Wolf v. Donahue

273 P. 547, 206 Cal. 213, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 582
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1929
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9199.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 273 P. 547 (Wolf v. Donahue) 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
Wolf v. Donahue, 273 P. 547, 206 Cal. 213, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 582 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

SEA WELL, J.

This appeal was taken from a judgment decreeing that by a contract and agreement entered into by and between Daniel Donahue and respondent, Jennie Wolf, in 1911, she was entitled to all of the real and personal property standing in the name of Daniel Donahue at the time of his decease and claimed by the administrator of his estate as property belonging to his estate and directing that conveyances of the real property be executed and delivery of the personal property be made to respondent by said administrator after the payment of all lawful subsisting claims and demands against said estate and costs of administration.

Daniel Donahue, who located in California a number of years ago, died intestate, a resident of Ocean Park, county of Los Angeles, on or about December 3, 1923, at about the age of sixty-eight years, leaving real and personal property situate in the county of Los Angeles standing in his name aggregating about $54,000 in value. An original mortgage in the sum of $12,000 upon the real property had been reduced by the payment of $3,000, leaving an existing balance due of $9,000. Daniel Donahue left no child or children, his heirs at law being three brothers and three sisters, appellants herein, all of whom are past or well along in middle life.

Decedent and respondent, Jennie Wolf, were first cousins, their respective fathers being brothers. Before coming to the United States of America from England, respondent, who *215 was then a small child, and her mother lived at the home o£ Daniel’s father. Upon coming to America, respondent subsequently married and located at New Haven, Connecticut, where she and her husband, who was a landscape gardener, resided until the latter’s death, which occurred May 11, 1911. Eespondent was left a widow, with one son, aged about seventeen years, and two daughters, aged about eleven and fourteen, respectively. A correspondence had its inception in 1910 by respondent writing a letter to Daniel Donahue’s wife addressed to her residence at Ocean Park, in which she stated that her husband was thinking of coming to Ocean Park to engage in landscape gardening. No answer was received to this letter until about one year later, at which time it was answered by Daniel Donahue. In the meantime he and his wife had become divorced and the husband of Jennie Wolf had deceased. In this letter he lamented his loneliness and ill health. He was then engaged in conducting a fish and poultry market at Ocean Park. In his letter, not being previously informed as to the death of respondent’s husband, he inquired if he was still thinking of coming to California to engage in landscape gardening and wrote encouragingly of the outlook. In her return letter she informed him of her husband’s death and told him that any notion she had previously entertained of coming to California would have to be abandoned because of her husband’s demise. Within two weeks after writing the above information to Daniel Donahue she received a second letter from bim in which he expressed his sorrow at the death mentioned and advised her not to worry as living troubles, doubtless having in mind his separation from his wife, were worse than death. He further suggested that as long as her husband was dead he could not see how that event should interfere with bringing her family to California and making their home with him. He said he was very ill and could not attend to both his home and business and he needed someone to look after the home and that if she came to his home she would never be sorry for so doing; that neither she nor her children should ever be in want and that when he should pass away he would see to it that everything he had would be hers and her children would be well cared for. She showed the letter to a neighbor, with whom she advised, who corroborated respondent on substantial matters as to the contents of said *216 letter. Her testimony is that she replied to his letter and informed him that she was conducting a wardrobe, dry-cleaning, dressmaking and remodeling business at New Haven, was among neighbors and friends and was getting along well and that she was not inclined to break up her home and go to California without any assurance that she would improve her situation. The correspondence extended through a period of about five months in which he repeated his promise to leave her his estate upon his death if she would come to California, do his housekeeping and help him in Ms business. On October 9, 1911, he forwarded to her transportation for herself and three children and she disposed of her personal effects and went with her children to his home at Ocean Park and remained a member of his household until his death, December 3,1923. The poultry and fish business he was conducting was of unknown value. The market was destroyed by fire in September, 1912. He owned two lots at Ocean Park valued at $700 and $4,000, respectively. Some time after the destruction of the market by fire he re-established the poultry business at his home and subsequently erected a quadruple apartment house. Her testimony as to the services she rendered during the twelve years of her residence in decedent’s home, for which she received no compensation, constitutes a full chapter of long hours spent in dressing and preparing fowls of all kinds for the market, caring for and raising fowls, assisting in conducting the poultry business, cooking, washing and doing work of a housekeeper, as well as doing memal service in keeping the apartment house in order. Testimony was given by several witnesses which either directly supported or tended to support respondent’s claims. Testimony, on the other hand, was offered by the brothers and sisters tending strongly to rebut the contention that decedent had agreed or contracted to leave his property by will to respondent for personal services or assistance to be rendered by her to him. In this class of cases the temptation is strong for those who are so inclined to fabricate evidence giving color to the claim that a written agreement subsequently lost or destroyed was made by a decedent to dispose of his property at death to the claimant. For this reason the trial court should closely scrutiMze the testimony of interested parties who offer themselves to re-establish an alleged loss or destroyed written contract or agreement, lest *217 an irremediable wrong be done to the heirs of a decedent whose lips cannot speak in protest against the consummation of a wicked design. But where the evidence is legally sufficient to sustain the judgment, as in the instant ease, we must assume that the trial court scrutinized the testimony of the witnesses in the light of the interest which each may have had in the result of the trial.

The contract upon which the action was brought consisted of a number of letters that passed between said Daniel Donahue and respondent, Jennie Wolf, which had long since been destroyed by said respondent. The contents of said correspondence, which began in May and concluded in October, 1911, by respondent coming to Daniel Donahue’s home, were re-established by parol evidence. The letters written by Jennie Wolf in reply to his, if not destroyed by him shortly after being received, were probably destroyed by a fire which consumed his place of business in 1912.

At the time respondent took her place in the Donahue household his real property was of small value, not exceeding $4,700, and there is no evidence showing that he possessed personal property of any consequence.

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Bluebook (online)
273 P. 547, 206 Cal. 213, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-donahue-cal-1929.