Taylor v. Polackwich

145 Cal. App. 3d 1014, 194 Cal. Rptr. 8, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 2041
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 15, 1983
DocketCiv. 66651
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 145 Cal. App. 3d 1014 (Taylor v. Polackwich) 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
Taylor v. Polackwich, 145 Cal. App. 3d 1014, 194 Cal. Rptr. 8, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 2041 (Cal. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

*1017 Opinion

LILLIE, Acting P. J.

Janina Taylor sued Joseph Polackwich to establish a one-half interest in property which they acquired while living together. Both parties appeal from the judgment.

Plaintiff and defendant met in 1971. Defendant was divorced. Plaintiff was separated from her husband and subsequently obtained a dissolution of the marriage. In 1972 defendant gave up his apartment and moved in with plaintiff, the six minor children of her marriage and her sister’s minor child who were living in a rented house on Lime Avenue. Plaintiff was employed as a part-time cafeteria helper and later as a full-time cook. From October 1970 to June 1979 she received aid to families with dependent children payments. Defendant was employed and earned a substantial salary; he did not contribute to payment of the rent or utilities but paid for some of the food. Because of disputes with the landlord, defendant asked plaintiff to look for a house which he could buy as a home for them. Plaintiff found a house with three bedrooms and one and three-fourths baths on Olive Avenue; defendant decided to buy it. The purchase price was $27,950 with a down payment of $6,000 and monthly payments of $184. Defendant took title to the house in his name as his separate property. He made the down payment with funds in his savings account; the monthly payments were automatically deducted from his checking account. Defendant, plaintiff and the seven children moved into the house in September 1973. At that time defendant asked plaintiff how much rent she had paid for the Lime Avenue house; she replied, $205 a month, plus electricity, gas and telephone. Defendant told her that the same arrangement would prevail in the Olive Avenue house as long as they lived there together; he was attempting to maintain a landlord-tenant relationship with plaintiff because he wanted everything that was his to remain his. Plaintiff deposited $205 each month in defendant’s checking account. At plaintiff’s request defendant gave her a rent receipt each month for the first year and a half in order that she could prove to the welfare department that she was paying rent; it was plaintiff’s understanding that she would not qualify for welfare if she owned an interest in real property.

Defendant purchased furniture for the house. In 1972 he purchased a motor home and thereafter made all of the payments on it. Defendant also bought a 1978 automobile for himself and made a gift to plaintiff of a 1973 automobile which he had purchased in his name. He paid the real property taxes and the insurance on the Olive Avenue house. While the parties lived there he bought food for the household, spending $600 or $700 per month for that item. Defendant had a checking account and a savings account in his name; he gave plaintiff a power of attorney to withdraw money from *1018 both accounts. In 1974 defendant executed a will leaving all of his property to plaintiff and the children. He named plaintiff as the beneficiary of his life insurance, his employee’s savings plan and his employee’s profit-sharing plan.

Plaintiff testified: It was the parties’ understanding that defendant purchased the house for “all of us”; plaintiff and defendant agreed that he would make the down payment and she would make the monthly payments; plaintiff was not concerned that her name did not appear on the title because defendant told her that he would take care of her and the children, and that was good enough for her; while the parties lived together they agreed to treat all of their property and earnings as joint property; plaintiff trusted defendant and relied on him to carry out that agreement; in addition to her employment outside the home plaintiff cooked, washed, shopped for groceries and took care of defendant when he was sick; she occasionally entertained defendant’s coworkers and helped him with a correspondence course to further him in his employment; while the parties lived together in the Olive Avenue house plaintiff used her salary to make house payments, to pay bills and to buy groceries; sometimes she deposited a portion of her salary in a savings account in her name which she opened in 1974; the bulk of her earnings was used for household expenses, but most of those were attributable to her and the children; before the parties began living together, plaintiff basically had nothing other than clothes and “shreds of furniture”; her living conditions improved substantially as a result of her relationship with defendant.

Defendant testified: The parties did not agree to pool their earnings or to share expenses; plaintiff “spent all the money she wanted without a questions asked” and defendant “footed the bill”; he did not know how much money plaintiff earned or how much she received in welfare payments; when he bought the Olive Avenue house he told plaintiff that he took title in his name because the house was his and he wanted to control it as long as he lived; after he died she could have it; plaintiff did not ask that title to the house be put in both their names, nor did she ever declare that she owned half the house; the understanding was that while the parties were together plaintiff and the children could live in the house but if their relationship terminated defendant would “withdraw” all the rights he had given her; defendant did not agree to share with plaintiff ownership of the house or any property he acquired while they lived together; none of such property was in the names of both parties; defendant told plaintiff that he probably would marry her when he was ready, but that time never came.

Plaintiff’s father testified: Defendant said that if something happened to him plaintiff and the children would be taken care of, i.e., plaintiff would *1019 get his property if he died while they were living together; defendant'did not say he would take care of plaintiff if the parties separated.

In July or August 1979 the parties had an argument and defendant told plaintiff that she and the children had to get out of the house.

When the parties separated defendant was employed, earning $19,625 per year; he also received annual pension of $4,852 from the Navy. At the time of trial plaintiff was 40 years old and was earning $9,000 per year as a cook for the Long Beach Unified School District. Plaintiff is a high school graduate and has completed 16 units of college work. While the parties lived together plaintiff wanted to resume her education, but defendant objected. If plaintiff earned an A.B. degree in the field of nutrition she would be eligible for employment as a dietetic assistant at a salary of $16,000 per year. There are cooking jobs in private industry which pay more than plaintiff presently earns, but she would have to attend cooking school to qualify for such a position. At the time of trial four of plaintiff’s children and the child of her sister were minors and lived with plaintiff in the Olive Avenue house. 1 After the parties ceased living together plaintiff’s former husband paid $9.80 per week as child support. Other than her salary and the child support payments, plaintiff’s only income is $75 which she receives biweekly from the earnings of her 16-year-old son who still lives at home. Plaintiff has tried without success to rent a suitable house or apartment for her and the children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 Cal. App. 3d 1014, 194 Cal. Rptr. 8, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 2041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-polackwich-calctapp-1983.