Estate of Baird

188 P. 43, 182 Cal. 338, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 519
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 8995.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 188 P. 43 (Estate of Baird) 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
Estate of Baird, 188 P. 43, 182 Cal. 338, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 519 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

—This is an appeal by "Veronica C. Baird, as executrix of the last will and testament of David Jennings Baird, deceased, from a judgment and from a decree of partial distribution of the superior court in and for the city and county of San Francisco. The petitioner, by the guardian of his person and estate, Lydia Margaret Valencia., applied for a partial distribution of the said estate on the ground that he is the illegitimate son of the decedent and said Lydia M. Valencia, and that he had been adopted by the decedent in the manner provided by section 230 of the Civil Code, that is to say, that the decedent had publicly acknowledged the petitioner as his own child, received him as such into his family, and had otherwise treated him as if he were a legitimate child.

On a former hearing a judgment denying the petition was made and entered by the superior court, sitting without a jury, from which an appeal was taken to this court. The *340 judgment.was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial (Estate of Baird, 173 Cal. 617, [160 Pac. 1078]), on the ground that the superior court erred in refusing the demand of the petitioner for a trial by jury as» contemplated by sections 1312 and 1716 of the Code of Civil Procedure. A trial was thereafter had before a jury, which resulted in a verdict in favor of the petitioner, in approval of which the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law, entered judgment in favor of petitioner, and made a decree of partial distribution on June 14, 1918, distributing the entire estate to him, namely, certain real property situate in Contra Costa County, ten thousand dollars in money, and 221 shares of the capital stock of the Sausalito Land and Ferry Company.

It is alleged in the petition that Lydia M. Valencia is the guardian of the estate and of the person of petitioner; that DaVid Jennings Baird, the decedent, died on November 25, 1908, leaving an estate of the appraised value of $98,666.38, consisting of real and personal property; that the decedent left a last will and testament dated July 30, 1903, by which he bequeathed and devised his entire property to his mother, Veronica C. Baird, and to two brothers and to two half-brothers ; that in said will the decedent appointed his mother, the said Veronica C. Baird, and I. I. Brown, executrix and executor, respectively; that petitioner is the child and son of the decedent and Lydia M. Valencia, and that neither the decedent nor Lydia M. Valencia was ever married; that petitioner was born in San Francisco on December 7, 1906; that at the time of and for more than one year preceding the birth of petitioner, the decedent and Lydia M. Valencia lived and cohabited together in San Francisco without having been married, and that during all of that time the decedent had a family consisting of himself and Miss Valencia; that from the time of the birth of petitioner and up to the death of the decedent, he maintained a home and family in San Francisco, consisting of the decedent, Miss Valencia, and petitioner, and of no one else, and that from and after the birth of petitioner and up to the death of the decedent, he publicly acknowledged himself to be the father of the child to numerous and various persons by open and public declarations, statements, admissions and acts; that upon the birth of petitioner the decedent received *341 him into his family, constituted as aforesaid, as his own child, and that the petitioner remained and was by the decedent kept continuously and uninterruptedly in the said family as a part of the same and a member thereof, in the care and custody and control of the decedent, as the father of petitioner, up to the decedent’s death, “and did otherwise so treat the said child as if it were a legitimate child by the exercise of those acts, declarations, and conduct which are usual by the father of a legitimate child and a legitimate born child with respect to such a child and the ordinary and usual treatment of such a child”; that the decedent adopted petitioner as his own child; that the said will of decedent was made before petitioner was born, and that it left petitioner unprovided for by any settlement; that the decedent in no way provided for petitioner in said will, and that by reason thereof petitioner is entitled to the whole of decedent’s property; and that the estate of decedent is but little indebted, and that the share of petitioner may be allowed to him without loss to the creditors of the estate.

The devisees and legatees of the decedent opposed the application for partial distribution. In their answer they denied all the material allegations of the petition as to the paternity and the adoption of the child, and alleged that the family of the decedent consisted of himself, his mother, sister, and brothers, into which family the child was never received; and that he indignantly denied in terms of opprobrium that the child was his and continuously concealed its existence from them.

A mass of evidence was introduced in support of and against the claim of adoption, but in the consideration of the question here we shall assume that upon the evidence, the verdict of the jury and the findings of the court, it was established that the decedent was the natural father of petitioner, and that he publicly acknowledged him as his own child. We will therefore discuss the evidence with special reference to the remaining propositions—whether petitioner was received into the family of the decedent, and by him otherwise treated as a legitimate child, and view it in the light most favorable to petitioner.

Beginning in the year 1902, at which time they set up housekeeping, and ending with the death of the decedent, he and Miss Valencia, though unmarried, lived together in *342 various places in San Francisco under the assumed name of Mr. and Mrs. David Tyler. The petitioner was born in the St. Helen Apartments, one of their abodes, on December 7, 1906. Miss Valencia testified that for more than a year preceding this event and until the decedent died, they lived together as man and wife, accomplishing all the relations of man and wife, and that she had no relations whatever with any other man, and that she and the decedent constituted a family at that time of which he was the head, and that petitioner was received into such family. The petitioner, the mother, and the decedent continued to live at the St. Helen Apartments until April, 1907, when they moved to the Octavia Apartments, where they remained for six months, and then went into a house at 230 I Street. They were living in the latter place when the decedent died on November 25, 1908. The attending physician at the confinement of Miss Valencia testified that he was engaged by decedent considerably in advance of the birth of petitioner ; that the decedent directed him to secure a nurse, and that the decedent paid all expenses.

According to the evidence, from the beginning of their housekeeping the decedent employed the servants and paid all the expenses of the household, and he would sometimes give orders to servants and to tradesmen. The bills for the household and other expenses were generally made out and paid in the name of “Tyler,” the real identity of the members of the household, however, being known to some of those with whom they had dealings, also to many of their mutual acquaintances and friends.

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Bluebook (online)
188 P. 43, 182 Cal. 338, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-baird-cal-1920.