Dabney v. Philleo

232 P.2d 481, 37 Cal. 2d 402, 1951 Cal. LEXIS 295
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1951
DocketL. A. 21768, 21861
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 232 P.2d 481 (Dabney v. Philleo) 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
Dabney v. Philleo, 232 P.2d 481, 37 Cal. 2d 402, 1951 Cal. LEXIS 295 (Cal. 1951).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

In these applications for a writ of supersedeas petitioners, Clifford R. Dabney and Alice M. Dabney, husband and wife, seek to stay further proceedings in the Estate of Louise E. Dabney, Deceased, under orders of ratable distribution entered on August 22 and September 26, 1950, and February 6, 1951, pending determination of petitioners’ appeals from such orders.

Petitioners allege, in their first petition for the writ, 1 that on February 1, 1950, they commenced an action (numbered 569707) in the superior court in Los Angeles in which they seek declaratory relief, to establish constructive and resulting trusts, to quiet title, and an accounting and further relief, all with respect to certain described properties which are inventoried as assets of the Dabney estate. Petitioners’ claims to and in such properties are asserted not as heirs of, but adversely to, the decedent’s estate. The properties were or are in the possession of respondent Milton H. Philleo as executor of the estate, subject to administration in the estate proceedings in the superior court in Los Angeles.

Petitioners then allege that the following proceedings occurred in the estate, each and all of them designed to defeat any recovery petitioners may secure in their action 569707:

Petitions for ratable distribution to the heirs of decedent were filed; petitioners filed objections thereto; the objections were overruled; two orders for ratable distribution, of $150,000 each, were entered on August 22, 1950; an order for distribution of $300,000 was entered September 26, 1950. On October 3, 1950, petitioners filed notices of appeal from these three orders, 2 and the transcripts ón appeal are now on file in this court (L. A. 21768).

Petitioners further allege that on August 25, 1950, the executor made full distribution of the sum of $300,000 under the two orders of August 22, and that he “has informed petitioners that he intends to make distribution of the” $300,000 under the order of September 26, despite the appeals of *405 petitioners. It is also alleged in a second petition 3 for the writ that on or about November 3, 1950, a further petition for ratable distribution was filed, petitioners filed objections thereto, the objections were overruled, an order of ratable distribution of $1,000,000 was entered on February 6, 1951, and on the same day petitioners appealed from such order; that the executor has stated his intention to distribute the entire assets of the estate despite petitioners’ appeals. This latter appeal is also presently pending in this court (L. A. 21861), a temporary stay has been ordered, and the record has been filed. 4

Petitioners allege, in addition, that if distribution is made under the orders appealed from the properties and interests which they claim to own and seek to recover, and which are inventoried as assets of the estate, will be irretrievably lost; that distribution will be made to more than one hundred persons, residing in many different states, and that it will be prohibitively expensive and in many cases impossible to recover from such distributees; that the bond of the executor is only $100,000 and his personal assets limited, and that therefore petitioners will be unable to recover from him in excess of his bond.

The executor as well as one of the distributees of the estate have filed demurrers and answers as respondents to the supersedeas petitions. In the answers and in oral argument before this court it is stated among other things:

That distribution of the $300,000 ordered August 22, 1950, was made on August 28, 1950, prior to the filing of appeal by petitioners (on October 3, 1950); on December 28, 1950, 5 distribution was made under the order of September 26, 1950; the executor has not stated to petitioners his intent to distribute “the entire assets” of the'estate regardless of petitioners’ appeals [however, he does not himself deny such *406 intention] ; petitioner Clifford R Dabney has assigned to others his entire interest in the estate and in any recovery in his action 569707 (for declaratory relief, to quiet title, etc.), and consequently is not a proper party in interest to object to petitions for ratable distribution; petitioner Alice M. Dabney filed no creditor’s claim against the estate and is not a proper party in interest to object to the petitions for distribution; in action 569707 demurrers to petitioners’ complaint have been sustained without leave to amend, judgment that “plaintiffs [petitioners here] take nothing” was entered accordingly (on October 6, 1950), and petitioners have appealed therefrom; in the proceedings on the petitions for ratable distribution, to which petitioners objected and in which their appeals are pending, the trial court “has ruled that inasmuch as Clifford R Dabney has sold his entire interests in the estate and made effective assignments, therein filed, that he has no standing in that court to object to petitions for ratable distribution merely by reason of the fact that he is asserting an adverse claim for certain of the assets inventoried and a part of the estate”; staying distribution under the orders from which petitioners appealed would result in tax losses to the estate as well as interest income on the amount sought to be distributed.

Respondents contend, first, that petitioners are not persons interested in. the estate and therefore have no standing in this court to object to distribution. It is apparent, however, from the portions of respondents’ answers quoted hereinabove, from the records on appeal in L. A. 21768 and L. A. 21861, from uncontroverted allegations of the supersedeas petition in L. A. 21861, and from statements of counsel in oral argument before this court, that this is one of the points directly concerned in the appeals now pending. The correctness of the decision of the trial court (at least when it is not apparent on the face of the record, and it is not so apparent here 6 ) is not *407 involved in a supersedeas proceeding; it “is not the function of such a writ to reverse, supersede or impair the force of, or pass on the merits of the judgment or order from which the appeal is taken; the validity of such judgment or order is to be reviewed on the appeal therefrom. [Citations.] Its purpose is merely to suspend the enforcement of the judgment pending the appeal.” (Smith v. Smith (1941), 18 Cal.2d 462, 465 [116 P.2d 3], and eases there cited.) Determination of the issue of petitioners’ interest in the estate must therefore await decision on the appeals.

It is established that under the provisions of section 949 of the Code of Civil Procedure the perfecting of an appeal from a decree of distribution by an appellant who is not required to perform the directions of the judgment or order appealed from “stays proceedings in the court below upon the judgment appealed from.” (See In re Schedel (1886), 69 Cal. 241, 243 [10 P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P.2d 481, 37 Cal. 2d 402, 1951 Cal. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dabney-v-philleo-cal-1951.