Collins v. Maude

77 P. 945, 144 Cal. 289, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 689
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1904
DocketL.A. No. 1206.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 77 P. 945 (Collins v. Maude) 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
Collins v. Maude, 77 P. 945, 144 Cal. 289, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 689 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

*291 CHIPMAN, C.

Plaintiffs bring the action to foreclose a mortgage on property in Riverside County, given by defendant to secure her promissory note for two thousand dollars, May 27, 1892, due five years after date, with ten per cent annual interest. The note and mortgage were given to Julia Mann, but the money was furnished by Bridget Collins, to whom Julia executed an assignment. Bridget came from Ireland about 1865 and took service as a cook with defendant at St. Louis, Missouri, and worked for her sixteen or seventeen years, and it was there she accumulated this money. Her two brothers, plaintiffs in the action, have for many years resided in St. Louis. As near as we can determine from the evidence, Bridget came to California in 1891. She worked for others several months, and came to defendant and remained about a year. Later Bridget worked for another family, and in the latter part of 1893 her health failed her and she was taken to defendant’s home and eared for. Defendant testified: “She was a good deal over sixty,” and could neither read ñor write. In December, 1893, Bridget determined to return to St. Louis for the advice of a doctor who had been successful formerly in treating her. Defendant and Bridget had some conversation concerning the note and mortgage, and on the day Bridget left for St. Louis she executed the following document -.—

“I am leaving for St. Louis, and before I start I write this is to certify that it is my wish that Mrs. Maude [defendant] shall not be asked for the money she borrowed from me or the interest on it. She and I have a perfect understanding about my business. I affix my name in the presence of these witnesses, this twenty-first day of December, eighteen hundred and ninety-three.
“Bridget (X her mark) Collins.
“H. Meyer, Helen Ward.”

On her arrival at Kansas City, Missouri, Bridget became ill, and on December 27, 1893, was attended by a physician, who testified that he diagnosed her case as chronic progressive dementia, and that she died at Kansas City December 29, 1893. On January 24, 1894, plaintiff Patrick Collins petitioned the probate court of St. Louis, Mo., for letters of administration on Bridget’s estate, setting forth that he and plaintiff John Collins were brothers of the deceased and her only heirs at *292 law, and that she died intestate, leaving an estate consisting of a note and mortgage for two thousand dollars and cash in bank two hundred dollars. On the same day the court issued letters reciting: “Whereas Bridget Collins, late of the city of St. Louis, died intestate, as it is said, having at the time of her death property in this state, which may be lost, destroyed or diminished in value if speedy care be not taken of the same, to the end, therefore, that the said property may be collected, preserved and disposed of according to law, we do hereby appoint Patrick Collins administrator of all and singular the goods and chattels, rights and credits which were of the said Bridget Collins at the time of her death with full power and authority to secure and dispose of said property, according to law, and collect all moneys due said deceased,” etc. On March 5, 1894, the court made an order approving the appointment of Patrick Collins as administrator, “taken and granted by the judge and clerk of this court in vacation since the last term thereof.” Inventory was duly returned and filed May 26, 1894, and described the note and mortgage in question; also cash on deposit in Riverside Savings and Loan Association, Riverside, Cal., $198.90; on her person, $45; and wearing apparel valued at $27.05; also, an account against Miss Mangan, $200,—making in all $2,470.95. Notice was given of final settlement of the estate to be held at the ensuing September term of the court, at which final settlement and distribution were decreed October 28, 1896. Among other things the court ordered the administrator to assign and transfer to himself and his brother John, as sole heirs of the deceased, each an undivided one half of the note and mortgage in question and other property, and on March 28, 1897, the administrator was discharged. Defendant claimed" in defense: 1. That she had paid the note in part; 2. That on December 21, 1893, Bridget “gave to defendant the sum evidenced by the note and mortgage, and forgave the indebtedness;” and 3. That the St. Louis court had no jurisdiction of the probate proceedings in said estate.

The court found against defendant on these issues and gave judgment for plaintiffs for the full amount of principal and interest of the note and rendered a decree of foreclosure. Defendant appeals from the order.denying her motion for a new trial.

*293 1. The question of jurisdiction demands first attention. The jurisdiction of the Missouri court is challenged upon the grounds that at the time of her death Bridget Collins was not a resident of St. Louis. The superior court, however, has found upon the evidence before it that the court of the city of St. Louis, state of Missouri, had jurisdiction of her estate and of its settlement, and authority to issue letters of adminis - tration therein. This finding necessarily implies that she was a resident of St. Louis, if that fact was essential to give such jurisdiction to that court. (Moore v. Gopp, 119 Cal. 429; Broder v. Conklin, 121 Cal. 282.) And as there was a conflict of evidence as to whether she was a tona fide resident of the city of St. Louis when she died, this finding cannot be disturbed. (In re James, 99 Cal. 374. 1 )

There is no direct evidence showing that Bridget ever intended becoming a permanent resident of California. She had resided many years in St. Louis, where her only relatives in this country resided, before coming to this state. She was unmarried and had reached an advanced age and there was testimony that she was not physically capable of performing the duties of servant as theretofore. Defendant testified that Bridget said she thought she would “be back.” Mr. Abbott, cashier of the bank, when given the custody of the note and mortgage, testified that she came to the bank on December 21st, the day she signed the paper held by defendant, and drew out some money. He testified: “My impression is then was the time she told me she was going east and might not return and wanted to leave the papers for safe-keeping.” She was so seriously ill when she departed that she died before reaching St. Louis. The St. Louis court in its appointment of the administrator mentions her as “late of the city of St. Louis,” and so also did the petition for letters filed by plaintiff Patrick Collins.

The burden of showing want of jurisdiction in the St. Louis court was on the defendant, and in view of the presumptions which are indulged in support of judgments of courts of record, this burden requires clear and convincing proof of such want of jurisdiction. The fact that Bridget came to California about the year 1891 and remained nearly three years does not compel the inference that she had thus abandoned her resi *294 dence at St. Louis.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P. 945, 144 Cal. 289, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-maude-cal-1904.