Eggert v. American Trust Co.

162 P.2d 707, 71 Cal. App. 2d 403, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 906
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1945
DocketCiv. 12841
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 162 P.2d 707 (Eggert v. American Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eggert v. American Trust Co., 162 P.2d 707, 71 Cal. App. 2d 403, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 906 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

GO ODELL, J.—This

appeal was taken from an order denying the appellants’ motion to amend and correct the decree of final distribution in this estate. The motion was made over two years after distribution, and at the time (shortly after the death of the testator’s widow) when the respondent trustee was about to deliver to the respondent orphan asylum, that part of the residue of the estate distributed to it by the decree. The share thus going to charity consisted of securities, the value of which may be conceded to be in excess of the statutory limit of one-third of the estate (Prob. Code, §41). The appellants’ motion was designed to prevent the respondent orphan asylum from receiving more than such one-third, and to obtain all in excess *405 thereof for themselves as heirs, legatees and devisees of the testator’s widow.

The testator died on December 7, 1940, leaving as his next of kin his wife, Matilda Lingg, three brothers and a sister. The widow was executrix of the will. Her account shows that the appraised value of the estate accounted for by her was $43,851.85, of which approximately 70 per cent was in stocks and bonds.

The widow was not very liberally provided for by the will. She was bequeathed $1,000 in cash, also personal effects, jewelry, an automobile, and the household furnishings; she was devised a life estate in real property on Capistrano Avenue, Berkeley (which property apparently already stood in her name) with the remainder to the appellant Hazel Eggert, her daughter by a former marriage; she was also devised a life estate in real property on Grant Street, Berkeley, with the remainder to the respondent orphan asylum; she was bequeathed the income for her life from the residue (after the payment of several money legacies), which residue formed the corpus of a testamentary trust. This residue consisted of securities, and the will provided that upon the widow’s death the trust should terminate and the trustee should pay certain legacies out of the corpus and pay “the remainder and/or residue of said Trust Fund to the Catholic Orphanage of San Francisco Diocese. ’ ’

The inheritance tax appraiser determined that the net estate amounted to $38,329.59; that $28,665.70 thereof was community property and $9,663.89 thereof separate property.

It is evident that the widow was not content to take only under the will, for the decree of distribution found that she “has elected to take and receive her community share of the estate,” and that “pursuant to agreement between said Matilda Lingg, and the interested residuary devisees, legatees and beneficiaries under the will of said deceased, that the community share of said Matilda Lingg consists of that portion of the estate of said deceased hereinafter distributed to said Matilda Lingg which is designated as her community share.”

The stocks and' bonds were valued, according to the account, at about $30,500 ($30,745.83 to be exact). Had the decree of distribution followed the terms of the will all these securities would have gone into the residue, but under the *406 settlement which, came about because of the widow’s assertion of her community right, there was a division of these securities. As a consequence there were distributed to her, outright, securities of the value of approximately $13,500 or about 45 per cent of the whole, which left securities of the value of approximately $17,000, or about 55 per cent of the whole, to fall into the residue. In short, instead of approximately $30,500 in stocks and bonds forming the residue, the major part of which eventually would go to the respondent orphan asylum, only a little over half thereof did so. Under the decree of distribution, notwithstanding this division, the widow still received the income for life from approximately $17,000 of securities which went into the residue.

The appellants contend that the provisions of the decree of distribution which obviously distributed more than one-third of the estate to charity, could not be conclusive because it was impossible to determine at the time of distribution, or until the termination of the trust on the death of the widow whether the devise and bequests to charity exceeded one-third of the estate, and, if so, the amount of such excess. In this connection they claim that under section 1120 of the Probate Code the court retained jurisdiction because a trust continuing after distribution was involved (citing Estate of Evans, 62 Cal.App.2d 249 [144 P.2d 625]). Appellants rely on Estate of Campbell, 175 Cal. 345 [165 P. 931], and Estate of Burns, 26 Cal.App.2d 741 [80 P.2d 77]. Before discussing those cases, however, we would advert to the important fact that a settlement was agreed on before distribution, to which agreement the widow and “the interested residuary devisees, legatees and beneficiaries” were parties. Included in such group was the respondent orphan asylum, the largest devisee and legatee, and presumably included also were these appellants, for their legacies (in no way involved in the present controversy) were to come out of the residue before the orphan asylum was to receive the rest of it. This agreement was made notwithstanding the widow could have insisted on her community right without asking leave of the other beneficiaries (Prob. Code, § 201). “The heirs or devisees may consent to a distribution in a particular manner, and the court may incorporate their contract in its decree, either by express terms or by apt reference. . . . The consenting parties cannot complain *407 on appeal that the decree departs from the terms of the will.” (11B Cal.Jur. p. 767). The decree herein departed from the will in that it gave the widow some $13,500 in securities which the testator had not left her, and thereby reduced the bequest to charity by exactly that much. That, the only departure, was by the widow’s own election. The testator left no issue. His only next of kin were his wife, three brothers and a sister. The brothers and sister were not mentioned in the will, did not appear in the proceedings or object to the distribution, and they are not parties- to this appeal. Hence the widow would seem to be the only person who could have objected to the charitable bequest in excess of the one-third limitation, or benefited by a reduction of such bequest. (See Estate of Cottrill, 65 Cal.App.2d 222 [150 P.2d 214]; see also Estate of Dwyer, 159 Cal. 680, 687 [115 P. 242], which explains the theory and purpose of the legislation relating to charitable bequests.) She was the executrix of the will, and of course knew from the very outset that it made exceedingly generous provision for charity. She saw fit to assert her community right, with the results already noted. The fact that she did not demand more would indicate that she was disinclined to cut further into the bequest which her husband had intended for charity.

If, as the appellants now contend, the court could not have determined the excess, if any, until after the widow’s death, Mrs. Lingg could have asked for such form of distribution as would have reserved that question until the excess, if any, could be ascertained. (See

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Bluebook (online)
162 P.2d 707, 71 Cal. App. 2d 403, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggert-v-american-trust-co-calctapp-1945.