Vallelunga v. Gomes

227 P.2d 550, 102 Cal. App. 2d 374, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1319
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 19, 1951
DocketCiv. 14451
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 227 P.2d 550 (Vallelunga v. Gomes) 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
Vallelunga v. Gomes, 227 P.2d 550, 102 Cal. App. 2d 374, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1319 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

WOOD (Fred B.), J.

Defendant, executrix of the will and estate of Alfred Gomes, appeals from an order denying her motion of October 17, 1949, for an order directing the payment to said estate of the residue of a deposit that had been made with the court pursuant to the judgment that had been rendered in the action on November 30, 1945, a judgment which had become final.

The action was brought May 12, 1945, by Emma Gomes against the executrix of the estate of Alfred Gomes (Emma’s deceased, divorced husband) to establish her claim against *376 the estate for money due and yet to become due for support of certain of their children and for money payable to Binma for raising and caring for the children, a claim predicated in part upon the provisions of a final decree of divorce between Emma and Alfred, entered May 14,1941, and in part upon the provisions of a support and property settlement agreement made by them on the 24th of January, 1940.

The judgment rendered herein on November 30, 1945, decreed, in part, that Emma Gomes then had a “valid and existing claim in the amount of $4,277.85 against” said estate “and the same is allowed for said amount,” * and that “the sum of $2,280.00 of said claim is due and payable out of the assets of said estate ... to plaintiff [Emma Gomes] at the rate of $10.00 per month commencing October 31, 1947, or from the date of marriage of said Alfred Gomes [Jr.] if he marries prior to October 31, 1947, until said amount is paid in full, subject, however, to abatement upon the marriage of plaintiff herein. It is ordered and decreed that the said executrix ... be directed to pay into the above-entitled court said amount out of the assets of said estate . . . , such sum to be paid over to plaintiff in said monthly installments of $10.00 per month and at such times as said installments accrue until the full sum of $2,280.00 has been paid unless abated as herein set forth.” (Emphasis added.)

On January 28, 1946, the money was paid into court pursuant to the judgment. In due course the monthly $10 payments to Emma Gomes commenced. They continued to be made until her death on May 9, 1949, when a balance of $2,110 remained in the fund. This unpaid balance, appellant claims, reverted to the estate of Alfred. It does not expressly appear in the record before us that Emma did or did not marry subsequent to rendition of the judgment. Prom the fact that the monthly installments were paid her until her death, it is inferable that she did not marry. However, that is not an issue presented by appellant, either upon her motion in the superior court or upon this appeal. Her claim is predicated solely upon the theory that the judgment gave Emma but a life estate or interest in the fund, thereby creating in the estate (which provided the fund) a reversionary interest *377 that became a present right of title to and enjoyment of the balance of the fund remaining undue and unpaid at the time of Emma’s death.

We do not so interpret the judgment. It says that $2,280 of Emma’s claim against the estate “is due and payable” to Emma; that it is payable “at the rate” of $10 per month “until said amount is paid in full,” subject to abatement “upon the marriage” of Emma; and that the executrix shall pay that amount ($2,280) into court, “such sum to be paid over” to Emma “in said monthly installments . . . until the full sum of $2,280.00 has been paid in full” unless “abated as herein set forth.”

By these words the court expressed, as clearly and unmistakably as available words permit, the concept that the entire fund belonged to Emma, enjoyable by her in monthly installments, subject to defeasance only if she should marry prior to exhaustion of the fund. From and after her death there can be no defeasance, for the event which would bring about a defeasance no longer can occur. Necessarily, the unpaid balance of the fund goes to Emma’s grantees, legatees, or heirs.

Appellant urges that this judgment should be read in the light of the issues framed by the pleadings in the action, and the facts found by the court after trial of those issues. Such an inquiry, says the appellant, will demonstrate that the judgment was intended to declare and enforce certain provisions of a property settlement agreement made by Emma and the decedent Alfred prior to their divorce; that those provisions, manifestly, obligated him to pay her $10 per month from and after the maturity or marriage of all of three of their minor children until Emma’s death or remarriage. Therefore, appellant would conclude, it was the reasonable intendment of the judgment, in creating a fund for such monthly payments, that the fund abate upon Emma’s death or remarriage.

Respondent contends that no such inquiry is in order because the language of the judgment is so clear and unambiguous it admits of no such aid to interpretation. That is probably true. It happens, however, that the suggested inquiry supports the plain wording, the clear meaning-, of the judgment, and demonstrates that the judge who signed and filed the judgment meant what he said.

The property settlement agreement, as pleaded in the complaint and found by the court, after making an allocation of *378 property and providing for care and custody of three of their children by Emma and payments to her therefor by Alfred, declared that upon all three children attaining 21 or marrying, “then from that time on first party [Alfred] shall pay to second party [Emma], only if second party is still single at that time, the sum of $10.00 per month so long as second party remains single, but if she remarries said payments shall terminate,” and that “It is understood that said monthly sum [$10 per month] is not deemed to be alimony, but that the same is being paid to second party [Emma] in consideration of her raising and caring for said minor children.”

The agreement doubtless did contemplate cessation of the $10 monthly payments to Emma in the event of her death or remarriage.

But the judgment did not so provide. Emma’s amended complaint, in respect to this part of her claim, alleged that she had a life expectancy of 19 years and that a sum of money representing $10 per month over a 19-year period had become and was due and owing to her. She prayed for a money judgment in an amount which included that sum, and for such other and further relief as might be equitable in the premises. Alfred’s executrix, in her answer, denied these allegations and alleged that upon Alfred’s death his obligation to make payments under the agreement terminated, save as to those which had already accrued and remained unpaid.

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Bluebook (online)
227 P.2d 550, 102 Cal. App. 2d 374, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vallelunga-v-gomes-calctapp-1951.