O'Brien v. Reardon

155 P. 534, 29 Cal. App. 703, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 153
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1747.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 P. 534 (O'Brien v. Reardon) 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
O'Brien v. Reardon, 155 P. 534, 29 Cal. App. 703, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 153 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

The plaintiffs, P. J. O’Brien and Harold Costello (a minor, acting through his guardian ad litem), bring this suit for the purpose of having vacated and set aside a decree of the probate court of the county of Santa Clara distributing to Annie Reardon, in the matter of the estate of Annie Nelson, deceased, the real property described in the complaint. Annie Reardon, a daughter of said deceased, and C. 0. Nelson, the surviving husband, are made defendants; and it is charged that they “entered into a conspiracy by fraud and falsehood to capture the said property, and with the intent by fraud and falsehood to defraud the plaintiffs out of their lawful interest as heirs at law in the estate of Annie Nelson, deceased”; that to accomplish their ends they “alleged, asserted, and gave out that the whole of the property of Annie Nelson deceased was community property,” knowing such assertion to be untrue; that the defendant Nelson, claiming it to be community property while knowing that it was the separate property of his deceased wife, made a conveyance to his codefendant of his title and interest therein as surviving husband; that the latter, as administratrix of the estate, caused it to be inventoried and returned to the probate court as community property, and petitioned the court for its distribution to herself .as the grantee of the surviving husband of the deceased; that Annie Reardon, by false testimony, deceived the court and obtained from it the decree of distribution in question.

The defendants answered, denying the allegations of fraud, asserting that the property in question was in fact the community property of the spouses; that the decree of distribution which the plaintiffs attacked not having been appealed from, was res adjudicata, and had been so held by the supreme court of this state in a proceeding brought by the plaintiff O’Brien, in which practically the same allegations as to its invalidity had been made as in the present suit.

The matter came on for trial, and the plaintiffs introduced their testimony, at the conclusion of which the defendants *705 moved the court for a nonsuit upon various grounds, viz., that the plaintiffs had failed to prove that they had any title or interest to the property described in the complaint; that they had failed to prove any fraud in the procurement of the decree of distribution sought to be vacated; that the evidence introduced by the plaintiffs failed to show that the said property was the separate estate of Annie Nelson, deceased; and, finally, upon the ground that the questions involved were also res adjudicada by virtue of a second proceeding in the probate court of the county of Santa Clara brought by said P. J. O’Brien praying for letters of administration upon the said estate to be issued to him.

Defendants’ motion for nonsuit was granted in general terms, and judgment entered thereon. Defendants appeal from the judgment, and from orders of the trial court denying (1) a motion to correct their notice of intention to move for a new trial, and (2) their motion for a new trial.

So far as previous litigation in the matter of this estate is concerned, the record shows that Annie Nelson, wife of the defendant C. 0. Nelson, died in the county of Santa Clara in February, 1910. Thereafter the defendant Annie Reardon, a daughter of the deceased, applied for and was granted letters of administration upon her estate. An inventory of the property of the estate was filed, which included the real estate involved in this action, but which was stated to be the community property of the deceased and her surviving husband. The latter executed to the administratrix a conveyance of his title and interest in said real property, and in the decree of diRt.ribnt.irm subsequently entered it was distributed to the administratrix as such grantee. No appeal was taken from said decree, and it is now in full force and effect.

Subsequently, and in December of the same year, the plaintiff herein, P. J. O’Brien, applied to the same probate court for letters of administration upon the estate of Annie Nelson, deceased, alleging that the real property already distributed to Annie Reardon in the proceeding above mentioned was in fact the separate property of the deceased and not community property, and that the court had been imposed upon by the fraudulent representations of said Reardon. The defendants herein filed a contest to said petition, and, after a trial of the questions involved, the probate court denied the petition, and found and decreed that the said real property was the eom *706 munity property of the deceased and her surviving husband, and that the decree of distribution theretofore made was legal, valid, and binding upon the plaintiffs herein as heirs at law of the deceased. Upon appeal by O’Brien the supreme court affirmed this second decree, and incidentally held that the decree previously entered not having been appealed from, was valid and binding upon plaintiff O’Brien and other heirs at law. (O’Brien v. Nelson, 164 Cal. 573, [129 Pac. 985].)

Upon the trial of this cause the facts above narrated appeared in evidence, and testimony was also introduced upon the question of whether the real estate in suit was the separate property of the deceased or community property.

As to the plaintiff O’Brien, it is immediately apparent that the motion for a nonsuit was properly granted upon the ground that the questions upon which his right to recover depend are res adjudicada by virtue of the prior proceeding brought by him and finally decided against him in the supreme court. It. also seems clear that, if in fact the real property involved in this proceeding was the community property of Annie Nelson and C. 0. Nelson, and that the testimony introduced in the plaintiffs’ case so showed, then the allegations of fraud with which the complaint is so plentifully be-sprinkled fall of their own weight, and that neither of the plaintiffs made out any case.

Prom the evidence so introduced it was shown that the deceased in the year 1880 (her name at that time being Annie O’Brien) was a widow with three young children, earning her living by taking in washing. She became acquainted with the defendant Nelson, whom she subsequently married. In 1882, with the help of one hundred dollars borrowed from Nelson, she opened a small workingmen’s boarding-house with a saloon attached at Second Street and Broadway in Oakland. In this venture she met with but indifferent success, for just prior to her marriage the following year she borrowed from Nelson a further sum of two hundred dollars, which was used in the furnishing of the boarding-house, of which, although consisting of only eight rooms, two were still completely unfurnished. Upon their marriage it was agreed between Nelson and his wife that the loan of three hundred dollars should not be repaid, but that whatever they possessed should be lumped together and considered as the family or community property. *707 Shortly after his marriage Nelson obtained employment at $75 per month, his duties consisting of lighting the street lamps in the evening and extinguishing them in the early morning. During part of the day he tended bar in the saloon and helped around the house.

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 534, 29 Cal. App. 703, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-reardon-calctapp-1916.