Stare v. Tate

21 Cal. App. 3d 432, 98 Cal. Rptr. 264, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1085
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 1971
DocketCiv. 38065
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 Cal. App. 3d 432 (Stare v. Tate) 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
Stare v. Tate, 21 Cal. App. 3d 432, 98 Cal. Rptr. 264, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1085 (Cal. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

KAUS, P. J.

Plaintiff appeals from an adverse judgment in an action to reform a property settlement agreement with her former husband, the defendant, and to enforce the agreement as reformed.

Facts

The agreement in question was signed by both parties on February 21, 1968. It was the culmination of protracted negotiations which had been going on for several years. Both sides were represented by counsel at all times. 1

In the negotiations both sides apparently agreed that the community property was to be evenly divided. They did not agree, however, on the *434 value of certain items and on the community property status of certain stocks which stood in the husband’s name alone.

These disagreements centered principally on items which, it was understood, were to be retained by the husband.

In particular the wife, Joan, had an idée fixe that certain real property (the Holt property) which she and the husband, Tim, owned as. tenants in common with his brother, was worth $550,000. 2 The husband’s valuation was somewhere between $425,000 and $450,000. Joan had very little evidence on which to base her contention: First, there was a statement by Tim’s parents when they had owned the property that it was worth about $550,000; second, a former attorney of Tim’s had, in 1966, written a . letter to Joan’s attorney which contained a settlement offer based upon a value of $550,000. 3

The second important area of disagreement centered on the ownership of stock in a family corporation and the proper basis for its valuation. In all Tim owned 25,500 shares. Of these he had owned 5,000 shares long before he married Joan. Joan realized that any claim that these 5,000 shares were community property was tenuous, at best. Similarly, on his part, Tim conceded that a block of 7,500 shares was community property. Another block of 5,000 shares was, according to Joan, given to her and Tim as a wedding present by his parents. Yet another block of 8,000 shares was, again according to Joan, given to both her and Tim as a present during their marriage. The shares were, however, in Tim’s name alone and he denied that the community had any interest in them.

The book value of the shares was a little less than $7.00 per share. Joan claimed that the fair market value was, however, $1.50 per share over the book value and that Tim should “buy” her community interest in the shares at that value.

To sum up: If Joan was correct with respect to' the value of the Holt property, her community property interest in it was about $25,000 higher than Tim conceded; if she were to succeed on her contentions with respect to the stock, Tim would have had to pay her roughly $40,000 more than he was willing.

*435 In January 1968, Joan’s attorney prepared a document entitled “Second Proposal For A Basis of Settlement—Tate v. Tate” which, among other things, arrived at a suggested figure of $70,081.85 for the value of Joan’s share in the Holt property. This value was arrived at by a computation set forth in the proposal. It is copied in the footnote. 4

It is obvious that Joan’s attorney arrived at the figure of $70,081.85 for the community equity in the property only by making two substantial errors. First, the net value after deducting the encumbrances from the asserted gross value of $550,000 is $241,637.01, not $141,637.01; second, one-half of $141,637.01 is substantially more than $70,081.85. The correct figure for the equity should have been $120,818.50 or, roughly $50,000 more.

The mistake did not escape Tim’s accountant who discovered it while helping Tim’s attorney in preparing a counteroffer. He brought it to the attention of the attorney who, in his own words, reacted as follows:

“I told him that I had been arguing with [the wife’s attorney] to use the value that was on the—on the real property tax statement, but I knew that that was low and [he] would never go for it, that the appraisal had been $425,000.00 when the building had been purchased by said owners, and I thought that until we got it, that we would use something like a $450,000.00 value, and he said, ‘Fine.’ It is my recollection that I said to him, ‘You know, you might as well use the figure that Walker has there because his mistake is a hundred thousand dollars and we value it at a hundred thousand dollars less, so it is basically the same thing, so give it a $70,000.00 equity,’ and that is what he did and that is how it came about.”

A counteroffer was then submitted to Joan and her lawyer. It lists all of the community assets, with the property in question being valued at $70,082.00, rounding up the erroneous figure in Joan’s offer to the nearest dollar. There can be no reasonable doubt that the counteroffer was prepared in a way designed to minimize the danger that Joan or her attorney would discover the mistake. While all other encumbered properties are listed at an agreed gross value, with encumbrances shown as a deduction therefrom, the only figure that appears next to the Holt property is the equity!

The counteroffer said nothing about attorneys’ fees. One of its terms *436 was that Joan would assume a note of not quite $11,000. It was based on only 7,500 shares of the family corporation’s stock being community property and a valuation at book. In other words, it represented a demand for total surrender by Joan on the two major items in dispute.

Based on the figures in the counteroffer Tim would have received substantially more in assets than Joan. This difference was to be made up by a cash payment of $46,534.

On February 16, 1968, the parties and their attorneys had a settlement conference. The counteroffer was the basis, for the discussion. There was no mention that the figure of $70,082 for the equity in the Holt property was based on an agreed value of $550,000 or any other figure. In the discussion it was agreed that the husband was to assume the liability on the $11,000 note and was to pay Joan’s attorney $7,500, a figure somewhat smaller than counsel’s time charges up till then. The result of all this give and take was that the cash payment from Tim to Joan was to be reduced to $40,000.

A few days later a formal agreement was signed. It simply recites who was to get what, without ascribing any value to any of the properties. It also provides for the $40,000 cash payment. Sometime in March 1968, Joan obtained a divorce.

The mistake might never have come to light had not Tim desired to have that exquisite last word. A few days after Joan had obtained the divorce he mailed her a copy of the offer which contained the errant computation. On top of the page he wrote with evident satisfaction: “PLEASE NOTE $100,000.00 MISTAKE IN YOUR FIGURES. . . .” The present action was filed exactly one month later.

Tim testified that he did not learn of the arithmetical error until after the property settlement agreement was signed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Cal. App. 3d 432, 98 Cal. Rptr. 264, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stare-v-tate-calctapp-1971.