Wickersham v. Comerford

31 P. 358, 96 Cal. 433, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 973
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1892
DocketNo. 14782
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 31 P. 358 (Wickersham v. Comerford) 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
Wickersham v. Comerford, 31 P. 358, 96 Cal. 433, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 973 (Cal. 1892).

Opinion

Vanclief, C.—

This is an action to set aside and annul an order of the superior court of Sonoma County designating and setting apart a homestead to the defendant Sarah, as the widow of Richard Comerford, deceased, on the alleged ground of fraud in its procurement.

The court sustained a general demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint, and as plaintiff declined to amend, gave judgment for the defendants.

The plaintiff appeals from the judgment, and contends here that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer.

The complaint shows that on August 11,1888, Richard Comerford and the defendant Sarah, being husband and wife, executed a written agreement, as follows: —

“That the said parties have agreed, and hereby agree, to live separate and apart from each other henceforth, and to divide the community property between them as herein provided.
“ Sarah Comerford to have the custody of their minor child, Philip P. Comerford, and provide for the support of said child. All the real estate situate in Sonoma County, state of California, which Richard Comerford has hitherto deeded to Sarah Comerford, shall remain and become her separate estate, free from all claim of the said Richard Comerford in law or equity, and he hereby waives all claim to the same as husband, and all right to the same at her death by reason of his relation as husband. He hereby also sells to her all the chattel property now upon the said ranch constituting their present home. The said Richard Comerford also hereby deeds to said Sarah Comerford all lots of land situate in Alameda County now belonging to him, or in which he has any interest, to be and become in like manner her separate estate, free from all claim of the said Richard Comerford. And in consideration of the aforesaid conveyance to her, the said Sarah Comerford pays to the said Richard Comerford the sum of three thousand five hundred dol[436]*436lars, gold coin of the United States of America, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged by the said Richard Oomerford, and the said sum shall be the separate estate of the said Richard Oomerford, and to it Sarah Comer-ford relinquishes all right, as his wife, in law or equity, or by descent; and each party shall have hereafter no claim upon the other for support or sustenance. The said Richard Oomerford to surrender the possession of all the said premises and property to said Sarah Comer-ford, and leave her in the sole occupation of the same.
“ These presents to bind said parties during their relative lives, unless vacated by the joint deeds of revocation of said parties.
“ In witness whereof, the said parties hereunto set their hands and seals this eleventh day of August, 1888.
“Richard Oomerford.
“Sarah Oomerford.”

That this agreement had been duly acknowledged and recorded in the counties of Sonoma and Alameda; that upon the execution of this agreement the parties thereto immediately separated and never again lived together. The wife, with her minor son,—the defendant Philip, — removed to Alameda County upon the lots described in the agreement as being there situated, and continued to reside there until after the order in question, setting apart to her a homestead, was made, and never, after the execution of said agreement, asked or received any assistance or support from her husband, nor complained that the agreement was not fair.

With the three thousand five hundred dollars received by the husband as per agreement, he purchased a lot of land in Sonoma County containing seven acres, a deed for which he procured to be executed to himself and his eldest son, who had remained with him, and on which he resided until February 10, 1890, when he died intestate, leaving no other property than his interest in said lot.

On February 18, 1890, the defendant Sarah applied [437]*437for letters of administration on his estate, and was appointed administratrix on March 3d. On March 6th she published the requisite notice to creditors, and on March 10th filed an inventory of the estate, in which the said lot was described as the only property of the estate. On the day of the filing of the inventory (March 10th), she filed her petition for an order setting apart to her as a homestead the said lot of seven acres, which stated, among other things, “ that said decedent during his lifetime resided upon said tract of land, and that she had been residing there since his death,” but which stated nothing about the deed of separation, nor the fact of separation. Thereafter, on March 24th, the court made the order setting apart the lot to her alone as a homestead, absolutely and without any limitation as to time. That plaintiff was a creditor of Richard Comerford at the time of his death, and within the time limited by the notice to creditors presented his claim to the administratrix for allowance, and that it was allowed by her on June 4, 1890, and by the judge of the court on June 9, 1890; that plaintiff first learned that the order setting apart the homestead had been made on June 4, 1890, — more than sixty days after that order had been entered.

The complaint charges that the statement in the petition for a homestead, to the effect that defendant had resided on the lot of seven acres since the death of her husband, was willfully false, and made with intent to deceive and mislead the court, by falsely suggesting that she had resided upon said lot with her husband immediately before and at the time of his death; and also that she intentionally and willfully suppressed and concealed from the court the said agreement to separate from her husband, and the fact of separation according to the agreement, for the purpose of deceiving and misleading the court; and that such false statement and suggestion as to her residence, and the concealment of the deed and fact of separation, did deceive and mislead the court to believe that she had resided with her husband as a part of his family immediately before his death, and that [438]*438there had been no separation, and thereby induced the court to make the order setting apart the homestead.

It is further alleged that plaintiff thereafter moved the court in which the order was made to set it aside on the grounds above stated, and that the court denied this motion.

I think the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint.

1. It seems clear that defendant was not entitled to the homestead which, was set apart to her, even for a limited period. In consequence of the agreement of separation, which had been fully executed on the part of the husband, and the fact of separation in accordance with the terms of the agreement, she was not a member of his family at the time of his death, nor at any time after the separation; and therefore, upon his death, was not entitled to a family allowance out of his estate, under sections 1465, 1466, and 1468 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Estate of Noah, 73 Cal. 583; 2 Am. St. Rep. 829; 88 Cal. 472); and since I think the setting apart of a homestead by the court from the separate property of the husband, as required by section 1465, “ for the use of the surviving .... wife .... and the minor children, or .... for the use of the minor children,” means the setting of it apart for the temporary use of the family

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 P. 358, 96 Cal. 433, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickersham-v-comerford-cal-1892.