Mulcahey v. Dow

63 P. 158, 131 Cal. 73, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 736
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1719.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 63 P. 158 (Mulcahey v. Dow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulcahey v. Dow, 63 P. 158, 131 Cal. 73, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 736 (Cal. 1900).

Opinions

GAROUTTE, J.

Arthur Waters died intestate in the city of San Francisco, leaving a wife, Elizabeth, here, and a sister and nephews in other states. Administration was had upon his estate, and in due time and after due notice, a decree of distribution was entered, which found that the wife, Elizabeth, was the only heir of her husband, and all of his estate was thereupon distributed to her. Subsequently, she died, and these defendants are her successors in interest. Plaintiffs—a sister of Arthur Waters, deceased, and a certain nephew and niece— brought this action, claiming to be his heirs at law, and asserting that the wife, Elizabeth, under the decree of distribution, held their respective shares of the property as an involuntary trustee. They were nonsuited, and judgment went against them. The sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment will be the material matter considered upon this appeal.

As a legal foundation upon which to rest their claims, plaintiffs rely upon section 222é of the Civil Code, which says: “One who gains a thing by fraud, accident, mistake, undue influence, . ... or other wrongful act, is .... an involuntary trustee of the thing gained, for the benefit of the person who would otherwise have had it.” For present purposes, it will be conceded that this section, in its terms, is broad enough to apply to judgments of courts adjudicating property rights; and here fraud upon the part of the wife, Elizabeth, in securing a judg *75 ment, is relied upon to support a recovery. In cases of this character, in order to substantiate the charge of fraud, evidence must be produced which is fully satisfactory to the judicial mind. The rule is clearly stated in Wickersham v. Comerford, 104 Cal. 495, where this court said: “It was necessary for the plaintiff to establish by clear and indubitable proof, to the satisfaction of the superior court, that the order setting apart the homestead had been obtained through some fraud practiced upon that court by the defendant.....She cannot be charged with fraud or any fraudulent imposition upon the court for merely failing to state in her petition any facts tending to show that the petition ought not to be granted, unless it is made to appear that she knew the import of these facts, and that they were willfully suppressed by her with the intention of deceiving the court and thereby inducing it to grant her petition.” Again, fraud must be shown which is extrinsic and collateral to the cause. It is held in Pico v. Cohn, 91 Cal. 129, 1 that neither perjury, nor subornation of perjury, constitute a fraud which will support a cause of action to set aside a judgment based thereon. In Fealey v. Fealey, 104 Cal. 354, 2 this court said: “The fraud which is set forth as the basis of the plaintiff’s cause of action relates to the alleged falsity of defendant’s statement made in her petition for the order setting aside the homestead, and again repeated in her testimony upon the hearing of such petition, concerning the nature of the title to the land set apart to her as a homestead; but the question of title thus presented and sought to be litigated in this action was necessarily involved in the proceeding to set apart the homestead, and the order or judgment of the court therein was a determination that the allegation of defendant’s petition in regard to the nature of the title to the land so set apart was true, and that her testimony relating to the same matter given upon the trial of that proceeding was also true.....Under these circumstances, that judgment is conclusive upon the plaintiff, and she cannot be permitted to bring into litigation the same matters therein involved and settled by that judgment.” Lynch v. Rooney, 112 Cal. 279, is similar to the ease at bar, save that the ground there relied upon for equitable relief was not fraud but mistake. In that *76 case it was held that the decree of distribution was final and conclusive upon all questions of heirship. The aforesaid section of the Civil Code relating to involuntary trustees places mistake and fraud in the same category, and, if the reasoning in Lynch v. Rooney, supra, be sound, the same reasoning must control here.

In treating of decrees of distribution, section 1666 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads: “In the order or decree the court must name the persons and the proportions or parts to which each shall be entitled.....Such order or decree is conclusive as to the rights of heirs, legatees, or devisees, subject only to be reversed, set aside, or modified on appeal.” The all-important question upon the hearing of a petition for a decree of distribution of the estate of an intestate is, Who are the heirs entitled to take the estate? The identity of the heirs being determined, the proportion of each is not a difficult question to decide; for the law itself fixes those proportions; and if the question of heirship is not settled by the decree of distribution, then nothing is settled by it, and the whole proceeding is a vain and useless thing. And this section of the code declares in terms that the decree, subject to appeal, is conclusive as to the rights of heirs, legatees, and devisees. Hence it must be the rule that, conceding section 2224 is broad enough to cover property gained by a judicial decree, still it only applies to cases where the fraud is such as would justify a court of equity in setting aside a judgment.

,We here have a judicial decree that these plaintiffs are not heirs at law of Arthur Waters, deceased—a decree that has never been assailed, and which by the very terms of the section quoted has become final and conclusive. It seems idle to say that the validity of the decree is recognized by the plaintiffs, and that they rely upon its validity in seeking relief. They are only entitled to the relief sought by showing circumstances in the procurement of the decree itself which would justify a court of equity in setting it aside for fraud. If those circumstances are not shown, they secure no relief. They must attack and overthrow the finding of fact in the decree as to the heirship of the wife Elizabeth—a finding expressly placed there by direct authority of the statute—in order that they may show themselves *77 heirs at law of the deceased, Arthur Waters. It therefore seems inevitable that, in order to secure the relief here sought, they must go behind the decree and falsify the important finding of fact upon which it is based.

In view of the decision in Pico v. Cohn, supra, and other cases cited, if these plaintiffs had appeared in person at the hearing upon the petition for distribution, and had litigated the question of heirship and lost their cause, certainly that decree, aside from the question of extrinsic and collateral fraud, would have forever foreclosed them from bringing an action of this character. But now the point is made that plaintiffs only had constructive notice of the hearing, and for that reason a different rule of law applies. The case of Dunlap v. Steere, 92 Cal. 344, 3 and the authorities cited in that decision, are relied upon to support this contention; but that the rule there declared ever applied to a proceeding in rem we gravely doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
63 P. 158, 131 Cal. 73, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulcahey-v-dow-cal-1900.