Estate of Emerson

167 P. 149, 175 Cal. 724, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 749
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1917
DocketL. A. No. 5012.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 167 P. 149 (Estate of Emerson) 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 Emerson, 167 P. 149, 175 Cal. 724, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 749 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

This is an appeal from an order and decree of the court in probate settling the first and final account of Collins P. Emerson, special administrator of the estate of Thomas B. Emerson, deceased. Thomas B. Emerson died intestate, a resident of the county of Los Angeles. Collins P. Emerson is his brother. He came from Iowa to California, applied for and received letters of special administration upon the estate of the deceased. He qualified and acted. Thereafter he sought, under section 1339 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to procure the probate of a will of his brother which *725 he averred was destroyed after his death. Failing in this he moved for a new trial, and appealed from the order denying it. This appeal is considered in Estate of Emerson, 170 Cal. 81, [148 Pac. 523], For the present purpose it is sufficient to say that he produced a writing which he asserted was a copy of this destroyed will. His testimony concerning it was thoroughly discredited, and it is perhaps unnecessary to add that by its terms he was a beneficiary of his brother’s bounty to the extent of one-third of his estate. The widow of Thomas B. Eknerson, deceased, then applied for general letters of administration and her application was opposed by this special administrator, who also petitioned for general letters. The widow received the appointment and the special administrator filed his first and final account of his special administration of the affairs of the estate.

The account as first presented set forth the amounts of money belonging to the estate of his brother which he had drawn from several banks, and it is noteworthy that in each instance he failed to report the amounts over the face of these bank accounts, which he had received from the banks by way of interest in addition to the principal sums. He only did so after his account as first presented was attacked for these as well as for other reasons. His explanation as to why he had failed to charge himself with these additional moneys thus received as interest may be given in his own language. “I charged myself with $1,575.68 from the City National Bank of Clinton, Iowa. That was not the exact amount which I withdrew from that bank. There was $1,912.88. I left out the interest in my account. I do not know why I did not charge myself with it. I received the money.’’ ’

Upon filing his revised or amended account these interest charges were of course included, and they were all allowed but one, for the sum of $48.04, which unquestionably and admittedly he received by way of interest upon his intestate’s account in the German-American Trust & Savings Bank. Respondent, indeed, admits that the failure of the court to charge the special administrator with this amount was due to oversight, and, this being recognized, we may pass on to certain other minor items before we come to a consideration of. the principal sum in controversy. These minor items are two. The special administrator claimed, and the court allowed him, a credit of $116.13 for railroad fare and expenses *726 in his journey from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he lived, to California, made for the purpose of applying for letters of special administration. The expense was incurred before he was appointed and for the purpose of procuring the appointment. Had the services of the special administrator proved even of great value to the estate—and here quite the reverse is true—this would not have been an allowable item. This was expressly decided in Estate of Byrne, 122 Cal. 260, [54 Pac. 957, 1015], and the item should therefore have been disallowed.

The second minor item, also allowed by the court, is for $143.36 for railroad fare and expenses incurred by the special administrator in going from Los Angeles to Cedar Rapids to withdraw the moneys belonging to the estate on deposit in banks at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and at Clinton, Iowa. Not one word is shown as to the necessity for this trip. It is plainly inferable, the special administrator having personal interests of his own in Iowa, that the trip was made in furtherance of those interests, and the benefit of the estate was made an excuse therefor. .But aside from this, it is beyond controversy that everything which the administrator did, he could have done by requests upon these banks to transfer these deposits upon forwarding to them certified letters showing his authority in the matter of the estate, and such, as this court, is well advised, is the usual practice of prudent administrators. To bolster up this claim the administrator testifies that on this trip “I succeeded in getting $257.25 as interest from the bank. I also succeeded in finding a contract on some property that my brother owned, which I formerly owned and sold him, and afterward I sold it for him and the contract had not been fulfilled; the payments had not been made, and the balance on that payment was $495. That contract I got.” The remainder of his evidence dealt with inconclusive journeys and inquiries which he made, prompted, as he says, “for the reason that there was a large shrinkage in my brother’s estate that he was reputed to be worth.” It strains credulity to believe that he succeeded in getting $257.25 as interest from the bank because the president was his “personal friend, ’ ’ and not because it was interest due on the deposit. It would require more convincing evidence to lead us to believe that the president of a national bank thus juggled with and illegally dissipated its depositors’ funds. But it *727 is quite noteworthy in this connection to observe that this $257.25 interest which he thus secured as fruits of his journey east was a part of the money which he did not account for, which he would have retained if his first account had not been attacked, and which, upon attack, he admitted belonged to the estate. And finally, whatever may have been the eastern shrinkage in the value of his brother’s estate, it suffered a very marked and decided shrinkage at the special administrator’s own hands in California, as we shall see when we pass on to the next item.

The heirs of the deceased sought to charge this special administrator with nine thousand dollars, admitted by him to have been borrowed from his brother shortly before that brother’s death. The special administrator sought to relieve himself from this, not under any denial of the receipt of these moneys, which he admitted, but by his own unsupported testimony that after having received these moneys there was a business settlement of his affairs with his brother, who was and for a long time had been owing him money, under which settlement the nine thousand dollars was accepted by him in payment of all his demands against his brother, so that at the time of his brother’s death neither stood indebted to the other in any sum whatsoever. This unsupported evidence of an oral agreement, made in the presence of nobody and evidenced by no writing, the court accepted to the fullest extent and ruled accordingly. It did this, we regret to state, in violation of positive law and against the overwhelming weight of the counter-showing.

This subject matter, as indicated, falls under two heads: First, the weight of the evidence itself, assuming its admissibility; and, second, the question of its admissibility. First as to the weight of evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 P. 149, 175 Cal. 724, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-emerson-cal-1917.