Estate of Hastings

239 P.2d 684, 108 Cal. App. 2d 713, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1730
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 16, 1952
DocketCiv. 14899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 239 P.2d 684 (Estate of Hastings) 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 Hastings, 239 P.2d 684, 108 Cal. App. 2d 713, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1730 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

*714 NOURSE, P. J.

On January 18, 1943, Harry C. Hastings employed A. J. Treat as his attorney to represent him in relation to a trust that had been set up by his grandfather and which was then the subject of litigation in an action pending in the superior court in San Francisco. Treat associated appellant Samter as cocounsel in the matter, with the approval and ratification of Hastings, on a contingent basis, counsel to receive 40 per cent of any recovery effected from the trust. The sum of $73,827.23 was then on deposit in escrow in a bank to await the judicial determination of the conflicting claims of Hastings and other claimants. On October 7, 1947, Harry C. Hastings died. His son, Harry C. Hastings, Jr., hereinafter referred to as Hastings Junior, was appointed administrator with the will annexed of his father’s estate.

Attorneys Treat and Samter filed a contingent claim of creditors in the estate of Harry C. Hastings, claiming a lien of 40 per cent of that part of the money in escrow that might be recovered for the estate of Hastings. On July 20, 1948, Hastings Junior petitioned the superior court to accept this contingent claim of creditors Treat and Samter and to continue their employment in the matter. The remaining sole heirs of Harry O. Hastings consented to the approval of the claim, and on August 10, 1948, the court issued its order approving the claim and the continued employment of Attorneys Treat and Samter. Apparently no action has ever been taken to have this order modified, amended, vacated or set aside.

Treat died before he and Samter had made any substantial progress toward the recovery of any part of the escrowed fund. After Treat’s death, Samter, with the consent and approval of Hastings Junior, requested the respondent Mac-Kay to become associated with him as attorney for Hastings Junior in the attempt to recover for the Hastings estate any interest in this fund. Samter and MacKay further agreed that any contingent fee recovered by them as a result of their efforts on behalf of the Hastings estate should be divided in three equal shares, one each to Helen B. Treat, Samter and MacKay. Helen B. Treat is the widow and sole heir of Attorney A. J. Treat.

As a result of the cumulative efforts of Treat, Samter and MacKay the claims against the fund in escrow were compromised with approval of the superior court, the estate of Hastings to receive by the terms of the compromise the sum *715 of $7,500. In addition to this order granting leave to Hastings Junior to compromise the claim, the court on August 19, 1950, ordered him to pay to Samter, MacKay and Mrs. Treat $3,000 in full discharge of the estate’s obligation for attorneys’ fees in the litigation with the other parties to the compromise.

Hastings Junior moved the superior court to vacate that portion of the order of August 19, 1950, which awarded the $3,000 to Samter, MacKay and Mrs. Treat, and petitioned the court to order him to pay the sum of $1,500 to Samter as Samter’s share of the $3,000 fee, but the court, after hearing the oral arguments of counsel and receiving their unsworn statements, denied the motion and ordered Hastings Junior to deposit the $7,500 in the bank and immediately pay therefrom $1,000 each to Samter, MacKay and Mrs. Treat. Hastings Junior and Samter are appealing from this order.

Appellants contend only that the superior court had no jurisdiction to make the order appealed from because:

1. The court had no jurisdiction to change a confirmed contingent contract between Treat and Samter as attorneys and Harry C. Hastings and make an entirely new and different contract with other parties;
2. There was no petition, complaint or pleading filed upon which the order appealed from could have been based;
3. There was no petition filed herein to set aside the order approving the contingent claim for attorneys’ fees filed by Treat and Samter in this estate and said order approving said contingent claim remains in full force and effect. It is a quasi judgment against Hastings estate in favor of Treat and Samter;
4. There was no evidence under oath taken by the court at the hearing when the order appealed from was made.

The substance of appellants’ first and third arguments is that the court was bound to award attorneys’ fees in the manner provided for in the court’s order of August 10, 1948, in the absence of some new order modifying that originally made. They argue that the order of August 10, 1948, was in the nature of a quasi judgment. In support of this line of reasoning appellants have cited Tomsky v. Superior Court, 131 Cal. 620 [63 P. 1020]. In that case, decided in 1901, an executrix had paid her attorney a retainer fee, but the probate court allowed as an expense to the executrix only a part of that fee and ordered the attorney to repay the balance. On appeal the Supreme Court held that the attorney could not *716 be required to repay a fee received under a valid contract with the executrix. The effect of this decision was not to increase the charge upon the estate, but only to cause the executrix to be personally liable under her contract with the attorney. In the present case the only effect of the order appealed from is to determine the charge upon the estate and the division of the fee allowed, hence the Tomsky ease is no authority for appellants’ position.

Section 910 of the Probate Code provides: “Attorneys for executors and administrators shall be allowed out of the estate, as fees for conducting the ordinary probate proceedings, the same amounts as are allowed ... to executors and administrators; and such further amount as the court may deem just and reasonable for extraordinary services. ’*’ Section 911 of the Probate Code provides: “Any attorney who has rendered services to an executor or administrator, at any time after six months from the issuance of letters testamentary or of administration, . . . may apply to the court for an allowance upon his fees; and on the hearing the court shah make an order requiring the executor or administrator to pay such attorney out of the estate such compensation, on account of services rendered up to that time, as the court shall deem proper ...”

The order of August 10, 1948, was for the payment of an indefinite and uncertain amount, not a fixed amount as required by the Probate Code, and it was therefore void. In Estate of Rowe, 66 Cal.App.2d 594 [152 P.2d 765], the court quoting from Estate of McDonald, 37 Cal.App.2d 521 [99 P.2d 1115

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Bluebook (online)
239 P.2d 684, 108 Cal. App. 2d 713, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hastings-calctapp-1952.