Curtis v. Underwood

36 P. 110, 101 Cal. 661, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1096
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1894
DocketNo. 18229
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 36 P. 110 (Curtis v. Underwood) 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
Curtis v. Underwood, 36 P. 110, 101 Cal. 661, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1096 (Cal. 1894).

Opinion

Searls, C.—

This is an appeal from a final judgment in favor of defendants, and from an order of the court denying the motion of plaintiff for a new trial,

Plaintiff is the widow of Weeden Underwood, who since the death of the latter has intermarried with one J. F. Curtis. Plaintiff and said Weeden Underwood were married September 21, 1880. Weeden Underwood [665]*665died October 3,1885, leaving surviving him as heirs the plaintiff and the minor child, Abbie M. Underwood, the defendant herein.

The object of the action is to quiet the title of plaintiff to an undivided one-half of all the interest of Weeden Underwood in and to the land and premises described in the complaint, upon the theory that it was the community property of herself and of her deceased husband, the said Weeden Underwood, to the one-half interest in which she succeeded upon his death.

The answer denies all right and title of plaintiff in and to the property; as to a portion thereof pleads title in the infant defendant acquired by her since the death of her father, and as to the residue avers it to have been the separate property of Weeden Underwood; that he died testate, and that by his last will said property was devised to his daughter, the infant defendant; that the will was duly admitted to probate, and such proceedings had thereunder that by the decree of distribution said property was by the decree of the court in probate duly distributed to the infant defendant.

A copy of the will, the order admitting the same to probate and the decree of distribution thereunder are set out and made a part of the answer.

As a further and separate answer and defense to the action, for the purpose of invoking an estoppel against the plaintiff, defendant averred the execution of a last will by Weeden Underwood by which he bequeathed to plaintiff the sum of two thousand dollars, anda monthly allowance of one hundred dollars per month not to exceed two years, declared all his property to be his separate property, and bequeathed and devised all the residue thereof to the infant defendant.

The answer further avers the death of Underwood, the probate of the will, the payment to and acceptance by plaintiff of the legacy to her, etc.; the distribution of the property under a decree of the probate court, etc.

The findings are in favor of defendant. So far as these findings are to the effect that all the property involved [666]*666in the action was separate property of the deceased Weeden Underwood, acquired by him before his marriage to the plaintiff, or purchased and paid for thereafter with the proceeds of his separate property, the contention of appellant against the findings is unavailing, for the reason that the evidence is ample in support of such findings, and, in the face of a substantial conflict in evidence, the facts as found must stand.

The more important assignment of error by appellant is founded upon the claim that at the trial the court erred in admitting in evidence the record of the probate proceedings of the proof of the last will and administration of the' estate of Weeden Underwood, deceased, in the superior court of the county of Calaveras.

The facts essential to an understanding of the question at issue are as follows: What purported to be the last will of Weeden Underwood was filed with the clerk of the superior court in and for the county of Calaveras on the sixth day of October, 1885.

At the same time Edgar B. Moore, named in said will as the executor thereof filed the usual petition that said will be admitted to probate, and that letters testamentary issue to him.

In said petition the next of kin and heirs of deceased were alleged to be the plaintiff herein and the minor defendant, the latter of whom was stated to be of the age of about four years, and both of whom were stated to be residents of Calaveras county. Both of said parties, as well as an Odd Fellows’ lodge, were stated to be devisees under the will.

On the same day an order was made by the superior judge, appointing October 24, 1885, at ten o’clock a. m., at the courtroom, etc., as the time and place for proving said will, and hearing the application of Moore for letters testamentary, etc., and ordering notice to be given by the clerk by publication in, etc., for not less than ten days before the hearing; that subpoenas issue to the subscribing witnesses, and that notice be served upon the heirs residing in the county, etc.

[667]*667A copy of this order of the superior judge, signed by the clerk, was published in the Calaveras Citizen from October 10th for five successive weeks.

On the twenty-fourth day of October, the day set for the hearing, it appearing that notice had not been served upon the heirs, the hearing was, by an order of the court, postponed until ten o’clock a. m. of Saturday, November 7, 1885, and it was ordered that notice be given to the heirs. On the same day a copy of the order and notice, with notice of the postponement, was served upon the plaintiff, who acknowledged service thereof in writing, and waived all further notice. A like copy was on the same day served upon the infant defendant by E. B. Moore.

At the foot of the notice of hearing, as published in the newspaper, there was inserted a notice of the postponement of the hearing by order of the court until November 7th, and it was so published until the hearing. Immediately under the notice of postponement, as published, was the name “ Ira Hill Reed, attorney for estate,” but whether placed there as the author of the notice, or, as is sometimes done, as indicating him as an attorney in the case, does not appear, and is not as I think, important.

The contention of appellant is that the statute has prescribed in explicit terms how jurisdiction may be acquired to probate a will, viz., by publication by the clerk, and by mailing copy of same notice to heirs resident in the state, or by personal service in lieu of such mailing; that both are necessary to confer jurisdiction; hence that when on October 24th it was found that the notice had not been served upon the heirs, the only order the court could properly make was one fixing anew a day for the hearing, and requiring notice to be again published and served upon the heirs, and that not'having done so the court acquired no jurisdiction in the case, and that all its subsequent acts in the premises were void and of no effect.

[668]*668We regard this view of the case as more technical than the requirements of the statute. Jurisdiction of the subject matter in the probate of wills is given by law to the superior courts.

The statute prescribes the method by which the court may obtain jurisdiction of the persons interested in such probate proceedings. Section 1303 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that when the petition is filed and the will is produced, the clerk of the court must set the petition for hearing by the court upon some day not less than ten"or more than thirty days thereafter, and must publish a notice of the hearing in a newspaper of the county, if there is one published; that it shall be published at least ten days, and if in a weekly paper, it must appear therein at least on three different days of publication, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 P. 110, 101 Cal. 661, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-underwood-cal-1894.