Monnette v. Title Insurance & Trust Co.

290 P. 668, 107 Cal. App. 313, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 388
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 23, 1930
DocketDocket No. 7299.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 290 P. 668 (Monnette v. Title Insurance & Trust Co.) 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
Monnette v. Title Insurance & Trust Co., 290 P. 668, 107 Cal. App. 313, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 388 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

This is an action to recover possession of and quiet the title to certain Liberty bonds aggregating in value the sum of $94,000.00.

In the court below judgment went for the plaintiff and the defendant appeals.

The plaintiff is the surviving husband of Ethel M. Monnette and the defendant Trust Company is the executor of the last will and testament of the said Ethel Monnette. At the opening of the trial it was agreed that the only question to be decided was as to the ownership of the bonds in dispute. The appeal is presented upon a bill of exceptions and the appellant urges three grounds for a reversal. It contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain or support the judgment and that the court below erred in its rulings on the rejection of certain testimony offered. In addition, it is strenuously contended that the trial court’s action in denying appellant’s motion for a new trial was prejudicial and erroneous to an extent demanding that the case be sent back. The greater part of the argument is directed to the first contention, though the other grounds are as insistently urged.

We are not asked to again determine any conflict in the evidence; indeed, there is little conflict, excepting upon minor matters. Most of the testimony offered was presented by the plaintiff, as is quite frequent in cases of this character where the defense is on an executor, whose direct knowledge of the facts involved is often meager.

It is appellant’s contention that, irrespective of what evidence may have been presented by the defendant, the case of plaintiff is in itself so inherently weak and incredible and self-destroying as to furnish no support whatever for the judgment entered. Therefore, it becomes necessary to turn to the evidence adduced.

Plaintiff Mervin J. Monnette and the deceased Ethel M. Monnette were married in the year 1915. At the date of *316 marriage plaintiff was of the age of sixty-nine years and the decedent was at said date of marriage of the age of thirty-six years. Both had been previously married, the wife having been married twice before, having been divorced from her first husband and the second husband having died in 1912. It appears that the plaintiff at the time of his marriage was a man of wealth and of some business experience. Likewise was the wife acquainted with business dealings though her capital was somewhat limited. The record discloses that at the date of the marriage herein discussed, the wife’s capital was approximately $26,000. The capital of the wife was dissipated through unfortunate investments and long prior to her death her original fund had been exhausted. At the time of her death her estate inventoried in excess of $70,000, exclusive of the bonds in dispute. At the time of the marriage each of the parties had leased separate safe deposit boxes. At a time after the marriage the wife surrendered her individual box and the same box was again leased by the parties as joint tenants. In 1921 the joint tenancy was terminated and abandoned, in so far as the deposit box was involved, and the wife again took the same box in her own name. Prior to the year last mentioned the bonds in question had been purchased. There is sufficient evidence indicating that the funds used in the purchase were originally the separate funds of the plaintiff, although there may be some confusion on this point which will be here noted. It was the plan of plaintiff, approved by the wife, that there be established a fund approximating $200,000, to be considered a fund in joint tenancy and to become the sole property of the survivor upon the death of either. It was from these funds that the bonds were purchased. Likewise, it might appear that the bonds were purchased with the separate funds of the plaintiff and after purchase were put into this fund. In either ease, the origin of the moneys employed was the separate property of the plaintiff. These bonds were all bearer bonds, carrying, on their face, nothing to indicate ownership. After the death of the wife Ethel M. Monnette on January 29, 1927, these bonds were found in her individual safe deposit box, together with her will and other personal property, which will be hereinafter referred to. In the box was found a document, inventorying, with other stocks and *317 bonds, the Liberty bonds here in question. At the beginning of this inventory, and as a part thereof, was the following statement: “All the stocks and bonds in lock box No. 4288 in the Citizens National Bank, Los Angeles, California, belong to and is the separate property of Ethel M. Monnette and consists of the following: (here follows the list).” This document was dated October 3, 1921, and was signed by Mervin J. Monnette, plaintiff. It may be here noted that the box of the wife and in which the document was found, and in which were the bonds, was the box named in the statement. In September of 1921, while the plaintiff was suffering from an illness somewhat grave in its nature, he signed a document to the same effect, stating that the bonds in question were the separate property of Ethel M. Monnette. In March of 1920, at the time of the purchase of $52,000 worth of bonds, the plaintiff indorsed on the envelope containing the bonds that the same were the separate property of Ethel M. Monnette. It is upon these signed documents that appellant bases the greater part of its contention. And this contention, in the main, is that the explanation offered by plaintiff is of an emergency character, designed only for the purposes of sustaining his claim, inherently improbable and suspicious and entitled to no weight. However, the court below accepted this evidence and we may analyze the same in an effort to disclose all or any of the faults ascribed to it by appellant.

The plaintiff testified that at the time of the marriage of himself and the decedent there was a great disparity in their respective ages. This fact is conceded. That by reason of that fact it was accepted as a foregone conclusion, based upon ordinary knowledge and expectation, that, in the absence of something unforeseen the plaintiff would predecease his younger spouse. She was constantly urging her unhappy plight upon the passing of plaintiff, and her anticipated widowhood. That it was due to the fact that he desired her to be provided for, beyond the claims of his natural heirs, he having lineal descendants by his former marriage, that he had given her evidence of separate ownership of the bonds herein involved. He testified that the idea of these documents originated with the decedent and that his acquiescence was in part due to the expectation of his predeceasing her and the purpose in mind, namely, her *318 protection and support. However, at the time of executing the document found in the deposit box, plaintiff testified that another document was executed, which latter document was of the same general nature, but signed by Ethel M. Monnette and declaring that the bonds in question belonged to and were the separate property of the plaintiff Mervin J. Monnette. He testified further that the purpose of these cross-acknowledgments was to create something in the nature of a joint tenancy, having at least the characteristic of such a tenancy, namely, a passing of the estate to the survivor. Further, he testified that without such an arrangement he would not have signed the document that he did sign and which was found in the box of the decedent.

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Bluebook (online)
290 P. 668, 107 Cal. App. 313, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monnette-v-title-insurance-trust-co-calctapp-1930.