Cavanaugh v. Cavanaugh

271 P. 109, 94 Cal. App. 271, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 657
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6357.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 271 P. 109 (Cavanaugh v. Cavanaugh) 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
Cavanaugh v. Cavanaugh, 271 P. 109, 94 Cal. App. 271, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 657 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

This is an action on a claim against the estate of William L. Cavanaugh after rejection by the administrator.

The claim presented to the administrator was as follows: “For services rendered William L. Cavanaugh, deceased, during his life time, for which he, agreed to pay the reasonable and market value thereof, consisting of continuous day and night nursing and taking care of said decedent and other incidental work, labor and services made necessary by the illness of said decedent for a period of sixty-eight (68) weeks from June 24, 1922, to October 15, 1923, at twenty dollars ($20.00) per week, $1,360.00.” It is admitted that the claim was presented within the time required by statute, and that after rejection action was commenced within the period prescribed.

William L. Cavanaugh died on or about October 3, 1925, and appellant was appointed administrator on October 5, 1925, and thereafter as such administrator caused notice to be given to creditors in the usual way. The claim, as hereinbefore noted, was rejected; hence the present action.

In plaintiff’s complaint herein she sets forth exactly the same demand as contained in the rejected claim. However, to the complaint is added this statement: “That during the life time of said William L. Cavanaugh no part of said sum was paid, and on and after the 16th day of October the entire amount and value of said services was the sum of one thousand three hundred sixty dollars, and that upon said last mentioned date the entire amount above named, to wit, the sum of one thousand three hundred and sixty dollars became and was due, owing and unpaid from William L. Cavanaugh to plaintiff.”

Defendant administrator in his answer denied the rendition of service, and denied the fact of nonpayment, and likewise denied the value of said services claimed to have been rendered. As a separate defense defendant set up the statute of limitations, section 339, subdivision 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, this defense going to the claim as a *273 whole and specifically to that portion thereof accruing prior to October 1, 1923.

At the trial plaintiff was permitted to amend her complaint, in conformity with proof offered, to allege that decedent William L. Cavanaugh promised to pay for the services as soon as he could sell certain real estate owned by him and that said real estate was sold on January 2, 1924. The trial court found in favor of plaintiff on all of the issues tendered, and judgment followed for the full amount claimed. Defendant administrator presents this appeal.

'Appellant at the outset relies on the familiar principle of law that courts do not look with favor upon stale claims, particularly when urged against the estate of a decedent debtor. Conceding the strength of the rule, yet this is a contention that is more proper to present to the trial court. And the scope of our inquiry here differs but little from other cases. We find in the record sufficient evidence to sustain the trial court’s findings, and we do not attempt to determine anew the conflict of testimony as urged, nor do we attempt to draw new conclusions from the apparent shiftings of position on the part of respondent.

Appellant next contends that the cause of action in the complaint was and is based upon a claim different and distinct from the claim presented to the administrator and rejected. It is conceded that the original claim as presented, and the complaint filed and judgment entered, each and all concern but one demand, namely, services rendered to the decedent over a period of sixty-eight weeks from June 24, 1922, to October 15, 1923, at a price of $20 per week. But appellant contends that the original claim as presented merely set forth the nature of the services and the time of rendition, and was on its face an outlawed claim, and that the administrator had no power to allow it. It may be conceded that the claim as presented was on its face barred by the statute of limitations (Corato v. Estate of Corato, 201 Cal. 155, 159 [255 Pac. 825] ; Estate of Steuer, 77 Cal. App. 584 [247 Pac. 211]). Section 1499 of the Code of Civil Procedure, provides that no claim must be allowed by the administrator which is barred by the statute of limitations. Therefore the action of the administrator here in rejecting the claim was not improper or unwarranted. However, a mere rejection by the administrator does not *274 conclude the claimant’s rights. Upon action brought the claimant, urging the same claim, may offer any legal evidence in support thereof. It is appellant’s contention that when a claim is presented against an estate of a decedent the demand should show affirmatively the time when payment was due, and that where, as here, any special time of payment has been agreed upon whereby a different period of limitation would apply, then the demand should show on its face the supplemental agreement. Concretely appellant argues that when plaintiff filed her claim with the administrator she set forth services rendered covering a period between June, 1922, and October, 1923, without any statement as to promise to pay, and that the law would presume the employment as one from month to month, with each month’s service payable when performed (Corato v. Estate of Corato, supra); that when plaintiff alleged a cause of action based upon the same services and alleging a promise to pay, which promise or agreement did not appear on the presented, claim, she thereby sought to enforce a demand that had never been presented for allowance to the administrator.

It is unnecessary to follow the contention throughout all of its phases. In some ways it seems quite persuasive, and serves to convince us that it would be a much better practice to set out in a claim to an administrator all of the details concerning time of payment and conditions thereof to a legal nicety. Yet the fact remains that in a vast majority of cases a claimant creditor has not the ability to determine all of the legal formulae nor the advantage of counsel. In Doolittle v. McConnell, 178 Cal. 697 [74 Pac. 305], the court says: “The same rules announced by the court in overruling appellant’s various attacks upon the complaint as amended (referring to the liberality of the law in permitting amendments to pleadings where the cause of action remains unchanged) apply with greater force to the refusal to hold that there was a fatal difference between the creditor’s claim as filed and the one upon which suit is brought, because the courts go further in upholding such demands against estates than in upholding pleadings. The purpose of presenting a demand to the administrator is to advise him of its nature, and there is no requirement that it shall state the facts with all the detail necessary in *275 a complaint, nor is its sufficiency to be tested by the rules of pleading.” (Pollitz v. Wickersham, 150 Cal. 238 [88 Pac. 911]; Elizalde v. Murphy, 163 Cal. 681 [126 Pac. 978]; Enscoe v. Fletcher, 1 Cal. App. 659 [82 Pac. 1075]; Doolittle v. McConnell, 178 Cal. 697 [174 Pac. 305]; Thompson v. Koeller, 183 Cal. 476 [191 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
271 P. 109, 94 Cal. App. 271, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cavanaugh-v-cavanaugh-calctapp-1928.