Estate of Hobart

187 P.2d 105, 82 Cal. App. 2d 502, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1232
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1947
DocketCiv. 13528
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 187 P.2d 105 (Estate of Hobart) 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 Hobart, 187 P.2d 105, 82 Cal. App. 2d 502, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1232 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

WARD, J.

This is an appeal from a portion of a decree determining heirship, wherein it was ordered and adjudged that all of the property described in the inventory and appraisement in the estate of Elsie Hobart, deceased, be distributed to Bertha Hagist, the mother of Elsie Hobart, except a small sum in cash which was distributed to Egeria Hobart Taft, a sister of the deceased husband of Elsie Hobart. Egeria Hobart Taft, the claimant in the heirship proceedings, is the appellant herein. The main question to be decided is the correctness of the court’s construction of Probate Code, section 229.

The petition for letters of administration filed by Edward F. Hagist sets forth “That Elsie Hobart, also known as Elsie Vogel Hobart, . . . died on the 26th of August, 1945 . . .; that deceased left estate . . . consisting of real and personal property.” Bertha Hagist was named the only heir. Two brothers and one sister were named as relatives. The petitioner, one of the brothers of the deceased, was appointed administrator of the estate.

The statement of claim of heirship alleged that “a true and correct inventory and appraisement” had been filed by the administrator and “That said Egeria Hobart Taft was and is a sister of Melmouth F. Hobart, who was the pre-deceased husband of said Elsie Hobart, the above named decedent; that said pre-deceased spouse of said decedent at the time of death of said decedent left him surviving no issue, no parent and no brother, sister, niece or nephew, excepting said Egeria Hobart Taft, only surviving sister, *504 and claimant above named; that said Elsie Hobart, decedent herein, left her surviving no spouse, and no issue and that her estate was partially community property of said deceased and said pre-deceased spouse and belonged to or went to said decedent by virtue of its community character on the death of said pre-deceased spouse or came to the decedent from said pre-deceased spouse by gift, descent, devise or bequest, or became vested in said decedent on the death of said predeceased spouse by right of survivorship in a homestead or in a joint tenancy between such predeceased spouse and the said decedent or was separate property of said predeceased spouse and came to said decedent from such predeceased spouse by gift, descent, devise or bequest. ’ ’

The property of the estate consisted of cash, securities and real estate. By consent of the parties the cash was divided equally between the claimant and the respondent Bertha • Hagist. The court found that securities should be distributed to the same respondent. The court also found that certain real estate was the separate property of Fred Hobart prior to his marriage to Elsie and was conveyed to her thereafter as sole grantee and that there was a good and valuable consideration for the particular conveyances and that none of •it came to Elsie Hobart in the manner and method described in Probate Code, section 229. Other listed properties -were found to be without the purview of the same probate section because of an insufficiency of evidence to uphold the • claim of the sister of the deceased husband. Finally, as to • two items, it was found that the property was the separate property of Elsie Hobart and did not come to her through Fred Hobart, whose full, name was Melmouth Frederick Hobart.

The burden of establishing a claim of heirship under section 229 is placed upon the claimant. (Estate of Beaty, 27 Cal.App.2d 745 [81 P.2d 1002]. A narration of the relationship of the parties appears in the following summary of the testimony of Bertha Hagist, the mother and heir of 'the decedent, Elsie Vogel Hobart. The witness first met Fred Hobart and his first wife 10 or 15 years previous to the trial. ’The back yards of the Hobart and Hagist houses were adjoining. Her daughter Elsie lived with her husband, Art •Vogel, and the families were very friendly. When Fred Hobart’s first wife was sick, Elsie took care of her. She died . approximately 10 years ago. After her death Fred Hobart became sick, and Elsie’s first husband told her, “Take care *505 of him, he is alone.” Fred Hobart lived alone in his house, with Elsie taking care of him; this arrangement lasted for about two years. Fred Hobart then moved in with Art and Elsie Vogel. Art Vogel died in 1938. Fred Hobart continued living in the Vogel home, with Elsie caring for him. Fred and Elsie were married in July, 1939. The following is from the transcript of the testimony of Bertha Hagist: “Q. . . . Why did he want Elsie to have the property ? A. She should have the property because he didn’t have nothing to do with his sister, that is what he said to me. Q. Anything else ? A. He says that she didn’t treat him right, she wasn’t all right, she was—I can’t say the word. Q. You can’t say the word? A. No. He was just against her, wouldn’t talk to her. Q. Well, how many conversations do you think you heard about property matters? A. Oh, many, you know, on a couple of times when I just came in, that they were talking. . . . Yes, he said nobody did so much for him than she did and for his wife, the first wife, yes.” Edward F. Hagist supplemented his mother’s testimony in relation to the location of the respective homes, the illness of Hobart’s first wife and the subsequent condition of Fred Hobart. He testified: “Fred said he had— well, he did say definitely he had everything taken care of to go to Elsie and that she would have no trouble and would avoid certain fees and court appearances, I believe is what they meant, that he wanted her to have everything he had, since there was no other people on earth that took care of Fred as Elsie and Art while he was living, and he would take care of the will before he was ever married to Elsie. . . . Well, there was the family discussed at times and he stated had he not married Elsie he would have bequeathed everything to the Mason’s Home. ... We often asked about family affairs and at that time he hadn’t seen or heard anything for about 17 years, 15 or 17 years, of his nearest relation besides his wife. He did receive two letters and he kept them and showed them and we asked him, ‘Well, why don’t you answer them?’ and he says, ‘No, I will wait a few days,’ and he waited a few days and he said no, and threw it down and said, ‘I wouldn’t answer it,’ and he did not answer it.”

It was agreed by the respective parties as to history and dates of transfer, that all of the securities should be considered in accordance with the evidence in reference to certain shares of preferred stock of the Pacific Gas and Electric *506 Company. The evidence discloses that prior to 1931, the securities stood in the name of Fred Hobart. In 1931, they were reissued in the names of Fred Hobart and his first wife, Elena Hobart, as joint tenants. Approximately a month after Elena’s death, in March of 1937, they were reissued in the name of Fred Hobart. Subsequently Fred Hobart married Elsie Vogel. In October, 1937, approximately 20 months prior to the marriage of Fred and Elsie, they were reissued in the names of Fred Hobart and Elsie Vogel as joint tenants. After the marriage they were reissued in the names of Fred Hobart and Elsie Hobart. Fred Hobart died. On July 26, 1943, approximately two years before Elsie’s death they were reissued in the name of Elsie Hobart.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P.2d 105, 82 Cal. App. 2d 502, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hobart-calctapp-1947.