Lord v. Hough
Before: Niles
Synopsis
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Júdicial District, City and County of San Francisco.
In the divorce suit spoken of in the opinion, C. S. Lord obtained a divorce in 1867, and the Court, in its decree, awarded him the custody of his three infant children, and decreed that he pay his wife one hundred dollars per month during her natural life, or in lieu thereof, the sum of ten thousand dollars, at his election. Afterwards, and September 21st, 1867, the Court granted the defendant a new trial, and the plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court from the order granting the new trial. This appeal was pending at the time of his death.
September 30th, 1867, Lord made the will spoken of in the opinion, in which he devised his property to his executors, to hold in trust; among other things, to pay the sum decreed by the Court to his wife, if the order granting a new trial was reversed, and the judgment remained in force. The will also confided the care and custody of his infant children to his mother.
This action was brought to have the deed of Lord to his mother declared fraudulent and void, and to have the same canceled. The defendant had judgment in the Court below, and the plaintiff appealed.
The other facts are stated in the opinion.
By the Court,
Niles, J.: The plaintiff was the widow of C. S. Lord, deceased. C. S. Lord died in July, 1868, leaving estate of the value of from one hundred thousand to two hundred thousand dollars, all of which was common property of plaintiff and deceased; and a will, appointing the defendants, Wooster, Knight, and Hudd, his executors. On the 7th of April, 1868, Lord conveyed to his mother, Olive S. Hough, one of the defendants, a parcel of land at Menlo Park, containing about six and three quarter acres, and then of the value of about four thousand dollars. The deed purported to be in consideration of natural affection.
Prior to the execution of the deed, C. S. Lord had instituted proceedings for a divorce against the plaintiff, and had obtained, by order of the District’ Court, the temporary custody of the three infant children of the marriage. This suit was pending when he died.
In Hovember, 1867, he visited his mother, then a resident of the State of Hew York, and agreed with her that if she would leave her then residence and go to California, and take charge of the children, he would provide liberally for her support. She consented, and came to this State in March, 1868, and from that time had the entire charge and care of the children, and resided upon the premises afterwards conveyed to her.
The plaintiff claims that the conveyance should be decreed to be void, as being voluntary and in derogation of her rights in the common property.
[585]A deed of gift of a portion of the common property by the husband is not void per se. If the gift be made with the intent of defeating the claims of the wife in the common property, the transaction would be tainted with fraud. In the absence of such fraudulent intent, a voluntary disposition of a portion of the property, reasonable in reference to the whole amount, is authorized by the statute which gives to the husband the absolute power of disposition of the common property as of his own separate estate. This doctrine was recognized, although not expressly decided, in the cases of Smith v. Smith, 12 Cal. 225: and Peck v. Brummagim, 31 Cal. 446.
The pendency of proceedings for a divorce does not, of itself, interrupt the exercise of the husband’s powers. The property does not come into the custody of the Court by the institution of the suit. The husband has still the control of it and full power of disposition of it. He is held to equal good faith in all transactions relating to it, as before the commencemnt of the suit. He is subject to the same restrictions in its disposal. He cannot make a voluntary conveyance of any portion of the property with the intent to deprive the wife of her claims, in anticipation of the divorce, any more than he could make such fraudulent disposition in anticipation of her widowhood.
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