This action is in claim and delivery to recover personal property levied upon by the defendant Parker as sheriff of the county in certain actions brought by the defendant Farmers' Union and Milling Company against Rachel D. Bashore, wife of plaintiff, and James H. Stufflebeem, a son of said Rachel by a former marriage. Plaintiff claimed the property as community property. Defendants in answer averred that the property was the copartnership property of Rachel Bashore and Stufflebeem, and for a separate answer pleaded an estoppel in pais against the plaintiff. Trial was had before a jury and judgment rendered for defendants. This appeal is from the order denying plaintiff's motion for a new trial.
Appellant first insists that there was no sufficient pleading of an estoppel, and that therefore the court erred in admitting any testimony upon the question. But as the appeal here is only from the order denying a new trial, the inquiry is limited to a consideration of alleged errors at law and to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. Technical objections to the sufficiency of the pleading which might have been *Page 527 raised by special demurrer may not be considered upon this appeal. Reference may be made to the pleadings only to learn whether an estoppel was sufficiently well pleaded to justify the taking of evidence upon the matter. We think this defense was set forth with sufficient particularity. It is alleged that Rachel Bashore became indebted to the Farmers' Union and Milling Company for goods sold and moneys advanced to her; that during all the time of these transactions she was engaged in the business of farming, stock-raising, and wood-cutting, in her own right, upon her own account and in her own name, in the community where she now resides, and that during all this period she owned and held in her own right, upon her own account, and in her own name, real and personal property of great value; that during all of this time she and her husband, John Bashore, represented, stated, and caused to be known to the community, and in the cities of Visalia and Tulare, and in the vicinity of said cities, and to the people residing therein and thereabout, and to the business world generally, that the said Rachel was the owner in her own right and name, of real and personal property of great value, and of the real and personal property set forth and described; and, further, that John Bashore had no interest whatsoever in or to the property, or in or to the business, or in or to the proceeds thereof; still further, that Rachel Bashore and John Bashore represented, stated, and caused to be known to the community generally, and to the defendant the Farmers' Union and Milling Company in particular, that Rachel was the owner in her own right and name of all this property, and that John Bashore had no interest whatsoever in or to it or any part of it, or to the business so conducted by her; that defendant Farmers' Union and Milling Company, relying upon the conduct, representations, and statements of the plaintiff and the said Rachel, his wife, as above set forth, and believing the same to be true, and not otherwise, made advances to Rachel Bashore; that John Bashore had full knowledge and notice of all the facts and circumstances above alleged and full knowledge and notice of the fact that the Farmers' Union and Milling Company was extending credit and selling goods and wares, and advancing money to Rachel, upon the faith of the representations and statements and conduct of himself and Rachel; and *Page 528 that, if these statements and representations of John Bashore and Rachel were untrue, and if his conduct was contrary to the fact, he should not be permitted to allege or maintain the contrary thereof, and is estopped from so doing.
We need not, as has been intimated, enter into any particular discussion of the necessary averments of an estoppel in pais. The oft cited cases of Biddle Boggs v. Merced Mining Co., 14 Cal. 367, and Davis v. Davis, 26 Cal. 23,1 together with the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 1962 of the Code of Civil Procedure, fully set them forth.
While the pleading of an estoppel in pais, or estoppel by conduct, may be regarded as sufficient, upon the introduction of evidence under the plea the court fell into error. It admitted the testimony of numerous witnesses touching business transactions which they had had with Mrs. Bashore and Stufflebeem covering a period of nearly twenty years prior to the transactions here called in question to show the declarations of Mrs. Bashore and her son Stufflebeem. The contention of the plaintiff — and to the support of this contention he brought evidence — was, that the property was community property, and that he being an invalid, by arrangement with his wife she was to transact the business, and he was to do such work as he could about the home ranch; that he never made any representations contrary to this. Upon the part of the defense it was undertaken to show that the Bashores, husband and wife, had both represented to the community generally that all of the property was the separate property of the wife, and that the husband had no interest therein, and that these representations were made specifically to the defendant the Farmers' Union and Milling Company, and that the representations made to individual members of the community were communicated to the Farmers' Union. When, however, the witnesses for the defense were called they proved individual business transactions had with Mrs. Bashore and Stufflebeem and their representations and declarations in regard to the property. These declarations did not at all concern the personal property involved in this action. It was not shown that the plaintiff knew anything about them; it was not even shown that they were in any instance communicated to the defendant the Farmers' Union. Here, then, to *Page 529 the plaintiff's prejudice were introduced in evidence declarations, not of himself, but of his wife, not made in his presence, not made with his knowledge, and not even communicated to the defendant. By no possibility, therefore, could these representations, whether true or false, have influenced the conduct of the defendant in making the advancements to Mrs. Bashore, and still less could they have tended to raise an estoppel against the husband to prevent him from proving the truth as to his title. As is said in Goodale v. Scannel, 8 Cal. 27 : "To estop the plaintiff it should appear that his declarations were communicated to the creditor, and that he parted with some right or advantage on the faith of the information. Not only is this fact not shown, but the defendant has failed to show that the plaintiff ever made any statement on the subject." (See, also, Moore v. Boyd, 74 Cal. 167; ThePresident, etc., v. New York R.R. Co., 13 N.Y. 638; People v.Bank of North America, 75 N.Y. 561.) It is too plain to permit of discussion that there can be no estoppel unless the party who alleges it relied upon the representations and was induced to act by them, and, thus relying and induced, did take some action to his detriment. (2 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 812.)
Still graver becomes the error when it is considered that in this testimony the witnesses were allowed to repeat the declarations of Stufflebeem; so that the effect was that the plaintiff was to be injured and bound by the declaration of one a stranger in interest and occupying no relation to him which could give binding effect to his word. The Code of Civil Procedure itself succinctly declares (sec. 1848) that the rights of a party cannot be prejudiced by the declaration, act, or omission of another, except by virtue of some particular relation existing between them. As to the declarations of the wife made in the absence and without the knowledge of her husband, those declarations, of course, cannot be held to raise an estoppel where his title to the community property is involved. (Rowe v.Hibernia Sav. and L. Soc., 134 Cal. 403; Paden v. Goldbaum, 37 Pac. (Cal.) 759.)
The court instructed the jury: "If a husband permit his wife to use his money or property, real or personal, as her own, for a considerable period of time, she incurring obligations and obtaining credit upon the faith and upon the belief *Page 530 on the part of those from whom she obtained such credit that the property is her own, the husband will be estopped from claiming such property as his own against those extending such credit to his wife." The instruction is erroneous. Even where a married woman engages in trade it is presumed to be with the funds of the community, and the burden of proof is on the person asserting the property to be her separate property. (Manning v. Burke,107 La. 456; Jacobs Co. v. Scott, 53 Cal. 74; Chaffee v. Brown,109 Cal. 211.) The instruction, moreover, eliminates from consideration the necessary elements of an estoppel as laid down by subdivision 3 of section 1962 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The court further instructed the jury: "If you believe from the evidence that any of the property involved in this action grew out of, or was bought by the rents, issues or profits of any real property owned by Mrs. Bashore, it is your duty to find for the defendants." The instruction is manifestly erroneous. It was their duty to find for the defendants, not generally, as the instruction declares, but only as to that particular property which the jury might find was so acquired by Mrs. Bashore.
In contemplation of a new trial and of the modifications of the rulings which will be made under this decision, we do not think it necessary to consider any of the other points raised by appellant.
For the foregoing reasons the order is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Lorigan, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.
1 85 Am. Dec. 157.