Patillo v. Norris

65 Cal. App. 3d 209, 135 Cal. Rptr. 210, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 2203
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 1976
DocketCiv. 48809
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 65 Cal. App. 3d 209 (Patillo v. Norris) 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
Patillo v. Norris, 65 Cal. App. 3d 209, 135 Cal. Rptr. 210, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 2203 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

ASHBY, J.

This case- involves determining the rights of the parties when a man with two wives and a child dies intestate, having designated a neighbor lady as the beneficiary of his employment-related life insurance policy and union pension fund death benefit.

The record on appeal in this case is sketchy and in some respects inadequate. None of the pleadings is contained in the clerk’s transcript. An engrossed settled statement is substituted for a reporter’s transcript of the proceedings. A summary of the evidence was contained in the closing trial brief of one of the parties and was adopted by the trial court as an accurate statement of the evidence. It appears that the case arises out of two interpleader actions by the Prudential Insurance Company of America and the Carpenters Pension Trust Fund of Southern California. The puipose of the proceeding was to determine who was entitled to the proceeds, in the sum or $10,488 of a Prudential insurance policy on the life of David Oliver Patillo, deceased, and of his preretirement death benefit, in the amount of $8,784, in the Carpenters Pension Trust Fund. The parties claiming interest in the proceeds are: Clydia Patillo, the first wife of David; Lois N. Patillo, the second wife, who sues individually and as guardian ad litem for Katherine Patillo, a minor, the adopted daughter of Lois and David; and Ruth Norris, the designated beneficiary.

*213 The trial court held that Ruth waá entitled to half the proceeds, and that Clydia, as legal spouse, and Lois, as putative spouse, should share equally in the other half. The court further stated that Katherine was a “pretermitted heir” with a possible claim against David’s estate under Probate Code section 90 and for child support, but that such claims would have to be filed against the estate. Lois and Katherine appeal from this judgment.

We set forth the chronology of events based upon the summaiy of the evidence which was adopted by the trial court.

September 16, 1942: Clydia married David.

December 24, 1949: Clydia and David separated. Clydia went to Texas, and lived apart from David for 20 years. Clydia testified the marriage was never terminated by divorce or dissolution.

March 11, 1951: Lois entered a valid ceremonial marriage with David at Yuma, Arizona. At the time of obtaining the marriage license, David executed an oath stating that he was not married, and David told Lois he was divorced from Clydia. Lois lived with David until August 2, 1969.

1949 to 1969: For these 20 years Clydia did not correspond with David and lost all contact with him.

1956 or 1957: Clydia went to the home of David and Lois, and left a note for David asking him to call her, signed, “Your wife, Clydia.” Clydia did not see David or Lois on that occasion. Lois found the note and asked David’s sister, Jessie Gentry, about it. Mrs. Gentiy told her that Clydia claimed to be still married to David, and Lois replied, “That’s too bad. There is nothing she can do about it now.”

August 9, 1963: David and Lois adopted Katherine. During the course of the adoption, the Department of Adoptions “verified” that Lois and David were legally married and the adoption decree so specified.

August 2, 1969: Lois and David separated. Lois left the family home out of fear for her life when David pointed a gun at her, told her to leave, and said that he would kill her if she took Katherine with her. Katherine continued to live with David until Januaiy 1971.

*214 Sometime in 1969: David attended a funeral in Texas and got in touch with Clydia through her uncle. David later sent her a plane ticket to Los Angeles.

December 24, 1969: Exactly 20 years after their separation, Clydia returned to David’s house in Los Angeles and they “reconciled.” She lived at the house with David and Katherine, but slept in the front room.

February 19, 1970: Clydia returned to Texas.

Easter 1970: Clydia returned to David’s home in Los Angeles.

Sometime between Easter and the latter part of1970: Clydia moved out, and got an apartment of her own. She continued to visit David. “I alternated between my apartment and his house. I would stay two or three days. He was out of work. He drank all day and walked all night. I was working and had to get my rest.”

Sometime in 1971: Clydia and David had another “falling apart.”

October 19, 1971: Lois filed suit for divorce. At no time subsequent to her separation from David in August 1969 did he provide support for her. In January 1971 he permitted Katherine to live with Lois, but he provided no child support for Katherine. On November 11, 1971, an order to show cause was issued ordering David to pay $10 per week child support. No interlocutory judgment of divorce was ever obtained.

September 16, 1972: David died.

Ruth was a neighbor of David’s; she showed him various kindnesses and performed some services for him gratuitously, with no expectation of payment. He never told her he was going to name her as a beneficiary.

The record contains no comparable summary of evidence detailing the nature of the insurance policy and the death benefits. We infer from the trial briefs that both were fringe benefits provided by David’s employer without any contribution by David. It seems to have been agreed that both funds were attributable to David’s employment and were therefore community property to the extent that a community existed. However, the trial court made no attempt to allocate any portions of the funds to any particular periods of employment. According to the trial briefs, the pension fund was created on September 14, 1959, with credit given for *215 prior union membership. The insurance policy was issued on March 27, 1970. According to a trial brief, David changed the beneficiaiy twice as to both benefits, designating Clydia on April 13, 1970, and Ruth on March 27, 1972.

Relying upon the principle that as the designated beneficiary Ruth could not defeat the community property rights of David’s spouse(s), the trial court held that Ruth was entitled to one-half of the proceeds. The court found that Clydia was David’s legal spouse and that Lois was his putative spouse and that each had a community property interest with David in the proceeds. The court thus divided the other half equally between Clydia and Lois. In making its ruling, the trial court refused to give retroactive effect to the 1971 amendment of Civil Code section 5118, which provides that: “The earnings and accumulations.of a spouse . . . while living separate and apart from the other spouse, are the separate property of the spouse.”

Discussion

Lois 1

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Cal. App. 3d 209, 135 Cal. Rptr. 210, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 2203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patillo-v-norris-calctapp-1976.