Stansbury v. Stansbury

309 P.2d 137, 149 Cal. App. 2d 760, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2096
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 1957
DocketCiv. 5376
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 309 P.2d 137 (Stansbury v. Stansbury) 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
Stansbury v. Stansbury, 309 P.2d 137, 149 Cal. App. 2d 760, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2096 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

MUSSELL, J.

Plaintiff, Trueman W. Stansbury, hereinafter referred to as “Trueman,” and defendant, Rae Helene Stansbury, hereinafter referred to as “Rae,” were married in New York on February 25, 1945, and at the time of this marriage, plaintiff’s previous marriage with one Jennie H. Stansbury was not dissolved and was in full force and effect. He had secured an interlocutory decree of divorce from her on July 28, 1944, and the final decree terminating this marriage was not entered until August 9, 1945.

Plaintiff and defendant came to California and lived together as man and wife until plaintiff filed his complaint

*762 herein for annulment of his marriage to Rae, on June 9, 1955. On November 5, 1952, Rae filed an action for divorce against Trueman in Kern County, alleging cruelty and asking for a division of the community property. On November 12, 1952, the parties entered into a property settlement agreement, dividing the community property and agreeing that all property thereafter acquired by either party should be the property of the party acquiring it. On January 21, 1954, the parties entered into a written stipulation which, among other things, stated that the parties had effected a complete reconciliation and it was their desire that the court set aside the interlocutory decree which had been entered on December 10, 1952. In accordance with this stipulation, the court set the interlocutory decree aside by order dated January 25, 1954.

On May 12, 1955, Trueman filed an action for divorce against Rae in Los Angles County, alleging cruelty and that there was no community property, the parties having entered into a property settlement agreement on November 12, 1952, whereby they divided and converted into separate property such community property as was theretofore owned and possessed by them. This action was transferred to Kern County on a motion for change of venue and was then voluntarily dismissed. Thereafter Trueman filed the complaint herein for annulment on June 9, 1955. In this complaint Trueman alleged that there was no community property, the parties having, on November 12, 1952, entered into a property settlement agreement dividing said property. Rae filed an answer to this complaint and also filed a cross-complaint and an amended cross-complaint for divorce in which Thomas W. Stansbury, defendant’s father, was also named as a defendant and in which Rae alleged the existence of community property consisting of a 1 per cent overriding royalty in all oil, gas and other hydrocarbons produced from certain lands therein described, a house and lot in Bakersfield, a 1955 Chevrolet car and certain household furniture.

The trial court rendered judgment annulling the marriage and decreed that the community property be divided equally between the parties, awarding one-half of the 1 per cent overriding royalty in all oil and gas and other hydrocarbons produced from the property described therein to each of the parties; awarding one-half of such royalties in the possession of defendant’s father, Thomas W. Stansbury, to each of the parties; awarding the household furniture to Rae, the Chevrolet to Trueman, and the residence of the parties to the parties *763 as cotenants in equal shares. Trueman and Thomas Stansbury appeal from the judgment, claiming that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings and judgment. Their principal contention is that the court erred in the division and award of the property of the parties, particularly the 1 per cent overriding royalty.

On September 23, 1952, Milton Stansbury and James H. Davis, doing business as Crown Drilling Company, entered into a lease covering the property involving the 1 per cent royalty herein and oil came in on this property on December 25, 1952. Prior to that time Trueman had been engaged in the business of “getting leases” and had done some work for the Crown Drilling Company for which they had orally promised him a 1 per cent interest. Trueman testified in this connection that he did not receive any document that formally gave him an interest in this lease until April, 1953; that on March 16, 1953, the Division of Corporations issued a permit for the issuance of the 1 per cent interest to him and an assignment was executed March 26, 1953, by the Crown Drilling Company to him. This assignment provided, among other things, that the overriding royalty should be paid only by the party producing oil, gas and other hydrocarbon substances and only if, as and when such substances were produced and saved under the lease and sold or removed from the lands. Oil was commercially produced from this lease in January, 1953, and some time in March of that year Trueman received the first royalty check in the sum of $190. In 1953 the Crown Drilling Company sold its interest in this lease to Standard Oil Company and thereafter the royalty checks were increased in amounts until they reached the sum of $1,200 per month.

On May 3, 1953, Trueman and Rae assigned the 1 per cent royalty interest to Thomas Stansbury and he thereafter collected the royalty checks. He withheld $1,000 from them to take care of an indebtedness owed by Trueman and gave the balance to Trueman and Rae, sometimes to both of them and sometimes to one or the other. Thomas testified that he took the assignment “as a favor” and the record shows that on September 1, 1954, he and his wife, in writing, reconveyed and transferred the said royalty interest to Trueman. Appellant Thomas Stansbury has no interest in the royalty other than in the disposition of money he still holds under the assignment to him.

Appellant Trueman contends that the royalty interest is his separate property under the terms of the property settle- *764 meat agreement of November 12, 1952, particularly under the provision thereof as to after-acquired property.

The interlocutory decree of December 10,1952, in the action in Kern County between Rae and Trueman Stansbury, contained an order approving the property settlement agreement. However, that decree was set aside pursuant to a stipulation of the parties. This stipulation, which was signed by both parties and acknowledged before a notary, recited that the parties have effected a full and complete reconciliation and were living together as husband and wife. In this connection, the court found that the parties effected a reconciliation and then and there agreed that said property settlement agreement be abrogated, annulled and canceled and that any and all property previously accumulated or thereafter acquired should become the community property of the parties. This finding has substantial evidentiary support and cannot be here disturbed. (Be rniker v. Berniker, 30 Cal.2d 439, 444 [182 P.2d 557].)

In addition to the written stipulation of the parties acknowledging a reconciliation, Rae Stansbury testified that after the divorce in which she obtained the interlocutory decree on December 10, 1952, and on the same day, she went home and the following conversation with Trueman took place:

“He said, ‘I can’t understand why we can’t act like grown people.’ He says, ‘After all we have taken our vows for keeps.’ I said,‘I have always felt that-way, Trueman.’ And he said, “Well, I promise you I will be a better husband to you, I will try to be kind and courteous, I will try.

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Bluebook (online)
309 P.2d 137, 149 Cal. App. 2d 760, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stansbury-v-stansbury-calctapp-1957.