Estate of Allen

108 P.2d 973, 42 Cal. App. 2d 346, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1261
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1941
DocketCiv. 2909
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 108 P.2d 973 (Estate of Allen) 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
Estate of Allen, 108 P.2d 973, 42 Cal. App. 2d 346, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1261 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an appeal from a decree approving certain accounts of the administratrix of this estate, approving and directing the payment of certain amounts as family allowance to the surviving widow, fixing and allowing compensation for the administratrix and her attorneys, both ordinary and extraordinary, and classifying and directing the payment of claims against the estate.

Frederick Jay Allen, who died on September 16, 1936, had, for some twenty years, owned and operated a distributing business for dairy products. The principal assets of the estate consisted of real estate, buildings and equipment used in this business, including five retail routes.

His widow was appointed special administratrix immediately upon his death and general letters of administration were thereafter issued to her. On December 23, 1936, an order was entered authorizing and directing her to continue the business, which she did until it was sold in September, 1939. In the operation of the business the administratrix purchased dairy products and sold them at both retail and wholesale. The business was run at a profit until August, *348 1938, after which, due to a “milk war”, it was operated at a loss until it was sold. Altogether, in these operations the administratrix accounted for receipts in excess of $335,000. The two appellants here furnished dairy products to the administratrix during these operations, being paid in part from time to time but leaving unpaid balances.

On June 11, 1937, the appellant Harvey D. Allen filed a petition asking to have the assets of the estate sold, and a family allowance reduced from $200 to $100 a month. This petition was never presented to the court for the reason that the said appellant entered into a written agreement with the administratrix, pursuant to which she gave him her personal notes for $10,500, part of which was secured by a mortgage, and paid off a note for $5,000 owed by the deceased upon which Harvey D. Allen was jointly liable.

In March, 1939, the administratrix filed her second annual report to which objections were filed by appellant Harvey D. Allen with a petition asking that the administratrix be compelled to sell and dispose of the assets. Early in May, the court continued these matters and directed that the operation of the business be continued for a further 90-day period. On August 15, 1939, the court entered an order directing the administratrix to sell the assets of the estate and thereafter the same were advertised and sold at public auction to the appellant Harvey D. Allen for a price much less than that for which they had previously been appraised. Thereafter, the administratrix filed a third and final account, to which objections were filed, and in due course the order was made from which this appeal was taken. The sale of the assets of the estate, after paying a mortgage lien, left an amount which is entirely inadequate to cover the debts and claims against the estate.

Appellants’ main contention is that their claims for dairy products furnished during the operation of the business by the administratrix are obligations necessarily incurred in the care and preservation of the assets of the estate, that, as. such, they are expenses of administration and preferred claims, and that the court erred in holding to the contrary.

The unauthorized operation of a business by an administrator of an estate was not considered binding on the estate and imposed a liability upon the administrator for any debts thus incurred. (In re Rose, 80 Cal. 166 [22 Pac. 86] ; Estate *349 of De Rome, 175 Cal. 399 [165 Pac. 919].) By an amendment adopted in 1929, now found in section 572 of the Probate Code, the court was empowered to authorize an administrator to continue the operation of a decedent’s business. As pointed out in Estate of Smith, 16 Cal. App. (2d) 239 [60 Pac. (2d) 574], this amendment, while it enlarged the powers of the representative of an estate, ‘1 did not have the effect of creating a lien upon the assets of the estate to enforce the payment of obligations incurred on that account as preferred claims”. In that case, the decedent died shortly after the above-mentioned amendment became effective. The court authorized the executors to continue the operation of the decedent’s farming business. A bank having loaned money for that purpose contended that the money thus borrowed and used by the executors was used for the purpose of preserving the property of the estate and should be classified as “expenses of administration”, with the result that it was a preferred claim as to the executors, and that the bank was entitled to subrogation to such rights and the benefit of that lien. It was held that this contention was without merit; that while the rule is that administrators who advance their own money for the necessary purpose of preserving the property of the estate are entitled to a preference in the repayment thereof, the executors had not used their own money in carrying out the farming enterprise; that the money thus loaned had been loaned to the estate and not to its representatives ; that the debt there in question should be classed “as an ordinary debt or obligation of the estate, and not as current expenses of administration, exactly the same as though the loan had been made to the decedent for the same purpose before her death ’ ’; and that the executors were entitled to no preference with respect to said claim to which the bank could be subrogated. The court then pointed out the danger of injustice to heirs and other creditors in permitting such a preference and stated that such a rule of law should not be declared “in the absence of clear statutory provisions to that effect. ’ ’

The principles and reasoning of that case are applicable here and we can see no difference in principle between loaning money to be used in the continued operation of a business and furnishing goods on credit for the same purpose. Regardless of any other consideration, the administratrix here *350 had not used her own money or credit in carrying on this business, at least insofar as appellants’ claims are concerned, and the credits under which appellants claim were given to the estate and not to the administratrix.

“Expenses of administration”, within the meaning of the statutes giving preference thereto, now section 950 of the Probate Code, have always been understood as referring primarily to the costs and expenses of the probate proceedings themselves, and which have arisen because of the necessity of probating the estate. Certain obligations are imposed by law upon the administrator, because of which he has been allowed to claim a preference for money he has necessarily expended in preserving the property of the estate, including taxes, assessments, insurance, repairs, cost of necessary assistance, and many other such things. (Ludwig v. Superior Court, 217 Cal. 499 [19 Pac. (2d) 984]; Estate of Smith, supra.) Such a preference, as an expense of administration, has not been allowed to outsiders who furnished such things without being under an' obligation so to do. (Estate of Hincheon, 159 Cal. 755 [116 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
108 P.2d 973, 42 Cal. App. 2d 346, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-allen-calctapp-1941.