Estate of Granniss

75 P. 324, 142 Cal. 1, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 885
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3167.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 75 P. 324 (Estate of Granniss) 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 Granniss, 75 P. 324, 142 Cal. 1, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 885 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

The appeal in this case is from a decree of distribution in the estate of George W. Granniss, deceased. The deceased left a last will and testament which is in the words and figures following:—

“I, George W. Granniss, of the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, do hereby make, publish and declare this my last will and testament, as follows, to wit: “First. I give unto my wife, Elizabeth Ingargiola Granniss, the sum of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00), together with all the household furniture and other personal property now contained in the dwelling No. 19 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, with the exception that my daughter hereinafter mentioned may select and possess the portraits of her grandfather, grandmother, her father in his youth, and any or all pictures painted by her mother.
“Second. I give unto my daughter, Harriet Granniss Center, all of the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, and wherever situated.
“Third. I hereby appoint my said daughter, Harriet Granniss Center, the executrix of this will without bonds.
“Fourth. I solemnly declare that all my estate herein devised is my separate property, and was the community property of my first wife and myself.
*4 “In witness whereof, I have set my hand to the foregoing will, which is all in my own handwriting, this eighth day of January, 1894. George W. Granniss.”

Six years and more after the date-of the will the deceased executed a codicil, which is as follows:—

“It is my desire and direction, that all my jewelry, my watch, swords, canes and personal effects of that nature be given to my grandson, Alexander Granniss Center, in the event of my death. G. W. Granniss,
“San Francisco, August 20th, 1900.”

George W. Granniss died at the city and county of San Francisco, January 26, 1901.

During the administration of the estate the bequest to his surviving wife, mentioned in the first paragraph, or item, of the will, was paid to her, and at the close of the administration the superior court distributed the remainder of the estate to his daughter, Harriet Granniss Center, and from this decree his surviving wife prosecutes the appeal.

1. It will be seen by the second -clause, or item, in the will that the testator says: “I give unto my daughter, Harriet Grannis Center, all of the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, and wherever situated.” The declaration of the testator in the fourth item of the will, that all his estate therein devised is his separate property, and was the community property of his first wife and himself, does not qualify or impair the language used in the second item or clause of the will, wherein it is declared that he gives all the residue of his estate to his daughter. Whether he is correct in his opinion that all his estate at that" period was the community property of himself and his first wife is quite immaterial and does not affect or control the previous express and emphatic clause of his will, wherein he gives “all of the rest, residue and remainder” of his estate to his daughter. The character of the estate of the decedent, whether it is separate or the community property of himself and his first wife, is not to be affected or changed by his opinion thereon, or by any declaration which he may make in reference to it, but is to be determined from the mode in which the property was acquired. The testator had been married previous to his marriage with the appellant, and his first wife died Sep *5 tember 12, 1890. He was married to the appellant December 27, 1892. At the time of his first wife’s death he had $14,152 in money, and a note of the Pacific Improvement Company for $100,000, which had been acquired during his first marriage. Between the time of the death of his first wife and his marriage to the appellant, he received $17,400, as interest upon this note, and from rents and services, and also a legacy of $10,000. After his second marriage he received a legacy of $5,000, of which $3,500 was paid to him in May, 1893, and $1,500 in May, 1894. He also received as interest upon the above note of the Pacific Improvement Company, after his second marriage, the sum of $28,763. In October, 1893, he purchased one thousand shares of stock in the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, which in about a month thereafter he sold at a profit of $1,440; and in January, 1894, purchased another one thousand shares of the same stock, which he sold in April, 1895, at a profit of $5,457. The note of the Pacific Improvement Company was paid September 25, 1897, and thereafter he purchased certain bonds for which he paid .$72,705. He received as interest upon these bonds during his lifetime the sum of $9,375. These bonds were part of his estate at the time of his death. A portion of them was sold after his death, and the proceeds applied towards the payment of his bequest to the appellant. It was stipulated by the appellant that the decedent was engaged in no business after his second marriage from which he received any income, except that he received $962.50 for certain services rendered by him, unless the purchase and sale of the above shares of stock in the steamship company be considered as business. It is also stipulated that aside from his investments his expenditures, between September 25., 1897, and December 1, 1898, amounted to $5,754. The note of $100,000, which testator had at the time of his second marriage, together with the interest which he received thereon after such marriage, was his separate property, and any investments which he made with the money received upon this note, or any property which he purchased with it, continued to be his separate property. The income from such investments, as well as the increase in value and profits derived from the sale of the property so purchased, was also his separate property. (Civ. Code, see. *6 163; Estate of Cudworth, 133 Cal. 462.) In Estate of Cudworth the husband had an income derived from his separate estate, and also earned money which became community property, and it was held that there was no presumption that the husband supported the family out of his separate property and preserved the community property intact; that he* is at liberty to devote all that is necessary to the support of the family out of the community funds, and to preserve the separate property, if he so chooses; and that the commingling of the funds of his separate estate with the community funds, where the community interest is inconsiderable in the property with which it is intermingled, will not cause the fund to become community property or destroy the character of his separate estate. The finding of the court that the only estate of said decedent was his separate property is fully sustained by the evidence, and, being his separate property, it was subject to his testamentary disposition. (Civ. Code, sec. 1333.)

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Bluebook (online)
75 P. 324, 142 Cal. 1, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-granniss-cal-1904.