Estate of Hayes

1 Coffey 551
CourtSuperior Court of California, County of San Francisco
DecidedNovember 25, 1895
DocketNo. 4,017
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Coffey 551 (Estate of Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Hayes, 1 Coffey 551 (Cal. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

COFFEY, J.

This is a petition to have certain property-set aside for the use and benefit of Agnes Hayes, a minor, under section 1465, Code of Civil Procedure. The facts are briefly these: Thomas Hayes died on September 30, 1884, [552]*552leaving him surviving as his only heirs his widow, Margaret Hayes, who died on May 15, 1885, and five children. All these children are now over the age of majority, except the petitioner herein.

Decedent Thomas Hayes left only one piece of property, which is situated in San Francisco. It was community property, and it is sought herein to have it set aside as a homestead.

Neither the widow in her lifetime nor any of the children during their minority, except petitioner, applied to have a homestead set aside.

It is asked that the property be set aside absolutely to Agnes Hayes.

Counsel for the other and adult children oppose this, and wish the decree to state that the homestead be set aside to petitioner during her minority.

1. It is the right of the minor to have, and it is the duty of the court to set aside absolutely to her, said homestead, without limitation: Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1465.

“When application is made that a homestead be set aside under this section, the court has no discretion in the matter, but must grant the application: Estate of Ballentine, 45 Cal. 696”; Estate of Davis, 69 Cal. 458, 10 Pac. 671.

2. When once set aside it ceases to be a part of the assets of the estate. It is therefore excluded from the jurisdiction of the court: Estate of Hardwick, 59 Cal. 292; Estate of Burton, 63 Cal. 36; Schadt v. Heppe, 45 Cal. 433.

The homestead must be set aside for the use of the minor children.

If the clause be added “during her minority,” the mandatory provisions of the section are not followed, because said clause is a limitation—just as much as if this court undertook to set it aside for one year or two years. It must be conceded that this could not be done. Section 1474, Code of Civil Procedure, alone provides when the court may set a homestead aside for a limited period, to wit: when it is taken from the separate property of the decedent: Phelan v. Smith, 100 Cal. 170, 34 Pac. 667.

[553]*553The court say: “It is only where a homestead is set apart from the separate property of the deceased that it is required to he for a limited period.”

In that case a decree was upheld which set apart the homestead for the use of decedent’s widow and family. (See page 170 of report.) See, also, on same point: Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1468; In re Lahiff’s Estate, 86 Cal. 151, 24 Pac. 850; Lord v. Lord, 65 Cal. 84, 3 Pac. 96; Hutchinson v. McNally, 85 Cal. 619, 24 Pac. 1071; Estate of Moore, 96 Cal. 522, 31 Pac. 584.

Agnes Hayes has a right to have a homestead set aside. This right is not an estate: Estate of Moore, 57 Cal. 443.

When the deceased mother, Margaret Hayes, and the now adult children failed to apply for a homestead—neglected to avail themselves of this right—they waived it; they lost it.

“If a widow die before applying for a probate homestead, any right to apply which she may have had is gone; no person succeeds to that right; no adult child of hers can have a right”: Estate of Moore, supra, p. 445; Estate of Boland, 43 Cal. 642.

A right to a homestead is one that may be lost, and there cannot be any such thing as a successor to that right.

Again, all rights of the widow as survivor of the community, all rights of heirship and testamentary disposition, as well as all rights of creditors, are subordinate and subject to this right to have a homestead set aside under section 1465, Code of Civil Procedure: Estate of Moore, 57 Cal. 442, 443.

The court say: “Setting apart a homestead is a part of the probate proceeding, as much as is the family allowance. .... The homestead, when set apart, is to be set apart for the benefit of the widow and children. Every minor child has an interest, and has a right to be named in the decree”: Keyes v. Cyrus, 100 Cal. 325, 38 Am. St. Rep. 296, 34 Pac. 722.

. The case of Estate of Moore, 57 Cal., is directly affirmed in Phelan v. Smith, 100 Cal. 158, 34 Pac. 667. On page 164 it is held that the surviving wife takes one-half of the community property, subject to the payment of debts, and subject to the exercise by the probate court of the powers over [554]*554it vested in that court, and qualified or subject to be qualified by the exercise of those powers.

What those powers are the court then proceeds to define. The heirs take under section 1384, Civil Code, and the widow under section 1402, Civil Code, subject to those powers.

When the proceedings of the probate court are set in motion for the exercise of this right, viz., to have a homestead set aside, and a decree is made, then the homestead becomes an estate, a vested title in those to whom it is set aside.

“And not until such action (setting aside homestead) can it be said that any estate has become vested, either at law or in equity”: Estate of Moore, 57 Cal. 443.

Setting apart a homestead vests the title in the party to whom set apart: Fealey v. Fealey, 104 Cal. 360, 43 Am. St. Rep. 111, 38 Pac. 49; Estate of Boland, 43 Cal. 640; Sheehy v. Miles, 93 Cal. 288, 28 Pac. 1046; Estate of Schmidt, 94 Cal. 334, 29 Pac. 714; Mawson v. Mawson, 50 Cal. 539; McKinnie v. Shaffer, 74 Cal. 614, 16 Pac. 509.

When a homestead is set apart under section 1465, Code of Civil Procedure, the title thereto vests in accordance with the provisions of section 1468, Code of Civil Procedure.

“The homestead is to be set apart in pursuance of the statute in force at the time when the order is made, and the interest therein which the widow and the surviving child will take is to be determined by the same statute”: Sulzberger v. Sulzberger, 50 Cal. 388.

“The decree setting apart the homestead vested the title thereto in the minor children as well as in the mother, .... and the application for the homestead, together with the order setting it apart, were made under the provisions of section 1465, Code of Civil Procedure, .... and by the provisions of section 1468, when property is thus set apart to the use of the family, ‘the one-half of such property shall belong to the widow or surviving husband, and the remainder to the child, or in equal shares to the children, if there be more than one’ ”: Hoppe v. Hoppe, 104 Cal. 94, 37 Pac. 894.

In other words, the title to land set apart out of the community does not vest according to the provisions of sections 1384 or 1402 of the Civil Code. When the right to have a [555]*555homestead set apart under section 1465 is applied for by any of the parties entitled thereto, it is the duty of the court to set it aside absolutely, if taken out of the community property; and for a limited period, if taken from the separate property of decedent. The property is then out of the jurisdiction of the court. The right to have a homestead then becomes a vested estate.

The title thereto vests, then, absolutely according to the provisions of 1468, Code of Civil Procedure. If all the parties entitled thereto lost this right given under section 1465, then this property would vest under sections 1384 and 1402, Civil Code, and not under section 1468, Code of Civil Procedure.

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Related

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84 P. 354 (California Court of Appeal, 1905)
In Re Estate of Heywood
84 P. 834 (California Supreme Court, 1906)
Lies v. De Diablar
12 Cal. 327 (California Supreme Court, 1859)
Gee v. Moore
14 Cal. 472 (California Supreme Court, 1859)
In re the Estate of Boland
43 Cal. 640 (California Supreme Court, 1872)
Schadt v. Heppe
45 Cal. 433 (California Supreme Court, 1873)
In re Estate of Ballentine
45 Cal. 696 (California Supreme Court, 1873)
Pryor v. Downey
50 Cal. 388 (California Supreme Court, 1875)
Mawson v. Mawson
50 Cal. 539 (California Supreme Court, 1875)
In re Estate of Moore
57 Cal. 437 (California Supreme Court, 1881)
Estate of Hardwick
59 Cal. 292 (California Supreme Court, 1881)
In re the Estate of Burton
63 Cal. 36 (California Supreme Court, 1883)
Lord v. Lord
3 P. 96 (California Supreme Court, 1884)
Farmer v. Stephens
10 P. 671 (California Supreme Court, 1886)
McKinnie v. Shaffer
16 P. 509 (California Supreme Court, 1888)
Matter of the Estate of Ramon Romero
17 P. 434 (California Supreme Court, 1888)
Tyrrell v. Baldwin
21 P. 116 (California Supreme Court, 1889)
Demartin v. Demartin
24 P. 594 (California Supreme Court, 1890)
Hutchinson v. McNally
24 P. 1071 (California Supreme Court, 1890)
In re the Estate of Lahiff
24 P. 850 (California Supreme Court, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Coffey 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hayes-calsuppctsf-1895.