Bemmerly v. Woodard

68 P. 1017, 136 Cal. 326, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 709
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1902
DocketSac. Nos. 986, 994.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 P. 1017 (Bemmerly v. Woodard) 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
Bemmerly v. Woodard, 68 P. 1017, 136 Cal. 326, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 709 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

George W. Woodard was the executor of the last will and testament of Michael Bemmerly, deceased, and continued in the management and possession of the estate until his death, December 22, 1894. This action was brought by the plaintiffs, as his successors in the office of administrator, to obtain from the defendant, as his executrix, an accounting of his administration and the possession of the estate. After a trial had been had in the superior court, an order was made by that court, upon the motion of the defendant, granting a new trial upon certain designated issues, and denying the motion as to all the other issues. From this order, and also from the judgment previously entered, the defendant appealed. Upon the appeal this court directed a modification of the judgment in certain respects and affirmed the order granting a retrial of those issues. The facts involved in the controversy between the parties are quite fully set forth in the opinion given upon that appeal. (Bemmerly v. Woodard, 124 Cal. 568.)

*328 The issues upon which the superior court directed a new trial were whether Woodard was appointed the trustee of the estate by the terms of the will of Bemmerly; at what time his trusteeship commenced and when it terminated; and whether Woodard had performed any extraordinary services in the administration of the estate. Upon the retrial of these issues the court found that he was appointed trustee of the estate by the terms of the will; that his trusteeship commenced on the eighth day of June, 1877, and continued until his death, December 29, 1894; that as such trustee he did not earn and was not entitled to any compensation from the eighth day of June, 1877,—the date at which he qualified as executor,—to the first day of January, 1884; that he did not as executor of Bemmerly perform any extraordinary services in the administration of the estate. The judgment previously entered was thereupon modified by deducting therefrom the amount included for interest subsequent to the death of Woodard, as had been directed by this court upon the former appeal. A motion on behalf of each party for a new trial was denied. From this order, and also from the judgment as thus modified, each party has appealed—the plaintiffs (ease No. 994) upon the ground that the court should have found that Woodard was not entitled to any compensation whatever for his services as trustee, and the defendant (ease No. 986) upon the ground that the court should have allowed compensation for his services as trustee at the rate of twelve hundred dollars per year for each year subsequent to June 8", 1877.

1. The plaintiff’s objection to the allowance of any compensation for the services of Woodard as trustee is foreclosed by the former decision of the superior court. The court then found that he was trustee of the estate from January 1, 1884, to January 1, 1894, and that his services therefor were worth-twelve hundred dollars per year each year, and gave judgment accordingly. The plaintiffs neither moved for a new trial nor appealed from this judgment. The value of Woodard’s services, as well as his right to recover any compensation therefor, were not included among the issues upon which the court directed a new trial. The former findings of the court thereon are not therefore now open for re-examination.

2. The contention on behalf of the defendant, that inasmuch as the finding upon the former trial as to the value of the *329 services of Woodard as trustee was not within the issues to he retried, the finding that their value was “twelve hundred dollars per year each year” required the court to allow that sum from the time when his trusteeship commenced is untenable. The finding upon that subject was: “GL W. Woodard was trustee of the estate of said Michael Bemmerly, deceased, from the first day of January, 1884, to the first day of January, 1894, and his services were worth twelve hundred dollars per year each year.” The value of the services per year is thus expressly limited to those performed subsequent to January 1, 1884, and the finding cannot be construed as determining the value of his services at any other time. Upon the former trial the court did not find whether Woodard was a trustee prior to the year 1884, or whether he had performed any services for the estate prior to that date, and consequently did not assume to find the value of any services during that time.

That it was the intention of the court to hold that Woodard was not entitled to compensation for services as trustee of the estate prior to the year 1884 is shown upon the proceedings of the court wherein a new trial of the above issues was directed. The court had found the value of such services subsequent to January 1, 1884, as above shown, but it had not found whether Woodard had rendered any extraordinary services as executor, as claimed by the defendant, or when his trusteeship commenced, or the value of any services rendered by him prior to 1884. In the statement on her motion for a new trial the defendant specified as grounds therefor that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the above findings as to the value of his services in this, “that there is no evidence that his services as trustee were worth only twelve hundred dollars per year, or that they were worth less than three thousand dollars per year during all the period from June 8, 1877, until December 22, 1894.” In its order directing a new trial the court recites as a reason therefor that on its former decision it “intended to find and give as full compensation for all extra services as executor, and for all services as trustee under the will, the sum of twelve hundred dollars per annum for each year, beginning with the first day of January, 1884”; but that “inasmuch as this intention of the court is not expressed with sufficient clearness in the *330 findings,” directs that a new trial he granted upon these issues, “in order that specific findings may be made thereon.” It is thus manifest that the court upon the first trial intended to decide that Woodard was not entitled to compensation for any services performed as trustee prior to the year 1884, and the “specific finding” made upon the retrial carries out the purpose for which such retrial was ordered.

Upon the retrial the court found that Woodard’s trusteeship commenced June 8, 1877, but it does not find that he performed any services for the estate as trustee prior to the year 1884. The finding that the trusteeship commenced June 8, 1877, does not necessitate the conclusion that he was entitled to compensation for services as a trustee prior to the year 1884, unless the court had also found that he had rendered services as a trustee during that period; and the finding that he did not earn and was not and is not entitled to any compensation from the eighth day of June, 1877, to the first day of January, 1884, implies that no such services were rendered by him. This finding is, moreover, fully sustained by the evidence. The testimony in reference to the services rendered by Woodard is general in its character and indefinite as to the time when they were rendered. No distinction appears to have been made by the witnesses between those rendered prior to January 1, 1884, and those rendered subsequent thereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 P. 1017, 136 Cal. 326, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bemmerly-v-woodard-cal-1902.