Perkins v. Perkins

154 P. 483, 29 Cal. App. 68, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 31
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1773.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 154 P. 483 (Perkins v. Perkins) 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
Perkins v. Perkins, 154 P. 483, 29 Cal. App. 68, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 31 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

This is an appeal taken from a judgment denying the plaintiff a decree of divorce. The defendant suffered default, and the court heard testimony at great length, all of which is presented here by transcript of the reporter. The *70 ground alleged was extreme cruelty. As described in the complaint, the facts relied upon were those which it is asserted established a course of cruel conduct practiced by the defendant against the plaintiff, and which commenced within a few weeks after their marriage in June, 1911, and continued almost uninterruptedly for a year and a half, or until- the plaintiff left the defendant. At the conclusion of the testimony the court orally summed up the case as being one of incompatibility of temperament, for which no divorce could be granted, and declared that the proof did not show extreme cruelty. No findings of fact were made. The only purported finding of any kind is the recitation found in the judgment as follows: “The court finds the evidence did not prove extreme cruelty and is insufficient to warrant a decree of divorce.” This finding, if it was intended as a finding of fact, and if written findings are required to be made in divorce actions, was wholly insufficient. (Franklin v. Franklin, 140 Cal. 607, [74 Pac. 155].) One of the claims of appellant is that the judgment should be reversed, because it is unsupported by findings which, it is argued, are required to be made under the provisions of section 131, Civil Code. This contention presents for consideration the question as to whether in actions for divorce, where the adverse party has made default, the court is required to express its decision in the form of findings of fact. Section 632 of the Code of Civil Procedure requires the court generally, where a trial of a question of fact is had, to give its decision in writing. In the case of Foley v. Foley, 120 Cal. 33, [65 Am. St. Rep. 147, 52 Pac. 122], it was held that in a divorce case, where no answer was filed, there was presented no issue of fact, strictly speaking, to be determined by the court. And in Waller v. Weston, 125 Cal. 201, [57 Pac. 892], considering the requirement of section 632, Code of Civil Procedure, it was said: “It is contemplated by our law that findings of fact shall be made only upon issues joined by the pleadings under section 590 of the Code of Civil Procedure.” At the time these decisions were rendered section 131 of the Civil Code did not contain the provision requiring the court to make its decision in divorce cases on the questions of fact in form as in other cases. ' That section in its first provision is as follows: “In actions for divorce, the court must file its decision and conclusions of law as in other cases, and if it determines that *71 no divorce shall be granted, final judgment must thereupon be entered accordingly. ’ ’ In construing that portion of this section which declares that in divorce actions the decision and conclusions of law shall be filed “as in other cases,” we are inclined to the view proposed by the appellant, which is that the words “as in other cases” refer to the form of the findings, and should not be taken as intended to relieve the trial judge in cases where default has been entered in a divorce case against one of the parties from making his decision in writing. This section coming as new legislation following the decision in the Foley case, we may, we think, properly indulge the presumption that the legislature intended to correct what it deemed to be a deficiency in the law. Moreover, it seems to us not to be correct to say that there are no issues to be tried in divorce actions, where default has been suffered by a defendant party, when the law requires strict proof to be made of a plaintiff’s cause of action. (Civ. Code, sec. 130.)

In this view we are in strict accord with the reasoning of the court in the case of Nelson v. Nelson, 18 Cal. App. 602, [123 Pac. 1099], where the court, by Justice Burnett, said: “Ordinarily, there would be no ‘trial of a question of fact’ where the fact is admitted by the failure to deny it, but where the asserted fact is the ground upon which a party relies for divorce, it must be established as though denied, since ‘no divorce can be granted upon the default of the defendant, or upon the uncorroborated statement, admission or testimony of the parties.’ ” The court in that decision takes notice of the provisions of section 131 of the Civil Code, and concludes that, where a cross-complaint stands in an action for divorce without answer, the trial judge is not excused from making his decision in writing' upon the issues of fact proposed therein. It is only fair that a party who has suffered an adverse decision at the hands of the court, based upon alleged insufficient proof, should have the benefit of a written declaration as to the particular conclusions arrived at by the court. This case most aptly illustrates the sound reason for such a requirement. For aught that appears from - the judgment made by the court in this case, the trial judge may have considered that all of the facts alleged had been sufficiently proven and corroborated, but had determined from those facts that, as a legal conclusion, the acts complained of did not amount to extreme cruelty. If such was his conclú *72 sion, it may be unhesitatingly said, upon the complete record of the testimony as it is presented, that such a determination is not borne out by the proof. The plaintiff here relied upon a course of conduct practiced by the defendant habitually, regularly, and almost continuously from a date a few weeks after the marriage, down to the day that she finally left him. This conduct, as alleged and testified to by her, consisted in acts which were calculated to irritate and humiliate the plaintiff and produce the exceedingly high state of nervous tension and distraction to which it was shown she had finally been driven. It will serve no useful purpose to recite the evidence with great detail.

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Bluebook (online)
154 P. 483, 29 Cal. App. 68, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-perkins-calctapp-1915.