Botsford v. MacIntosh

173 P.2d 359, 76 Cal. App. 2d 452, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 734
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 11, 1946
DocketCiv. 15217
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 359 (Botsford v. MacIntosh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Botsford v. MacIntosh, 173 P.2d 359, 76 Cal. App. 2d 452, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 734 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

SHINN, J.

This is an appeal by an executor from an order (1) denying his petition for instructions regarding the disposition of personal property; (2) refusing to settle his second account current and supplement thereto; (3) refusing to reduce his bond from $20,000 to $5,000, and (4) removing him as executor.

*454 Appellant is an attorney at law. He was named in the will of Joel Wacholder as one of two executors and was appointed sole executor on the 1st day of March, 1938. The coexecutor, Mr. Macintosh, declined appointment, and died in November, 1,939. The estate was originally appraised at $37,336.97. Appellant’s first account current was filed and was duly approved December 21, 1942. The assets shown in the inventory were accounted for and the estate carried into the next accounting period was of the appraised value of $8,481.15, consisting of a lot in Clear Lake Highlands, Lake County, appraised at $5.00; household furniture and furnishings appraised at $1,000; 250 shares of capital stock of Wacholder Glass and Sales Company, appraised at $3,405; good will and trade name of Argonaut Brokerage Company, appraised at $100; a lot and an interest in another lot in Los Angeles County; some jewelry, and miscellaneous articles of personal property of small value. By the terms of the will the household furniture was bequeathed to respondent, Ruby B. Macintosh. It was in storage at the time of Mr. Wacholder’s death and had remained there. In July, 1944, the executor reported a sale of it to one Wexler for $850 and asked for confirmation of the sale, which was opposed and was denied by the court, and the executor thereupon filed his petition for instructions as to what to do with the property. It was shown by his petition that the estate was still indebted in the amdunt of $603 for storage of the furniture, and for costs and expenses of administration in an amount exceeding $1,000. Ruby B. Macintosh thereupon filed a petition for removal of the executor, upon the grounds that he had filed no account since February 13, 1942, and “That said Frederick L. Botsford has wasted and mismanaged and is continuing to waste and mismanage the property of said estate, has wrongfully neglected said estate, and has long neglected to perform any act as Executor.” Appellant demurred to the petition for removal upon general grounds, and upon the special ground that it was uncertain, in that it could not be ascertained “in what manner or how the said Frederick L. Botsford has wasted or mismanaged, or is continuing to waste or mismanage the property of the above-entitled estate, or how or in what manner the said Frederick L. Botsford has wrongfully neglected said estate or has long neglected to perform any act as executor or otherwise.” Appellant also filed an answer to the petition, but in the meantime had filed his second account cur *455 rent. To this account Ruby B. Macintosh filed objections upon the following grounds: that said account failed to balance; that an amount shown as having been advanced to the estate by the executor in the sum of $502.89 was not itemized; that no vouchers had been filed; that no dates of receipts or payments appeared in the account, and that the liability of the estate for storage charges of the furniture was not shown. Appellant’s request in his account for the reduction of his bond was objected to upon the ground “that the executor’s actions herein are presently under objection.”

The demurrer to the petition for removal was overruled, but we do not understand why for it should have been treated as a request that the charges be made specific and should have been granted. Appellant was entitled to have the charges made specific; general charges of waste and mismanagement would be about as difficult to meet as general charges of fraud. Also, the court was entitled to have the issues clearly defined before entering upon a trial. The objections to the account did not challenge the accuracy of any item of the receipts or disbursements. Respondent should have been required to make her objections specific. (Estate of More, 121 Cal. 635 [54 P. 148] ; Estate of Sylvar, 1 Cal.App. 35 [81 P. 663].) The several matters were heard together. The trial commenced without the definition of issues as to any acts of alleged waste, mismanagement or neglect upon appellant’s part, or as to any improper charge or credit in his account which respondent expected to prove. The trial ended in all the uncertainty with which it started and without the determination of any specific fact upon the petition for removal or the objections to the account.

Upon the issue of dereliction of duty, the court made a general finding that it was true that the executor had wasted, mismanaged and wrongfully neglected said estate. As to the contest over the account, the finding was, “That said account current of said executor and the supplement thereto, do not reflect the true condition of said estate.” Nevertheless, petitioner’s letters were revoked and he was removed as executor. After the receipt of extensive evidence, action on the account and supplementary account which had been filed was deferred indefinitely.

The reporter’s transcript of the hearings shows that respondent, Ruby B. Macintosh, was no more prepared to prove acts of malfeasance or misfeasance on the part of the *456 executor, or errors in his account, than she was prepared to allege them. We have read and reread the transcript and the generalities of the brief of respondent and have been unable to find in the record any evidence of waste, mismanagement or neglect in the performance of appellant’s duties, or any evidence which would have supported a finding that he should have charged himself with more or credited himself with less than was shown by his account. This is not to say that appellant’s administration was proved to have been free of any act of waste, mismanagement or neglect, but that there was insufficient evidence to support charges of malfeasance or misfeasance. So far as the accounts before the court were concerned, there wa.s no evidence to question their correctness. As will be pointed out, respondent confined her efforts to an attack upon appellant’s first account, which had been approved in 1942. There has been no trial and determination as to the correctness of the current accounts.

In the matter of appellant’s removal as executor, the order should, of course, be sustained unless there is an entire absence of evidence of unfitness or breach of duty on the part of appellant. The trial court exercises a broad discretion in such matters (In re Bell’s Estate, 135 Cal. 194 [67 P. 123] ; Estate of Healy, 137 Cal. 474 [70 P. 455] ; Estate of Newell, 18 Cal.App. 258 [122 P. 1099]), but, as the court stated in In re Welch, 86 Cal. 179, at 183 [24 P. 943] : “While it is the duty of the courts to protect carefully the interests of estates, the rights of those who are appointed to take charge of and manage them should not be overlooked; and an administrator should not be removed except for good and sufficient cause.” (See, also, Estate of Chadbourne, 15 Cal.App. 363 [114 P. 1012].)

The appeal involves little in addition to an examination of the record for evidence of waste, mismanagement or neglect on the part of appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 359, 76 Cal. App. 2d 452, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/botsford-v-macintosh-calctapp-1946.