Nevins v. Nevins

276 P.2d 655, 129 Cal. App. 2d 150, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1576
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 23, 1954
DocketCiv. 20117
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 276 P.2d 655 (Nevins v. Nevins) 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
Nevins v. Nevins, 276 P.2d 655, 129 Cal. App. 2d 150, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1576 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

MOSK, J. pro tem. *

Appellant seeks reversal of an adverse judgment in his quiet title action in the court below, and insists as a matter of law he is entitled to prevail.

Kenneth and Antoinette Nevins were married in 1929, and although they are now divorced, and Kenneth has remarried, for convenience we shall herein refer to them as husband and wife. They have two daughters, one born in January, 1930, the other in December, 1930. There is no evidence that either possessed any separate property at the time of their marriage, or that either acquired property by gift or bequest from any third party during, marriage. Up to June, 1941, the couple resided together in Los Angeles, where for the three years preceding the husband had been employed as a salesman for a beverage company. Additionally they operated a small retail liquor business in the city of Bell, Los Angeles County, and frugally resided in the rear of the store.

Offered a position in Hawaii by the .beverage concern, the husband accepted and departed on June 4, 1941, the wife and children remaining in Los Angeles. The wife continued to conduct the business enterprise, which prospered due to the combination of her industry, skillful management, and the war economy.

On February 3, 1944, the wife, without her husband’s prior knowledge, purchased an eight unit apartment court in Bell for $23,000, of which $8,000 was paid in cash and the balance under a promissory note secured by a deed of trust. The $8,000 was borrowed from friends, and the wife obligated hersélf alone to repay both that sum and the note for the balance due on the court. At that time the wife did not disclose her husband was in Hawaii, but represented to the vendor and to the lenders that he was a war casualty. The instruments were executed to and by “Antoinette Nevins, a widow.”

Through the years the parties corresponded with reasonable regularity and varying degrees of warmth. Under date of February 9, 1944, the wife informed her husband that she had acquired some income property, although she did not provide the details. Not having returned to the mainland *153 in the interim, the husband filed suit for divorce in Hawaii on September 6, 1947, making no allegations of any interest in the Bell property. He obtained a decree on January 5, 1948, and two days later remarried.

During his absence the husband sent funds for support of the two daughters, but a considerable disparity developed at the trial in the sums calculated by the respective parties. Regardless of the amounts, there seems to be no serious contention that the husband sent- the wife any money other than for child support. She earned her support exclusively by her own efforts.

On March 9, 1949, the husband filed suit in Los Angeles Superior Court to quiet title to the eight-unit court. At the first trial in 1951, Judge Hugh E. Brierly of Inyo County, sitting in Los Angeles County by assignment of the Judicial Council, found for the husband in a brief memorandum, but the judge died before he could sign findings and judgment. A retrial was ordered. At the second trial, the wife prevailed, and this appeal followed.

It was not contended that the wife was ever established by judicial decree as a sole trader (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1811-1821), or that Civil Code, section 169, was here applicable, since the trial court in a memorandum opinion found the intention to live permanently separate had not formed in the husband’s mind at the time the wife acquired the Bell property.

The husband first insists that the trial court erroneously applied the presumption contained in Civil Code, section 164, and as a result an improper burden of evidentiary proof was placed upon him. The pertinent portion of that code section reads: “ . . . whenever any real or personal property,. or any interest therein or encumbrance thereon, is acquired by a married woman by an instrument in writing, the presumption is that the same is her separate property, ...”

From the earliest period of California history courts have adhered to the Spanish law rule accepted in community property states that the presumption attending the possession of property by either a husband or wife is that it belongs to the community. Exceptions to the rule must be proved, and the burden rests with the claimant of the separate estate. (Meyer v. Kinzer (1859), 12 Cal. 247 [73 Am.Dec. 538]; Wilson v. Wilson (1946), 76 Cal.App.2d 119 [172 P.2d 568].)

*154 In 1889, however, by direct statutory change, the foregoing general rule was modified as to properties held in the wife’s name. In those situations, according to the addition to Civil Code, section 164, where property is acquired during marriage by a married woman by an instrument in writing, the presumption is not that the property is community, but the contrary, that it is separate. (Armstrong, California Family Law, pp. 440-441; 10 Cal.Jur.2d 713.) The burden is then upon the husband seeking to claim the property for the community. (Dunn v. Mullan, 211 Cal. 583 [296 P. 604, 77 A.L.R. 1015]; Pearson v. Hellman Commercial etc. Bank, 199 Cal. 305 [249 P. 10].) Originally this portion of Civil Code, section 164, was limited to conveyances of real property (Stafford v. Martinoni, 192 Cal. 724 [221 P. 919]; 12 Cal.L.Rev. 421) but a further amendment in 1927 extended its application to acquisition of any interest in or encumbrance on real or personal property. (10 Cal.Jur.2d 715.)

As against the husband, the presumption is disputable, and may be controverted by other evidence, direct or indirect. But the evidence to overthrow the presumption must be “clear and convincing” (Attebury v. Wayland, 73 Cal.App.2d 1, 5 [165 P.2d 524]). Whether or not it is so controverted is a question of fact for the trial court, its conclusions, unless manifestly without sufficient support in the evidence, being conclusive on appeal. (Nichols v. Mitchell, 32 Cal.2d 598, 605 [197 P.2d 550]; Bales v. Farley, 107 Cal.App.2d 642, 647 [237 P.2d 686].)

The following elements in the testimony may be said to support the husband in his efforts to overcome the presumption created by the form of the deed: The failure of the wife to advise him of the purchase until it was a fait accompli; the duplicity of the wife in representing she borrowed $2,000 when in reality the sum was $8,000; the repeated false representations to the vendor and the lending agency that she was a widow; the correspondence between the parties up to late in 1944 which could be interpreted as indicating continued marital affection coupled with mutual economic goals.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P.2d 655, 129 Cal. App. 2d 150, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevins-v-nevins-calctapp-1954.