Estate of Anderson
This text of 68 Cal. App. 3d 1010 (Estate of Anderson) 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.
Opinion
Estate of REMBERT C. ANDERSON, Deceased.
CROCKER NATIONAL BANK, as Executor, etc., Petitioner and Appellant,
v.
MARGARET ANDERSON KELLY et al., Objectors and Respondents.
Court of Appeals of California, Second District, Division Two.
*1011 COUNSEL
Paul, Hastings & Janofsky, George E. Stephens, Jr., and Peter D. Collisson for Petitioner and Appellant.
John J. Nolan, Jr., Peter W. Anderson, Wehrle & Anderson, Hill, Farrer & Burrill and David C. Grant for Objectors and Respondents.
OPINION
FLEMING, J.
The executor of the estate of Rembert C. Anderson (decedent) appeals the probate court's denial of a family allowance to the surviving spouse. The controlling statute is Probate Code section 680, which provides that in an insolvent estate, family allowance "must not *1012 continue longer than one year after granting letters."[1] (1) The probate court based its denial of family allowance on a finding of insolvency, which in turn it deduced from the existence of civil actions filed by nieces and nephews of decedent (respondents) against the estate for damages in excess of the value of the estate for decedent's breach of fiduciary duty, constructive trust, conversion, and waste occurring in 1934. The probate court declined to examine the probability of success in these lawsuits, concluding that because these lawsuits had survived law and motion procedures in the superior court the estate was insolvent within the meaning of the statute. The court held: "Because the lawsuit brought against the estate upon the complaints of Margaret Anderson Kelly, Trent G. Anderson, Jr., and James R. Anderson have successfully completed all law and motion procedure and are at issue, there is, as a matter of law, a reasonable probability that said lawsuit will render the estate insolvent. Therefore, under Probate Code section 680 the Court must deny the petition for family allowance and terminate family allowance."
Respondents' actions against the estate allege that decedent, their uncle, in conjunction with their parents as co-trustees, mismanaged a testamentary trust of which they were ultimate remaindermen by permitting the sole asset of the trust, a parcel of real estate, to be lost by foreclosure during the depression in 1934. They also claim that decedent and their parents wrongfully failed to comply with the order in the decree of distribution in their grandfather's estate requiring that $1,000 be deposited for each respondent in a savings bank and distributed with accrued interest upon his or her majority. They claim damages in excess of the value of the probate estate (inventoried at $1,035,972.40) and seek to identify assets currently in the estate as wrongful profits that accrued to decedent as a result of failure to redeem the trust property.
As the probate court noted, these actions survived the law and motion stage. However, appellant executor has highlighted a number of factors that make it unlikely respondents' actions will meet with any success. For *1013 example, in order to avoid the bar of the statute of limitations, respondents allege they did not know of the allegedly wrongful acts that took place in 1934 and could not have learned about them before decedent's death. Yet the co-trustees of the allegedly mismanaged trust were decedent's brother and sister, parents of respondents. Appellant further asserts there is no merit in respondents' claim that decedent wrongfully permitted the real estate to be lost by foreclosure, inasmuch as the property was foreclosed during the depression, was then unoccupied, there were no assets in the trust to pay the upkeep on the property, and no way to make it generate income. Additionally, it seems probable that respondents will have difficulty proving that decedent's motive (and that of respondents' parents) in not redeeming the property in 1934 was to divert funds into other parcels of land in his own name in order to enrich himself at the expense of the trust. Yet on this theory respondents claim damages of approximately $2,292,182, which include compound interest and treble damages for decedent's asserted willful and deliberate misconduct. In valuing the lost property respondents used the appraisal in the estate of decedent's father, their grandfather, in 1930. The property was valued at $96,250 in 1930 before the depression caused land values to plummet. The property was then subject to a $15,000 mortgage, which was the one foreclosed in 1934. Respondents assert the trustees had independent means to meet the mortgage payments, but not that the trust had any liquid assets to enable them to do so. Furthermore, respondents base their damages on the value of a fee interest in the property, when in fact in 1934 they had only a remainder interest therein. There is scant likelihood respondents will persuade a court to award them treble damages for willful or wanton waste committed by a life tenant (Code Civ. Proc., § 732) against the estate of a deceased life tenant for permitting foreclosure of his interest over 40 years ago.
Under section 680, when an estate is insolvent, termination of family allowance one year from the grant of letters is mandatory. At bench letters were issued 6 February 1975, and the widow received family allowance from 8 January 1975 to 8 April 1976. Accordingly, the only discretion in the probate court was to determine whether the estate was insolvent. California cases in point are Estate of Murphy (1964) 225 Cal. App.2d 224 [37 Cal. Rptr. 205], and Estate of Cates (1971) 16 Cal. App.3d 1 [93 Cal. Rptr. 696]. In Murphy, a civil action had been filed against the estate claiming decedent had obtained all assets of the estate from his aunt through undue influence. Claimants sought to impress a constructive trust upon the assets and obtained a preliminary injunction on the civil side of the court enjoining the administratrix from *1014 transferring any assets or funds out of the estate. Accordingly, the probate court terminated the widow's family allowance after one year. The appellate court affirmed this exercise of judicial discretion, finding it reasonably probable the estate would be rendered insolvent by the pending litigation. In Cates, decedent's will in favor of his second wife was under attack as a violation of the joint and mutual will made with his first wife in Illinois. After the heirs under the first will secured an Illinois judgment establishing the validity of the mutual will under the collateral estoppel doctrine, they objected to further payment of family allowance to the second wife. The appellate court reversed the probate court's grant of continued family allowance to the second wife (who had been receiving family allowance for more than eight years), holding further payments improper in view of the pending litigation in Illinois.
The Murphy and Cates cases are distinguishable from the case at bench to the extent that in the lawsuits filed against those estates, a favorable outcome for the adverse claimants was readily apparent. In Murphy, the judge trying the constructive trust action had been willing to issue an injunction restraining the executor from disbursing estate assets, and in Cates the collateral estoppel effect of the Illinois judgment made a favorable outcome for contestants virtually certain.
The case here undeniably involves hardship on the widow.
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68 Cal. App. 3d 1010, 137 Cal. Rptr. 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-anderson-calctapp-1977.