Dean v. Superior Court

63 Cal. 473, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 501
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 Cal. 473 (Dean v. Superior Court) 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
Dean v. Superior Court, 63 Cal. 473, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 501 (Cal. 1883).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

On the 13th July, 1876, the petitioner filed his final account and petition for distribution of the estate of H. W. Dean, deceased, of which he Avas executor; and on the 25tli of the same month the Probate Court rendered a decree discharging the executors, releasing their bond and decreeing that the remainder of the estate “be and is hereby Avholly set over and distributed to Mrs. H. W. Dean,” etc. The petition of the executor stated “that the real estate and personal property described in the inventory remains on hand,” and, “said estate is uoav ready for distribution.” - The decree allowing the final account and distributing the estate, after reciting that the account “contains a just and full account of all the moneys received and disbursed by said executor from the date of his appointment as such to the said 25th day of July, A. D. 1876,” the day when the decree was entered; “that all necessary vouchers Avere produced and duly filed herein; that the total amount received by such executor as such is $232.95, and the full amount expended -$157.75, leaving a balance of $75.25 in gold coin”; and after other recitals with respect to the payment of debts and of a certain specific legacy, and as to the assumption by the residuary legatee of the payment of executor’s fees, and [475]*475the consent of the executor to release the estate therefrom, and as to the payment of all other expenses of administration, proceeds: “and it further appearing that the aforesaid final account embraces all the moneys received and paid out by the co-executor Sylvester Trule, and that he has ceased to act as such executor; and further, that said estate is now ready for final distribution, and that said account is entitled to be allowed, and the court having duly considered all the matters aforesaid: It is ordered and declared that the said final account of E. "W". Dean, co-executor, etc., be and the same hereby is, in all respects, as the same was rendered and presented for settlement, approved, allowed,. and settled, and that both of said executors, E. W. Dean and Sylvester Trule, be and are hereby finally and fully discharged from the further execution of their trust, and then1 bond fully exonerated, and that the remainder of said estate be and is hereby wholly set over and distributed to said residuary legatee, Mrs. H. W. Dean, otherwise Nellie T. Dean.”

Section 1697 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads: “ When the estate has been fully administered, and it is shown by the executor or administrator, by the production of satisfactory vouchers, that he has paid all sums of money due from him, and delivered up, under the order of the court, all the property of the estate to the parties entitled, and performed all the acts lawfully required of him, the court must make a judgment or decree discharging him from all liability to be incurred thereafter.”

Until the entry of a judgment or decree discharging the executor, the trust still continues in contemplation of law, and such executor remains clothed with the duty and authority of his office. (McCrea v. Haraszthy, 51 Cal. 151; Dohs v. Dohs, 60 Cal. 255.)

It may be admitted, for the purposes of this decision merely, that if it appeared from the decree that it had not been shown to the Probate Court “by satisfactory vouchers” that the executor “had paid all sums due from him,”, or had not been shown, to the satisfaction of the court, that he had delivered "up all property of the estate to the persons entitled, etc., the decree in so far as it attempts to “discharge” the executors would be void, because in excess of the jurisdiction; and, being void, [476]*476that the court, of its own motion, or on motion of any party in interest, would be authorized to set aside or strike from, its records such invalid portion of the decree.

But, inasmuch as the statute does not require that the judgment or decree shall contain copies of the vouchers mentioned in section 1697, or recite the evidence which shall satisfy the court that the- executor has delivered all the property of the estate, the judgment discharging the executor, upon any construction of the section of the Code, is not void on its face unless it affirmatively appears therefrom that it was shown to the court that the executor had not complied with the prerequisites to the judgment.

It may be said that every portion of the decree before us which took effect at all, took effect at the same moment of time, and therefore it appears that the order discharging the executors was premature; that we cannot divide the decree and hold that, perhaps, the account was approved, the order of distribution made, the distribution made in fact, and afterwards satisfactory vouchers and evidence were produced by the executor, and then an order made discharging him.

But the section of the Code does not provide that the discharge can only be made after the decree of distribution, but after the estate has been fully administered. It may be admitted there must be an order of distribution to support the judgment of discharge, but may not the two take effect contemporaneously? In anticipation of the approval of his account, and of a decree of distribution, the executor may have paid the $75.25 to the residuary legatee, or arranged with her for its application upon the executor’s fees which she was to pay. As to the real estate, if she was already in actual possession of it, it was only necessary to show that fact to the court. The decree does not recite in terms that the $75.25 is “in the hands” of the executor, but that, deducting from the moneys received by the executors the amount of the sums by him paid out, there remains a balance of $75.25. Nor do we attach so much consequence as does respondent to the words in the decree, “it further appearing . . . . that said estate is now ready for final distribution.” It would be equally ready for the decree of distribution—for the action of the court, which would give legal effect to the distribution—whether the property had or had not previously [477]*477been actually delivered by the executor'* to the parties who should be determined by such decree to - be entitled to it. It may be that it was made to appear to the Probate Court that the money had been paid or the property in fact distributed, in the manner in which the decree provided that it should be distributed. If so, there is no reason why the decree of distribution and discharge should not take effect contemporaneously. We cannot say that the judgment itself shows that the portion of it discharging the executor is void.

Due notice was given of the hearing of the application of the executor for a settlement of his final account and for a distribution of the estate. The notice recites, that, the executor “ having filed in this court his final account and petition for distribution of the estate of said deceased,” the hearing of the same had been fixed by the court for a certain day and place, and proceeds: “All persons interested in said estate are notified then and there to appear and sho w cause, if any they have, why the said account should not be allowed and petition granted.” This certainly notified all persons interested that the account to be acted upon was the “final account” of the executor.

From the judgment or order, as a judgment or order settling the final account of the executor and directing distribution of the estate, an appeal lay to this court.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Cal. 473, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-superior-court-cal-1883.