regard to the community property and closing with the statement: “In relation to said assertions about defendant’s great wealth, defendant says that at the time of the great fire in San Francisco, he had the home above mentioned; that the other lot of the community was unimproved, and that he had less than three thousand dollars in cash. Since that time he has earned the money necessary to erect the said flats amounting to twenty thousand dollars and has paid for all of the street work in connection therewith, amounting to five thousand dollars, and to buy the Stevenson Street property for three thousand five hundred dollars, male *540 ing a total accumulation made by the defendant in that time of thirty-two thousand seven hundred dollars, which defendant submits is all that he could be expected to accumulate in that short space of time in consideration of his age and bodily condition.” About the time the answer was filed and the affidavit served on plaintiff negotiations were opened for the settlement of the property interests of the parties to the divorce suit. It does not appear whether negotiations were pending when the answer was filed or whether they were opened shortly after. The negotiations were carried on between the attorneys of the respective parties and. extended over a period of from one to two months. During the negotiations, some five or six offers of settlement of the property interests were made on behalf of Quinn, and they were successively rejected by Mrs. Quinn. On the trial of this ease the rule excluding evidence of confidential communications between attorneys and clients was rigidly applied to the evidence of the attorneys of both parties. It appears, however, that no direct representation was made either by Quinn or by his attorney to Mrs. Quinn or anyone in interest with her in regard to the amount of community property, unless the representations made in the answer and cross-complaint and in the affidavit served upon Mrs. Quinn or her attorneys can be so construed. The only statement ascribed to the attorney ' for Quinn during the negotiations was, “Tour client says one thing and my client says another.” Whereupon, the attorneys for both parties continued to deal in view of the community property known by the attorneys for the plaintiff to exist. Despite the fact that Mrs. Quinn repeatedly told her attorneys that she believed Quinn had some sixty thousand dollars’ worth of securities, Quinn’s deposition was not taken, nor was any direct inquiry made of him, nor, so far as the record shows, of his attorneys in regard to the discrepancy between the belief of Mrs. Quinn and the statements of Quinn m his answer and cross-complaint. After rejecting many offers of settlement, the plaintiff entered into a stipulation which is attacked in the present suit. The property agreement embodied in the stipulation was made upon the assumption that under it each of the parties should receive one-half of the community property. The stipulation was for a division of all the community property. It provided that a certain lot was the property of Nellie Riley, a married *541 daughter of the parties; that plaintiff Delia Quinn, now Delia Milekovich, should receive a lot in San Francisco, 60 by 120 feet, improved by a building containing six flats, and another lot 25 by 95 feet, together with the family dwelling-house thereon and its contents, except personal belongings of the husband; that “all of the remainder of the community property of said community shall be awarded to and be the sole and separate property of the defendant, Patrick P. Quinn, including the following described real property”; after which followed a description of a lot 75 by 95 feet, another lot 27 feet 6 inches by 85 feet, a lot in San Leandro, in Alameda County, “and also all personal property of every kind and description of said community other than the contents of said Ninth Avenue dwelling-house.”

It is further stipulated that “the foregoing, division of the community property is in absolute, entire, and complete satisfaction and discharge of all claims which either party to said action might assert against the other whether on account of property rights, interest in community property, or rights to maintenance, alimony, costs, and counsel fees.” In consideration of the “foregoing statements and compromise,” the parties mutually released each other from all claims and demands and bound themselves to execute such conveyances as might be proper to effectuate the settlement. The stipulation closes as follows: “It is furthermore stipulated and agreed that in case the above-entitled court shall make and enter any decree in the above-entitled action awarding a divorce to the plaintiff or to the defendant in said action that the said court shall find that all of the property hereinbefore referred to is community property of plaintiff and defendant and shall divide the same between them in accordance with the terms of this stipulation. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
181 P. 256, 40 Cal. App. 537, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milekovich-v-quinn-calctapp-1919.