Webster v. Webster

14 P.2d 522, 216 Cal. 485, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 597
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
DocketDocket No. L.A. 12248.
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 522 (Webster v. Webster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. Webster, 14 P.2d 522, 216 Cal. 485, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 597 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

WASTE, C. J.

Plaintiff appeals from that portion of an interlocutory decree of divorce which fixes and determines the property rights of the parties. The appeal is on the judgment-roll alone.

On January 14, 1929, the plaintiff instituted an action for separate maintenance to which the defendant in due time filed an answer. Defendant also cross-complained for a divorce. Thereafter, and in the early stages of the trial, plaintiff was granted leave to file a supplemental complaint for divorce upon the ground of extreme cruelty. Defendant did not file a written answer thereto, it being stipulated in open court that the allegations of the supplemental complaint should be deemed denied. At the conclusion of the *488 trial findings of fact were waived and the court below entered its interlocutory decree granting a divorce to plaintiff upon the ground of extreme cruelty. This decree awarded the community property in kind to the defendant husband. In lieu of awarding a portion of the property in kind to the plaintiff wife, the interlocutory decree granted to her a lump sum of money, represented by a promissory note in the sum of $3,500 to be executed by the defendant husband and to be secured by a mortgage on the real property awarded to the defendant husband. Plaintiff was also awarded $40 a month for her support and maintenance, to be paid by the defendant until such time as the plaintiff remarried. The defendant was also charged with the expense incidental to the maintenance, support and education of the minor child of the parties.

As already intimated, the plaintiff has not appealed from that portion of the interlocutory decree entitling her to a divorce, but confines her attack to those portions of the decree which fix and determine the rights of the parties in and to the community property. Plaintiff’s first assault thereon is grounded upon the erroneous assumption that the decree awards all of the community property to the defendant, and grants to her only an award of money for support and maintenance under section 139 of the Civil Code. This is asserted to be error. A reasonable construction of the interlocutory decree readily discloses that plaintiff was awarded a portion of the community property, her share being awarded to her in money rather than in kind, the same being secured by a mortgage on the real property. The fact that the decree awards said sum “for the maintenance and support of the plaintiff”, does not make it any the less an award of a portion of the community property. In addition thereto, plaintiff was awarded support money, payable monthly, until such time as she remarried. This is a proper method of distribution of the property and is a matter to be determined in the sound discretion of the trial court. (Marshall v. Marshall, 196 Cal. 761, 765 [239 Pac. 36] ; Meyer v. Meyer, 184 Cal. 687 [195 Pac. 387] ; Gaston v. Gaston, 114 Cal. 542, 546 [55 Am. St. Rep. 86, 46 Pac. 609].) We perceive no abuse in its discretion.

Plaintiff next contends that under section 146 of the Civil Code, and the authorities construing the same, the *489 court below should have awarded her in excess of one-half of the community property. We find it unnecessary to here determine whether or not in actions for divorce based on charges of extreme cruelty the trial court should, or must, award in excess of one-half of the community property to the unoffending spouse. Assuming this to be the general rule, as urged by the plaintiff, a point we need not decide, we cannot say on the record now before us that the court below in awarding the property as above indicated, did violence to this asserted general rule. The appeal being on the judgment-roll alone, every presumption and intendment is resolved in favor of the regularity of the proceedings in the court below. (Coleman v. Farwell, 206 Cal. 740 [276 Pac. 335]; Johnston v. Callahan, 146 Cal. 212 [79 Pac. 870] ; Kelly v. McDonald, 98 Cal. App. 121 [276 Pac. 404].) In the absence of the evidence it is, of course, impossible for us to say that the court below awarded less than one-half of the community property to the plaintiff, or otherwise erred or abused its discretion in awarding the same. In this state of the record it will be presumed that the trial court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, determined that the best interests of the parties would be served by the disposition above outlined.

Plaintiff would have us accept the allegations of the supplemental complaint as to the value of the community property, thus indicating, so she asserts, the unequal distribution of the same. This we cannot do. The parties stipulated in open court that the allegations of the supplemental complaint were to be deemed denied. This stipulation appears in the reporter’s notes taken upon the trial of the cause and has been brought to our attention by diminution of the record heretofore duly authorized by this court over the plaintiff’s objection. Such a stipulation made in open court constitutes “not only an agreement between the parties but also between them and the court, which the latter is bound to enforce, not only for the benefit of those interested, but for the protection of its own honor and dignity”. (Meagher v. Gagliardo, 35 Cal. 602; 23 Cal. Jur. 811, sec. 2.) Nothing in section 283 of the Code of Civil Procedure militates against the binding effect of a stipulation entered into and executed by the parties in open court and duly reported in the proceedings of the *490 trial. (McLaughlin v. Glaussen, 116 Cal. 490 [48 Pac. 487] ; Smith v. Whittier, 95 Cal. 279, 2'87, 288 [30 Pac. 529] ; Welch v. Stratton, 73 Cal. App. 765, 768 [239 Pac. 380].) In Smith v. Whittier, supra, it is stated:

“The evident object of this section [see. 283, Code Civ. Proc.] is that whenever the attorney shall enter into an agreement for the purpose of binding his client, there shall be such a record thereof as will preclude any question concerning its character or effect, and that the extent of the agreement may be ascertained by the record, if oral, that it shall be entered in the minutes, and if written, that it shall be filed with the clerk. ‘It is not intended to enlarge or abridge the authority of the attorney, but only to prescribe the manner of its exercise. ’ (Preston v. Hill, 50 Cal. 53 [19 Am. Rep. 647].) The section does not require a construction that in no instance shall an agreement which the attorney may make in behalf of his client be binding unless entered in the minutes of the court or filed with the clerk. Its provisions have reference to executory agreements, and not to those which have been wholly or in part executed; and it was with reference to oral agreements of an executory character that the court said in its opinion in Borkheim v. North British & M. Ins. Go., 38 Cal. 628, [relied on by plaintiff herein] ‘of such agreements, therefore, there can be no specific performance’.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 522, 216 Cal. 485, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-webster-cal-1932.