Estate of Grant

43 P.2d 266, 2 Cal. 2d 661, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 380
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1935
DocketL. A. 14548
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 43 P.2d 266 (Estate of Grant) 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 Grant, 43 P.2d 266, 2 Cal. 2d 661, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 380 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

U. S.Grant, Jr., died leaving a last will and testament in which his wife, the respondent, America W. Grant, was named as the executrix thereof, and as his sole devisee. Upon her appointment as such executrix she duly published notice to creditors, and within the time provided by law for the presentation of claims two claims were presented and allowed against said estate, one by S. A. Reed in the sum of $457.03, and the other by the trustees of George J. Keating Medical Fund in the sum of $7,200. The last-mentioned claim was secured by a mortgage upon real property belonging to said deceased. Subsequent to the allowance and filing of said claim the trustees of said medical fund foreclosed said mortgage and bought in the mortgaged property. After applying the proceeds of said sale to the amount due under the decree of foreclosure there remained a deficiency of $3,764.94 due under said decree for which deficiency a judgment was duly docketed against the estate of said deceased. There were also two preferred claims filed against said estate, but as they were paid by said executrix they are in no way involved in the present controversy. After the payment of these preferred claims and the costs of administration, excepting executrix’s and attorney’s fees, the court decreed that there remained in the hand *663 of said executrix the sum of $2,443.11, less definite amounts to be paid on executrix’s and attorney’s fees, and an indefinite amount to discharge any inheritance tax which might be found due from said estate. The balance remaining in the executrix’s hands was to be applied pro rata upon the two nonpreferred claims against said estate and the claim of the executrix which arose under the following cir"eumstances: At the time the deceased died he was indebted to the U. S. Grant, Jr., Hotel in the sum of $1759.44, the payment of which had been guaranteed by Mrs. Grant. The hotel company deducted this amount from a dividend subsequently declared on stock in said company belonging to Mrs. Grant. The other debt paid by Mrs. Grant was based upon a promissory note executed by Mr. and Mrs. Grant, the latter simply as surety, in favor of the Bank of America. The bank came into possession of funds, after the death of the deceased, belonging exclusively to Mrs. Grant, outo of which it paid the amount due on said note, amounting at that time, principal and interest, to $6,092. Neither the hotel company nor the Bank of America filed any claim against said estate for its debt against the deceased. Although these two amounts; due primarily by the deceased, were paid by Mrs. Grant from her own separate funds, she filed no claim against said estate for either of said amounts. In her final account she claimed, however, that these two amounts represented legal claims against the estate of her husband, and asked that the remaining funds in her hands as the executrix of the will of said deceased be applied in payment pro rata on the aggregate amount of these two debts as well as on the two claims of S. A. Reed and the trustees of the Keating Medical Fund. The trustees of said fund filed written objections to said account and to the payment to Mrs. Grant, or to the retention by her, of any amount on account of these two claims, on the ground that neither of them was ever, filed as a claim against said estate. The probate court after a hearing overruled the objections of said trustees to said account and entered an order directing said executrix to apply the balance of money in her hands to the payment pro rata of the claims against said estate, including the two amounts, aggregating the sum of $7,851.44, paid by Mrs. Grant in settlement of the debts of her husband due said hotel company and the Bank of Amer *664 ica, respectively. From this order the trustees of said medical fund have appealed.

As U. S. Grant, Jr., died September 26, 1929, and prior to the adoption of the Probate Act, all proceedings in his estate for giving of notice to creditors were governed by the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 1490 provides for the publication of the notice to creditors. Section 1491 limits the time in which claims may be presented to six months' after the first publication of said notice, and section 1493 provides that all claims arising upon contract must be filed or presented within the time limited in the notice, and any claim not so filed or presented “is barred forever”. Section 1510 provides that if the executor or administrator is a creditor of the decedent, he shall file his claim with the clerk, who must present it for allowance or rejection to the judge. Section 1632 of the Code of Civil Procedure was reenacted without substantial change as section 929 of the Probate Code, which reads as follows: “If it appears that debts of the decedent have been paid without verified claims having been filed or presented and allowed and approved, and it shall be proven that such debts were justly due, were paid in good faith, that the amount paid was the true amount of such indebtedness over and above all payments or setoffs, and that the estate is solvent, the court, in settling the account, shall allow the sums so paid.”

Appellants contend that under the provisions of this last-mentioned section an executor or administrator may have debts, which he has paid without the presentation of verified claims therefor, allowed only in estates which are solvent, and that in estates which are insolvent the court is without any authority to allow debts of the deceased paid by the executor or administrator in the absence of any presentation of verified claims therefor, and if debts against an insolvent estate are paid without verified claims therefor having been filed or allowed, then the executor or administrator paying the same cannot have them allowed in the settlement of his account. We are of the opinion that this contention must be sustained.

Under the sections of the Code of Civil Procedure cited above as in force prior to the adoption of the Probate Code (and the rule is now the same under the Probate Code), all claims against the estate of a decedent arising upon contract *665 must be filed or presented within the time prescribed in the published notice to creditors, and if not so'filed or presented they are forever barred. There are certain exceptions to this requirement but no contention is made that any of these exceptions has any application to the present controversy except possibly section 1632 of the Code of Civil Procedure, now section 929 of the Probate Code. This section in express-language permits the allowance of debts paid by the executor or administrator without the presentation or allowance of verified claims therefor in solvent estates only. No mention is made of debts against insolvent estates, and by no process of reasoning can its terms be construed to' include such debts. The maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius applies in this instance with controlling force.

While a statute with provisions similar to section 1632 of the Code of Civil Procedure and section 929 of the Probate Code has in various forms been in force in this state since the year 1872, the question presented on this appeal has never been directly passed upon by the courts of this state. It was before the court in the Estate of Card, 64 Cal. App. 268 [222 Pac. 145], but that ease was evidently decided upon another point, leaving the question in which we are now interested undecided.

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Bluebook (online)
43 P.2d 266, 2 Cal. 2d 661, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-grant-cal-1935.