Howell v. Dunning

Tolman, J.

Prior to April, 1914, the respondent and appellant were husband and wife, residing together as such in the town of Harrington, which had been their home for several years. At practically the same time, the respondent, through his attorney at Davenport, and the appellant, through her attorney at Spokane, each began a suit for divorce from the other, and shortly after the service of the respective com*592plaints, the parties composed their differences and resumed their marital relations. Nothing was done towards dismissing either suit, and both parties appeared to have considered that both actions were then abandoned. One year later, on April 15, 1915, trouble again arose between the parties, and it was agreed between them that they should go to Davenport and the husband should secure a divorce upon the complaint which he had prepared and served a year before, and then, or on the way to Davenport, the husband suggested that, in view of his liabilities and obligations, he could pay her but $3,000, and that only in installments, which would be her fair share of the community property, and the remainder of the property should become his separate estate; explaining in some detail, according to appellant’s testimony, that he was heavily in debt, that the expenses of his business absorbed the profits, and that, after deducting the indebtedness, the community estate was not worth to exceed $6,000. The wife expressed a wish to have her attorney present, and to have the benefit of his advice, but the husband assured her that would be a useless expense, and that the proposed $3,000 settlement was all that the court would give her in any event. The husband denies that he told his wife that the value of the community property was only $6,000, but does not deny- that the wife was entirely without business experience; had no knowledge of his business, its value and earnings : that he had enjoined upon her the strictest economy, because he claimed he was overburdened with indebtedness; had refused her requests for money for the same reason, and testified that he never, at any time, told her the value of their joint property, and seems tacitly to admit that the wife relied upon him to be fair in the matter. The wife, as she now claims, believing that the net value of the community property *593was $6,000, and relying upon the husband’s statement with respect thereto, consented to the decree awarding the husband the divorce and the custody of three of their five children, and awarding her the custody of the two remaining children, with a provision for $25 per month to be paid by the husband towards their support, and a property settlement of $3,000, payable $500 in cash and the balance - in annual installments, with interest.

It is admitted that the husband’s attorney undertook to act for both in arranging the property settlement and procuring the entry of the decree, and there is nothing in the record to indicate that the attorney acted in any other than a fair and impartial manner respecting the settlement. Neither is there anything to indicate that the attorney knew anything more of the value of the community property or the earning capacity of the business carried on by the husband than did the wife. And, acting for both upon a subject upon which they were apparently agreed, there appears to have been no reason for him to make such an investigation as might have been thought proper by one acting solely in the interest of the wife. After the entry of the decree, the wife went to California, and in the fall of 1916 first learned facts that indicated that she had been deceived in the property settlement, and thereafter brought this action, attacking only that portion of the decree which provides for the property settlement. Prom an adverse judgment below, she appeals.

Considering the nature of the case, the evidence is singularly lacking in conflict upon most of the vital points. As already stated, the respondent admits that appellant, while his wife, knew nothing about the details of the business; does not deny that he commonly refused her information when she inquired; and one *594reading the record can hardly escape the conclusion, whether the husband’s testimony is accepted or the testimony of the wife, that the wife relied absolutely upon the husband in this matter of the property settlement. This being so, in dividing, that which belonged equally to both, but which the law placed exclusively in the possession and control of the husband, common justice, common fairness, and the law, all alike, require the husband to disclose fully the nature and value of the property to be divided and to make a fair division, or else put the wife on notice that they were dealing at arm’s length and advise her to seek counsel and receive assistance from some other source. Normile v. Denison, ante p. 205, 186 Pac. 305. The husband, having dissuaded the wife from seeking the advice of her own attorney, must assume the same loyalty to her interest as her attorney would have shown, and whether his fraud be active or passive is immaterial.

That the amount paid to the wife was grossly inadequate is practically admitted. The husband himself testified in his own behalf as to the value of the community property at the time of the settlement, as follows:

“Q. Are you able to give at this time what your property, what you considered your property was worth at that time over and above your debts, over your liabilities? A. Why, I should imagine it was worth from $12,000 to $14,000. I wouldn’t say whether it was worth that much or less. It could not have been worth over that.”

While his bookkeeper, to whom he referred all questions of figures, and who, as he stated, knew all about. his financial affairs, testified that the net assets of the firm in which the husband was a partner and half owner, for the year 1914, being the year immediately preceding the entry of the decree, were of the value of *595$45,036.80, and the net profits of the firm for that year were $13,495.95. In 1915, the year the decree was entered, the firm made a net profit of $43,145.68, and in 1916 the net profit was $63,017.79. Admitting that these are hook profits only, and that they might never he realized in full, still, at the beginning of the year 1917, respondent bought out his partner’s interest in the firm and, according to his own testimony, paid him $35,000 therefor. The bookkeeper, who appears to have had a thorough, knowledge of conditions, also places a value upon respondent’s interest in the firm, at the time the decree was entered, of $25,000, which valuation respondent in no way disputes. Taking the bookkeeper’s figures as to the value of that part of the community property invested in the partnership, and adding to it $2,000, which respondent himself fixed as the value of the community property not invested in the partnership, we have a community estate valued at $27,000, the whole of which the husband seeks to retain, after paying the wife, who, so far as appears, has done her full share- in helping to acquire it, but a small fraction thereof. Respondent testified to community indebtedness outside the partnership of $10,149. While this appears only by his testimony, and there are some facts shown which cast doubt upon some of the items included, yet we are disposed, under the record, to allow this offset, this reducing the net value of the community property, at the time of the entry of the decree, to $16,851, the wife’s half of which was $8,425.50. Deducting the sum of $3,000 already paid her, she should be allowed the difference of $5,425.50.

Appellant asks us, if we find the wife has been defrauded, to treat the' community estate as undivided, order an accounting, and give the wife the benefit of the earnings subsequent to the entry of the decree. *596This we cannot do, for the community was then dissolved; it was the purpose to then divide the community property, and the wife is entitled to receive what she would have received if no fraud had been practiced upon her, plus only legal interest during the time it has been withheld from her.

The record discloses a state of facts with reference to the entry of the decree of divorce by consent upon a complaint verified and served a year before, during all of which intervening time the parties had lived together as husband and wife, thus working a condonation of all matters charged, which amounted to a fraud upon the trial court, and cannot be permitted to pass here without comment and condemnation of all concerned therein. Neither party has attacked the decree except in the one particular of the property settlement, yet, did it not appear that appellant has remarried and has a child by her second husband, we should feel it our duty, of our own motion, to direct the trial court to set aside the decree in toto;, but since to do so would be to punish the innocent with the guilty, we feel constrained to direct the trial court to permit the decree to stand as to the divorce, the custody of the children, and the provision for their support, but to modify it as to the property settlement as hereinbefore indicated.

Judgment reversed.

Holcomb, O. J., Mount, Bridges, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.

[Decided March I, 1920.]

Per Curiam.

In the opinion heretofore filed in this

case, it is said:

“The record discloses a state of facts with reference to the entry of the decree of divorce by consent upon a complaint verified and served a year before, *597during all of which intervening time the parties had lived together as husband and wife, thus working a condonation of all matters charged, which amounted .to a fraud upon the trial court, and cannot be permitted to pass here without comment and condemnation of all concerned therein. ’ ’

While adhering strictly to the views thus expressed, it is but fair to say that none of the attorneys now appearing for respondent appeared for, or in any sense represented, him in the divorce action, a fact which should have been set forth in the original opinion. Our attention being called to the oversight, we make haste, in justice to respondent’s present counsel, to say that we find nothing in the record reflecting upon them or either of them in the slightest degree.