Estate of Kennedy

149 P.2d 319, 64 Cal. App. 2d 757, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1123
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 1944
DocketCiv. 14195; Civ. 14306
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 149 P.2d 319 (Estate of Kennedy) 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 Kennedy, 149 P.2d 319, 64 Cal. App. 2d 757, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1123 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*759 DESMOND, P. J.

This case presents two appeals by Celia Kennedy, widow of John E. Kennedy, from orders in probate, which are to be disposed of as a single appeal, under order heretofore made. By the first order she was denied a family allowance requested after an earlier allowance had expired; by the second, the first and final account, and also a supplemental account, of the executor named in her deceased husband’s will were settled over appellant’s objections and the property of the estate on hand was distributed to Laura K. Rogers, sister of the deceased.

John E. Kennedy died on October 23, 1940, leaving an estate appraised at $4,940.75, consisting of $340.75 cash and one parcel of real estate, appraised at $4,600. In his will, dated September 30, 1935, Mr. Kennedy nominated his friend, Jack Waldron, executor without bond, and bequeathed his entire estate to his sister, and in the event she predeceased him, to her husband, A. B. Rogers. The will specifically disinherited testator’s wife “because of her abandonment of me shortly after our marriage in 1918, and with whom I have not lived or cohabited since 1918.” There were no children, issue of this marriage. Petition for probate of will was filed November 6, 1940, and it was admitted December 3, 1940.

The application for family allowance above mentioned was filed on September 21, 1942, two days before the date set for hearing upon the executor’s first and final account and petition for distribution. At the same time, appellant filed her exceptions to the account and petition, reciting that a family allowance of $100 per month for a period of one year from date of death of decedent had been granted on July 1, 1941, to expire October 23, 1941, and praying that the hearing upon the first and final account and petition for distribution be ordered off calendar “until objector herein is granted a family allowance for the period from October 23, 1941 to date of closing said estate and the same paid for in full.” The hearing on the final account was postponed from time to time and, ultimately, to March 23, 1943. Meanwhile, on October 14, 1942, an amendment to the exceptions was filed, in which the following recital appears: “That said first and final account, etc. shows on its face that certain alleged liabilities of the above entitled estate are still outstanding and have not as yet been liquidated and/or determined as follows to wit: determination as to the validity of the alleged claims *760 for $4,320.00 filed by A. B. Rogers and Laura Rogers for alleged board and room furnished the decedent, for the sum of $4,000.00 on an alleged note and mortgage filed by Laura K. Rogers and for a note in the sum of $1,000.00 filed by Laura K. Rogers.” On that same date, a hearing on the petition for family allowance was had before the same judge pro tempore who had granted the first allowance, namely, Miss Florence BischofE, a probate commissioner, and the petition was, by her, denied on December 29, 1942.

On March 1, 1943, a supplement to the first and final account was filed and, in her objection and exception to that supplement, appellant notified the court that on February 26, 194'3, she had filed a notice of appeal from the order denying the family allowance and that if her appeal proved successful it would be necessary that the real property be sold and the proceeds of sale used to pay the sum so allowed her as a family allowance. Notwithstanding this objection, the court, as we have stated heretofore, ordered the real property, which was found to be the separate property of the deceased, distributed to the respondent, Laura K. Rogers, requiring the distributee, as a condition to distribution, to “post a surety bond in the sum of $3,000.00 indemnifying the executor against any and all claims, demands, costs and attorneys’ fees to which he may be subject by reason of said distribution having been made prior to a final adjudication of the claims of said Celia Kennedy.”

The first and final account, instead of following the usual course, declaring that all claims against the estate had been paid and that the estate was, therefore, ready for distribution, contained the following statement: “That the time for filing creditor’s claims has expired and the only claims filed against this estate are those on behalf of Laura K. Rogers, sole legatee and devisee, and A. B. Rogers, her husband. That the sáid Laura K. Rogers and A. B. Rogers, by and through their attorney, John P. Tobin, have executed and delivered to your petitioner a certain document purporting to withdraw each and all of said claims in accordance with the terms of said document; that a true copy of the same is attached hereto marked Exhibit ‘A’ and made a part hereof by this reference, and the same is submitted to the Court for its consideration and such action thereon as to the Court seems just and proper in the premises.” The document referred to as Exhibit “A,” reads as follows: “To the Honorable, the Su *761 perior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles : The undersigned Laura K. Rogers, devisee and legatee of the above described estate, and A. B. Rogers, her husband, contingent devisee and legatee of above described estate, having heretofore filed certain lawsuits against the executor of said estate on claims rejected by him, together with an action for foreclosure of a mortgage on the only piece of real estate in said estáte, and they, and each of them, being the only legal beneficiaries under said estate, agree to file a dismissal of each of said actions, being numbered 464248 and 472-684 in above court, with the Honorable Jess Stephens, Judge Presiding in the Probate department of above court, upon the following conditions: 1. That the Petition for Distribution and the accounting of the Executor be approved; 2. That there be no further claims of any or all nature be filed or approved by Executor or by the Court, including any claim for Family Allowance or continuance thereof in any way shape or form; it is understood and agreed, however, that the payment of the statutory fee for counsel or the fee acceptable to Executor or such taxes as may be levied are not to be included in the first portion of No.. 2, hereof. 3. It is distinctly made a part of this agreement to enter dismissal that this agreement shall not constitute a dismissal of any rights actions or potential rights or potentional actions by the signatories hereof, nor is it intended by these presents to constitute a waiver of any and all rights therein, but that it is an agreement to file, in futuro, as aforesaid, dismissals in accordance with provisions of law relevant thereto forever relieving said Executor or said estate from any or all liability thereunder upon the happening of the foregoing contingencies.

A. B. Rogers

Laura K. Rogers”

When this account was filed, August 27, 1942, notice of hearing thereon, fixed for September 23, 1942, was served by the executor upon the contending parties. On September 21, 1942, two days before the date of the scheduled hearing, appellant filed her exceptions to that account and petition for distribution. Hearing upon the first and final account was postponed, as we have stated, to March 23, 1943. Meanwhile, Miss Bischoif had heard the petition for the extra family allowance and at that time the dismissals of suits, *762 mentioned in Exhibit

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Bluebook (online)
149 P.2d 319, 64 Cal. App. 2d 757, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-kennedy-calctapp-1944.