Estate of Dunsmuir

2 Coffey 53
CourtSuperior Court of California, County of San Francisco
DecidedMarch 27, 1905
DocketNo. 23,158
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Coffey 53 (Estate of Dunsmuir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Dunsmuir, 2 Coffey 53 (Cal. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

COFFEY, J.

This is a motion to vacate, set aside and de-

clare null and void a judgment of this court entered May 9, 1900, admitting the will of Alexander Dunsmuir, deceased, to probate, and appointing James Dunsmuir executor thereof, upon the grounds (1) that at the time of making and signing said judgment the court did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter of said estate nor any jurisdiction to do any act in the premises, and (2) that at the time of making said order and signing said judgment the court did not have nor obtain jurisdiction of any of the persons interested in said estate and was without power to make or enter any order binding upon said estate or upon them.

The motion is' based upon the records and papers on file in the matter of the estate and is made on behalf of Edna Wallace Hopper, a daughter and heir at law of Josephine Dunsmuir, deceased, who was the widow of Alexander Dunsmuir, decedent testator. .

An affidavit accompanies the motion made by Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper, a practicing barrister and solicitor in British Columbia, Dominion of Canada, learned in the law of that realm, and the occupant at different times of the offices of minister of justice, attorney general, and solicitor general of the dominion. Affiant is counsel for Mrs. Joan Olive Dunsmuir, mother of the decedent and the executor, and as such counsel engaged in an action instituted and now pending in [55]*55the supreme court of British Columbia, brought to revoke a certain probate of the will of Alexander Dunsmuir, the decedent, which was obtained on an application by James Dunsmuir, on motion of his counsel, A. P. Luxton, who applied for and obtained probate in what is known in that province as probate in common form. Affiant says that in obtaining probate of a will in common form the application is made, as it was in this case, ex parte, and the order admitting said will to probate was granted on the affidavit of James Dunsmuir, without notice to any of the heirs of the deceased, and without notice of any kind, such as by publication or otherwise. Probate in this common form is revocable under the laws of that province at any time and the executor who obtains such probate may be cited to bring in the will and propound it in solemn form. Without obtaining probate in common form, and without being so cited, or if being so cited, an executor may obtain probate of a will in solemn form by citing the heirs of the deceased and parties interested in the estate; in which case the procedure and law require strict proof of the death of the testator, of his capacity, and of the valid execution of the will. In the case of a foreign will, evidence is required that it has been recognized as valid by a court of the foreign country, or that it is valid according to the law of the foreign country in which the testator was domiciled when it was executed. Where all in interest have been cited, probate of a will in solemn form is irrevocable and absolute. Affiant further saj^s that in the action now pending in British Columbia for the revocation of the probate herein, Mr. E. P. Davis, K. C., who is associate counsel in the case with Mr. A. P. Luxton for James Dunsmuir, has contended in argument before the supreme court that the effect of an alleged probate of this will which has been granted in this court in California was and is equivalent to a judgment in rem, and therefore, is binding throughout the world, if the domicile of Alexander Dunsmuir was in this state, and that the proceedings adopted in this court were equivalent to what is known in that province as proof in solemn form, and that the question of the valid execution of the will, or whether the docu[56]*56ment was testamentary, and whether the testator had capacity, could only be raised in the court of his domicile.

Affiant finally says that the practice obtaining in British Columbia in respect to the proof of wills is similar to that of England and that the decisions of the English courts are authoritative and binding on this subject in that province.

The records in this matter, numbered 23,158, superior court, department 10, San Francisco, California, show that on April 26, 1900, James - Dunsmuir presented and had filed his petition in which he represented that Alexander Dunsmuir died on or about the thirty-first day of January, 1900, in New York City, being a resident of the city and county of San Francisco, state of Cálifornia, leaving a last will and testament, dated December 21, 1899, which by a judgment duly given and made on the 24th of February, 1900, by the supreme court of British Columbia (in probate) was duly proved, allowed and admitted to probate, and that such judgment, allowance and admission to probate was never in whole or in part appealed from, revoked, set aside, modified, or in any way affected, and that the same had become absolute; that the court which so admitted the will to probate had jurisdiction in the premises; that the decedent testator left estate within this city and county, which was described, and that it was necessary that the will, by duly authenticated copy, be admitted to probate in this state and in this court, and to have the same force as a will first admitted to probate in this state and that letters testamentary issue thereon. Petitioner produced and filed with his petition for probate a copy of the will with the usual authentication record averring that. it appeared upon the face of said record that the will had been proved, allowed, and admitted to probate in a foreign country, to wit, British Columbia, and that it was executed according to the law of that place and of the place in which the same was made, to wit, the state of California. James Dunsmuir, the brother of deceased, was named as sole executor and Sole devisee and legatee, and the value of the estate in California was averred to be about $154,000. The heirs were alleged in the petition to be, Josephine Dunsmuir, his widow, residing at San Leandro, Alameda county, Cali[57]*57fornia; Joan Olive Dunsmuir, his mother, residing at Victoria, British Columbia; and the sole devisee, James Dunsmuir, his brother, the petitioner, residing at said Victoria, who consented to act as executor'and prayed for probate as aforesaid. In the will testator describes himself as “I Alexander Dunsmuir of San Prancisco California United States of America.”

Upon the filing of this petition the court made an order appointing time and place for proving by a copy of the will and the probate thereof, duly authenticated, the last will and testament of Alexander Dunsmuir, and for hearing the application for letters and directing notice to be given by the clerk, which appears to have been done, and on the ninth day of May, 1900, the paper was by an order of the court admitted to probate. In this order or judgment is a recital, among others, that due proof had been made and the court found that the testator was “at the time of his death a resident of the city and county of San Prancisco, state of California.”

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Bluebook (online)
2 Coffey 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-dunsmuir-calsuppctsf-1905.