Estate of Carpenter

80 P. 1072, 146 Cal. 661, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 581
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1905
DocketSac. No. 1285.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 P. 1072 (Estate of Carpenter) 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 Carpenter, 80 P. 1072, 146 Cal. 661, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 581 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal from an order settling an account of the executor of the will of C. W. Carpenter, deceased. The account covered the period between the time of the appointment of the executor on February 23, 1884, and January 1, 1901, and was not presented or settled as a final *663 account. The only appellant is the assignees of one S. D. Woods, who, as appears from the findings, was, on the nineteenth day of September, 1892, by an order “duly made, given and entered in the above entitled matter and estate,” allowed the sum of three thousand dollars “as attorney’s fees for services rendered by him as attorney of the minor legatees and devisees named in the last will and testament of said C. W. Carpenter, deceased,” and payment of said amount was, by said order of September 19, 1892, directed to be made as necessary expenses of administration. No part of the same has ever been paid.

It is claimed that the appeal should be dismissed for the failure on the part of appellant to serve his notice of appeal on certain persons alleged to be adverse parties. One of such alleged adverse parties was a creditor whose claim had been duly allowed, but who did not, so far as the record shows, make any appearance in the matter of the settlement of this account. As he did not appear and make himself a party to this proceeding, it was not necessary to serve the notice of appeal upon him. (Estate of McDougald, 143 Cal. 476.) The other alleged adverse parties were attorneys who had rendered legal services to the executor in the matter of said estate, and to whom the executor was directed by the order settling his account to pay certain sums as compensation therefor. These attorneys of the executor were not persons interested in the estate, and could not be parties to the proceeding of settlement of account. It was not necessary to serve the notice of appeal on them. (Estate of Kruger, 143 Cal. 141.)

It is urged by respondent that the order of September 19, 1892, in favor of S. D. Woods, was made without jurisdiction and is void, and that his assignee has, therefore, no interest whatever in the estate, and cannot maintain this appeal. From the record before us, we cannot say that the order, so far as it fixes the fee to be received by the attorney theretofore appointed under the provisions of section 1718 of the Code of Civil Procedure to represent the minor legatees and devisees,, was beyond the jurisdiction of the superior court. Under the provisions of that section, which was repealed in 1903 (Stats, 1903, p. 243) the court was authorized to appoint an attorney to represent devisees and legatees who were minors, and had no general guardian, and to fix the fee of the person so ap *664 pointed. It is found that the order fixing the fee was duly given, made, and entered, and it must he presumed in favor of the order, in the absence of a showing to the contrary in the record, that all persons interested were duly notified of the application for the fixing of the fee, and that the order was not, as suggested, an ex parte order. The mere fact that there never had been any previous account filed by the executor, if such fact is shown by the record, does not conclusively establish want of notice to all parties interested, of the application for the fixing of this fee. There may have been an application for the sale of realty, or some other appropriate proceeding, in which all of the parties interested were before the court, with full notice of the application for the fixing of this fee. The record does not show that such was not the case.

The principal points made by appellant for reversal are,—1. That the superior court erred in allowing the executor interest upon the money advanced by him; and 2. That said court erred in decreeing that the executor should have and recover from the estate, the balance remaining due him for moneys advanced and interest thereon, before any payment should be made on account of appellant’s claim. The superior court allowed the executor interest upon all amounts expended by him, - at the rate of seven per cent per annum from the-time of payment to January 1, 1901, and charged him with interest upon all amounts received by him as executor, at the same rate, from the time of receipt to January 1, 1901. It found that, on such basis, there was due the executor on January 1, 1901, a balance of $22,201.41. As to such allowance of interest to the executor the court found, “That all of said expenditures made by said executor were proper and beneficial to said estate and tbiose interested therein and resulted in the preservation théreof for the parties entitled thereto, and said executor made said expenditures at a time when there were no funds of said estate in his hands and he is entitled to interest on said ¡amounts as set forth above.” There is no bill of exceptions showing the evidence taken on the hearing in the superior court. The account and report show that the great bulk of the disbursements made by the executor were made in and about the large amount of litigation in which the estate appears^ to have been involved, most of *665 which related to the maintenance of the will under which the minor devisees and legatees claimed.

We cannot say, in the face of this finding, and in the absence of any bill of exceptions showing the evidence, that the court erred in allowing the executor interest upon advances made by him.

It appears to be well settled that circumstances may be such as to justify a court in allowing the executor or administrator interest upon advances made by him for the benefit of the estate, either from his own funds or from money borrowed by him for that purpose. It is true that claims for interest are pot favored, will be viewed with caution, and examined with scrupulous care, but it is uniformly recognized that the condition of an estate is sometimes such as not only to authorize, but strongly commend such advancement of money. In American and English Encyclopedia of Law (2d ed., vol. 11, p. 1267) it is said: “In regard to interest on advances to the estate made by the executor or administrator out of his own funds, the rule is well settled that credit will be allowed if the advances were beneficial to the estate, and the necessity of making them was not occasioned by any neglect or delay on the part of the executor or administrator. But such claims are not favored, and in no case will they be allowed if the advances were not beneficial to the estate, or if the executor had funds of the estate in his hands, or could have put himself in funds from the estate.” (See, also, Woerner on Law of Administration, 2d ed., sec. 523; Liddell v. McVickar, 11 N. J. L. 44, 47; 1 P ettingill v. Pettingill, 60 Me. 411, 425; Trimble v. James, 40 Ark. 393, 406.) Where it is absolutely essential for the protection of an estate and the preservation of the property thereof for those beneficially interested, that the executor should advance money, and he does so, thereby producing benefit to those interested therein, it is only equitable that he should be fully reimbursed, and “it is according to the rules and principles of equity that the acts of an executor had in the administration of his trust are to be adjudged.” (In re Clos, 110 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
80 P. 1072, 146 Cal. 661, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-carpenter-cal-1905.