Estate of Hogemann

403 P.2d 405, 63 Cal. 2d 131, 45 Cal. Rptr. 149
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1965
DocketL.A. 27773
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 403 P.2d 405 (Estate of Hogemann) 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 Hogemann, 403 P.2d 405, 63 Cal. 2d 131, 45 Cal. Rptr. 149 (Cal. 1965).

Opinion

63 Cal.2d 131 (1965)
403 P.2d 405
45 Cal. Rptr. 149

Estate of FRIEDA HOGEMANN, Deceased.
UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK, as Administrator With the Will Annexed, etc., et al., Petitioners and Respondents,
v.
ROBERT F. KENNEDY, as Attorney General of the United States, Claimant and Appellant.

Docket No. L.A. 27773.

Supreme Court of California. In Bank.

July 2, 1965.

*132 John W. Douglas, Assistant Attorney General (United States), Francis C. Whelan and Manuel Real, United States Attorneys, Morton Hollander, Sherman L. Cohn, Pauline B. Heller and Robert V. Zener for Claimant and Appellant.

Powers, Himrod & Pepys and Eric C. Pepys for Petitioners and Respondents.

MOSK, J.

The Attorney General of the United States, as successor to the Alien Property Custodian, appeals from an order divesting the United States of its interest in the estate of an enemy alien pursuant to Public Law 87-846 (50 U.S.C. App. § 41).

The decedent, then a resident and national of Germany, died testate in 1942, bequeathing her residuary estate in specified proportions to certain near relatives. The property located in California consisted of a modest amount of cash and securities. In 1950 the United States Attorney General, acting pursuant to the Trading With the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. §§ 1 et seq.) and various executive orders issued thereunder, executed Vesting Order No. 16217, vesting in him for the benefit of the United States "all right, title, interest and claim of any kind or character whatsoever" of six legatees under decedent's will who were residents and nationals of Germany, amounting to nineteen twenty-fourths of the residuary estate.

*133 The first administration having been declared incompetent, a California bank was substituted in 1958 as administrator with the will annexed. In September 1960 the bank presented its account and petition for distribution. On October 27, 1960, the court decreed distribution of that portion of the estate not affected by the vesting order; but as the German legatees requested additional time to investigate the "continued effectiveness" of the vesting order,[1] the court withheld distribution of the remaining nineteen twenty-fourths of the estate here in issue.

In October 1962 Congress enacted Public Law 87-846, which provides in relevant part that "all rights and interests of individuals in estates ... vested under this [Trading With the Enemy] Act ... which have not become payable or deliverable to or have not vested in possession in the Attorney General prior to December 31, 1961, are divested; ..." (50 U.S.C. App. § 41.)[2]

In September 1963 the administrator presented its final account and the court entered the order from which this appeal *134 is taken, divesting the United States of its interest in the estate purportedly pursuant to Public Law 87-846.

The main issue we need resolve is whether that portion of the estate subjected to the vesting order of 1950 became "payable or deliverable to or ... vested in possession" in the Attorney General prior to the cutoff date of December 31, 1961. Respondents (the German legatees) take the position that under California law (Prob. Code, § 300) the property in an estate remains "subject to the possession of the executor or administrator," and therefore subject to the control of the superior court, until the decree of distribution; that no such decree has been entered as to the nineteen twenty-fourths of the estate here in issue; and hence that such portion of the estate never became payable or deliverable to or vested in possession in the Attorney General.

[1] At the time of the first hearing, however, the estate was not in such an unsettled condition as respondents assert. In its order of October 27, 1960, the court found (1) that all notices required by law for settlement of the estate had been given, (2) that the proposed account of the administrator was correct, (3) that the time for filing claims against the estate had duly expired, (4) that all taxes and debts of the estate, and administration expenses other than commissions, had been paid, and (5) that "except for a determination of the rights, if any, of the legatees named in the Will of said decedent whose interests have been affected by said vesting order issued by the Attorney General of the United States, said estate is otherwise in a condition to be closed and by reason thereof there may be distributed at this time ... that portion of the estate distributable to persons whose interests are not affected by said vesting order...." (Italics added.) The clear implication of these findings is that although actual distribution of the share vested in the United States was temporarily withheld, the entire estate was then "distributable" as far as California probate law was concerned.

Respondents emphasize that a principal purpose of a decree of distribution is the determination by the court of the persons to whom the estate passes and their respective shares (Prob. Code, § 1021), and argue that because no such decree was entered as to the nineteen twenty-fourths of the estate here in issue we cannot know to whom and in what amounts the property was thus distributable. The argument, however, is refuted by the realities of the case. The decedent's will was not ambiguous in this regard, and the administrator's first account *135 listed by name "the persons to whom said Estate is to be distributed ... and the proportions thereof to which each is entitled." The court adopted that listing as to the legatees whose shares were ordered distributed, and there is no reason to suspect that the list was any less acceptable as to those whose shares were affected by the vesting order. The record is devoid, in fact, of any dispute over either the identity or the shares of the German legatees.

[2] Of course, in the absence of a decree distributing the share vested in the United States, that share was not reduced to physical possession by the Attorney General. But in the light of the legislative history of Public Law 87-846 that fact appears irrelevant. In the form first introduced in Congress the bill provided for divestment of interests which had not been "reduced to possession," i.e., physically collected, by the Attorney General. Subsequently, the Department of Justice, speaking through Deputy Attorney General (now Justice) Byron White, requested that the language of the bill be amended to save interests still in the process of collection; the interests to be divested would be those not collectible until the occurrence of some future event, such as income interests (which cannot be collected until the periodic payment date) or remainder interests (which cannot be collected until death or passage of time terminates the intervening estate). The language proposed by the Department of Justice to effect this change was adopted verbatim by Congress in the final form of Public Law 87-846. Yet under respondents' view this deliberate alteration of wording would serve only the trivial purpose, in the present context, of guarding against the possibility that the cutoff date might occur for some estates during the brief period between entry of the decree of distribution and the writing of a check by the administrator in accordance with that decree. Nothing in the language or history of the statute compels such a narrow limitation of its scope.

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Bluebook (online)
403 P.2d 405, 63 Cal. 2d 131, 45 Cal. Rptr. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hogemann-cal-1965.