Chandler v. St. Mary's College of Oakland

15 P.2d 849, 216 Cal. 667
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1932
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14267.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 P.2d 849 (Chandler v. St. Mary's College of Oakland) 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
Chandler v. St. Mary's College of Oakland, 15 P.2d 849, 216 Cal. 667 (Cal. 1932).

Opinions

THE COURT.

After further consideration of this cause, we are satisfied to readopt the opinion of Mr. Justice Preston, formerly rendered herein, which is as follows, to wit:

“Appeal from order admitting to probate a purported will of decedent dated March 27, 1929, and denying admis *669 sion to probate of a purported will dated December 13, 1928. The question is whether the testatrix intended the later instrument to be a codicil to the earlier one or whether she intended it to stand alone as her last will and testament.
“The testatrix, Hermina .Peralta Dargie, a resident of Alameda county, passed away on December 8, 1929, at the age of seventy-one years, leaving an estate consisting of real and personal property of an estimated value of $1,400,000. For many years she had been a widow and she left no children. Her sister, Josefa Peralta Wilson and the five children of said sister survived her and were her next of kin. A Spaniard, Captain Antonio Rodriguez Martin, who had made his home with her from about the year 1920, handling her affairs and apparently enjoying her full confidence and trust, produced, after her death, the documents above mentioned, both of which are wholly written, dated and signed in the handwriting of the deceased and on their face purport to make complete testamentary disposition of her properties.
“The writing of March 27, 1929, upon petition of the executors therein named, was admitted to probate as the last will and testament of decedent, over the objections of certain legatees named in the earlier instrument, their petition to have that instrument also admitted being denied. The court stated that it was convinced that the testatrix did not intend the March will, which expressly revokes all previous wills, to be a codicil to, supplement to or part of the December will; hence it found that the December will, having been revoked, was not the last will and testament of the deceased, but that the March will was her last will and testament, as such entitled to be admitted to probate.
“The document of December 13, 1928, denied probate, opens with the declaration that it is to serve as the last will and testament of the testatrix, all previous testamentary documents signed by her being declared void. It then provides that the sister of the testatrix receive an income of $1,000 a month from the estate, also certain real property and the sum of $150,000 to be paid her over a period of time; that the sister's children each receive the income from $50,000; that Captain Martin receive $250,000; that appellant Tripler receive $25,000; that appellant Summers receive $50,000, and that appellant St. Mary’s College receive, *670 in memory of decedent’s brothers, $20,000. After providing for some ten additional legacies, aggregating about $106,000, the instrument names as executors, Captain Martin, William T. Summers and Alexander Doig, and as attorney for the estate Mr. Jefferson Chandler. Following the signature of the testatrix appears this provision: ‘ Should Mr. Joseph E. Knowland continue as a partner in my estate affairs—I hereby demand that all rights be accorded me, after all is in order I order now, that this large Estate I am leaving back of me—be placed, into a competent Trust Co. to which my executors will agree for the benefits of my family (signed) Hermina Peralta Dargie. ’
“The instrument of March 27, 1929, is entitled and first provides as follows: ‘ Continuation of my last will and Testament. I. I hereby revoke any and all wills previously made by me. II. I desire that my executors as soon as they have sufficient funds in their hands pay my funeral expenses . . . ’, etc. Then follow paragraphs numbered III to 30, naming some legatees and providing for total cash bequests aggregating about $239,000 to be paid out of dividends and accumulations from the estate. Decedent’s sister is left $50,000 and her children $5,000 each. Paragraph XXVIII appoints as a board of executors Captain Martin, Alexander Doig, Jefferson Chandler and William T. Summers. Paragraph 29 provides that said executors pay to said sister $1,000 per month from dividends derived from the assets of the estate. Paragraph 30 provides that all smaller bequests be paid as soon as possible from accumulations of dividends from the estate. The will then closes as follows: ‘The residuary legatees, Captain . . . Martin, to whom I give, devise & Bequeath the full half of my Estate, as I would have done had he been my son — The other half as Eesiduary Legatee — to my sister Josefa Peralta Wilson. It is my wish, that my Estate be kept intact, for at least twenty years after I pass from life. ’
“An analysis of these documents shows that thirty-seven legatees are named in the March will, twenty of whom are not mentioned in the December will; twenty-one legatees are named in the December will, eleven of whom are carried over in the March will for less amounts each, four for the same amount, two for greater amounts, and the remaining four are not mentioned at all; they are appellant St. Mary’s *671 College, which would receive $20,000 under the December will; John Peralta, who would receive $1,000; ‘Any poor relation’, etc., $10,000, and Mrs. Peralta, $1,000. Appellants here are St. Mary’s College, Leonore F. Triplet, left $25,000 by the December will and but $10,000 by the March will, and Panchita Dibblee Summers, left $50,000 by the December will and but $5,000 by the March will.
“The controlling factor on this appeal is, of course, the intent of the testatrix in so far as we are able to ascertain it from the wording of the documents and the circumstances under which they were made, viewed in the light of the well-established rules on the subject of interpretation of wills, which are summarized in Estate of Coleman, 189 Cal. 612, 620 [209 Pac. 571], and many other cases.
“The document of March 27, 1929, is in itself a complete will, disposing of all decedent’s properties. Other than use of the word ‘continuation’ in the title, there is not a shred of evidence to support the view that the testatrix might have intended it as a codicil to her former will. But for the use of that word, no one would attempt to make such a claim. But appellants do make this claim and to support it they place great reliance upon the fact that the testatrix entitled the instrument: ‘Continuation of my last will and testament.’ In what sense the testatrix used the word ‘ continuation’, it is impossible to say, but it seems plain that she did not use it in the sense of ‘Codicil’ as the character of the instrument refutes such a view. The word is not a part of the body of the writing, but only of the heading. It is possible that, having given grave thought to her last will during the period from December to March, the testatrix, again taking pen in hand, had in mind setting forth the final result of her continued and matured consideration of the subject and so wrote the word ‘ continuation’ in the heading,. immediately thereafter taking the precaution, as shown by paragraph I, to first revoke all previous wills. No doubt she realized that the December will omitted many whom she wished to remember and failed to make satisfactory disposition of her residuary estate.

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Related

Ramelow v. Smilie
222 P.2d 692 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Estate of Dargie
119 P.2d 438 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
Martin v. Wilson
119 P.2d 438 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
Martin v. Chandler
64 P.2d 1131 (California Court of Appeal, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
15 P.2d 849, 216 Cal. 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-st-marys-college-of-oakland-cal-1932.