Estate of Falcone

211 Cal. App. 2d 40, 27 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1483
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1962
DocketCiv. 25993
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 211 Cal. App. 2d 40 (Estate of Falcone) 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.

Bluebook
Estate of Falcone, 211 Cal. App. 2d 40, 27 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1483 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

BURKE, P. J.

This is an appeal based upon two separate notices of appeal by the decedent’s surviving husband, A. V. Falcone, from certain portions of the judgment, order and decree of final distribution. In summary, appellant asserts that respondents’ petition to determine heirship did not state facts sufficient for such determination; that respondents did not prove they were pretermitted heirs or that there was any separate property for them to take; that the cash proceeds from the sale of the former residence of the parties upon which there was a recorded homestead constituted the proceeds of a homestead and vested as such in the appellant by operation of law immediately upon decedent’s death and were not part of the estate.

Decedent and A. V. Falcone were married on July 23, 1941.

*43 Each had children by prior marriages. Decedent’s are Howard Keller, Rosemarie Keller Hunt and Clark Quinn Keller. The last two, both adults, were the petitioners in the proceedings to determine heirship and are the respondents on this appeal. Howard Keller died on April 18, 1951, predeceasing his mother. lie left surviving him a daughter, Beverly, a minor. Howard and the minor’s mother had been divorced, the final decree having been entered on December 17, 1948. The mother subsequently married a Mr. Bohlman, who adopted Beverly on September 4, 1951. Neither the minor’s mother nor Mr. Bohlman are related by blood to decedent. The court adjudged that the minor was not decedent’s heir and no appeal has been taken with respect to Beverly.

Decedent had been a court reporter but was not regularly employed after 1943. Thereafter she was principally a housewife but did engage in a limited practice of psychology and did some writing but with only nominal earnings. Both prior to and during their married life appellant engaged in the practice of law and also in some extraneous activities including farming, chicken ranching and as operating coowner of a small defense plant.

Decedent left a holographic will dated May 24, 1944, which read as follows: “Everything I possess, I leave to my beloved husband, A. V. Falcone.” Decedent enclosed this will in an envelope together with a typewritten document. She sealed the envelope, signed her name “Marie Falcone” on it and delivered it to appellant with her oral statement to him that the same contained her holographic will leaving everything to him and further contained her wishes and suggestions to him which he might but need not follow. She had had considerable illness both before and during her marriage. At the time of the delivery of her will to her husband she was entering the hospital for surgery.

On June 3, 1944, when she returned home appellant stated to her that he had opened the envelope and read the documents. Decedent stated that he should keep them, which he did. The typewritten document consisted of two parts, the upper part containing suggestions to appellant as to her wishes regarding her three children and as to appellant’s sister and daughter, named therein as Yolande and Dolores. The lower part contained a personal message to appellant.

At the hearing appellant testified that on January 5, 1947, decedent stated to him she had changed her wishes and suggestions and requested him not to make any provision for or *44 gifts to any of her three children for certain reasons which she stated, including that they were estranged from her. She requested appellant to bring the letter she had written to him to her. He stated he did so on the next day and that she cut off the upper part and tore it in half, stating that she revoked it. Appellant requested to keep the torn parts as well as the lower part as a memento. He stated that decedent said he could do so but not to consider her original wishes and suggestions which had been set forth in the part which she revoked. Appellant kept the envelope and its contents which were introduced in evidence.

The holographic will was admitted to probate and the appellant was appointed as administrator with will annexed. The typewritten document, although received in evidence, was determined by the court to have had “no legal effect and is not considered by the court.”

The judgment decreed that certain cash held on deposit in decedent’s name, certain stocks likewise in her name alone and an equity in a promissory note in her name representing the remainder of the sale price of a former residence of the parties were decedent’s separate property and decreed two-thirds thereof to respondents as pretermitted heirs and one-third thereof to the appellant individually. It decreed that certain items of personal property and an automobile were appellant’s own property and not part of the estate, and that basically all other articles of personal property were community property which the decree awarded to appellant.

The issues raised on appeal are principally: (1) Are respondents pretermitted heirs and in this connection was the court in error in determining that the typewritten document which accompanied the will had no legal effect? (2) Did the decedent leave separate property ? (3) What was the status of the cash proceeds from the sale of the homestead property, which property was sold prior to decedent’s death?

As was pointed out in Estate of Torregano, 54 Cal.2d 234, 248 [5 Cal.Rptr. 137, 352 P.2d 505], “Since its origin as a state, California has continuously protected both spouse and children (and to some extent, grandchildren) from unintentional omission from a share in testator’s estate. Such protection, unknown to the common law, has been provided by statute, commencing with the Acts of 1850, continued by various sections of the Civil Code, and today appearing in sections 70, 71, 90, 91 and 92 of the Probate Code. Thus the Legislature has indicated a continuing policy of guarding against *45 the omission of lineal descendants by reason of oversight, accident, mistake or unexpected change of condition. ’ ’ The court then followed with certain rules of construction applicable to the objects and interpretation of these statutes, including among which are (p. 249) : “There is a presumption of law that the failure to name a child or grandchild in a will was unintentional [citing cases] ”; that “Although a testator may lawfully disinherit any or all of his natural heirs if he so desires, in order to avoid the operation of the pretermission statutes, an intent to omit provision for testator’s child ‘must appear on the face of the will, and it must then appear from words which indicate such intent directly, or by implication equally as strong. Any other rule would lead to guesses or to inferences merely conjectural, which would be too unsubstantial to base judgment on.’ (In re Stevens, 83 Cal. 322, 329-330 [23 P. 379, 17 Am.St.Rep. 252] [Citing cases].) ”

While the petition to determine heirship in the instant case left something to be desired as a pleading, it was sufficient to meet the requirements of section 1080 of the Probate Code. When considered in conjunction with the statement filed by appellant it was sufficient to comply with the requirements as to pleading so as to place the issues before the court.

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Bluebook (online)
211 Cal. App. 2d 40, 27 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-falcone-calctapp-1962.