Estate of Klepsch

97 P.2d 987, 36 Cal. App. 2d 483, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 742
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1940
DocketCiv. 11224
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 97 P.2d 987 (Estate of Klepsch) 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 Klepsch, 97 P.2d 987, 36 Cal. App. 2d 483, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 742 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

Henrietta Akers appeals from a judgment dismissing her petition for the revocation of the will of Emilie Klepsch, deceased, and from the order denying her motion for a new trial. The last order is not appealable, and the appeal therefrom should be dismissed. (Estate of Ivey, 110 Cal. App. 561 [294 Pac. 420].)

Emilie Klepsch died testate in San Francisco in April, 1937. On October 6, 1937, a will of the deceased, naming Mary Veitch and John A. Koehler as principal legatees, and not mentioning Henrietta Akers, was admitted to probate, *485 and Mary Veitch was appointed executrix. On November 12, 1937, appellant, Henrietta Akers, claiming to be the adopted daughter of the decedent, filed a petition for the revocation of the probate of the will on the grounds that the same had been executed as the result of duress, menace, fraud and undue influence of the principal legatees; that the decedent was of unsound mind at the time of the execution of the will, and that the will does not bear the true signature of the decedent.

On the trial of the will contest, the trial judge properly ruled that the issue as to whether the contestant was a person interested in the estate should be tried preliminary to the trial of the contest. In support of her contention that she was the adopted daughter of the decedent, appellant offered in evidence the judgment roll in a certain proceeding instituted by one Rose Cuneo to restore the alleged destroyed records of the adoption of appellant by decedent. This judgment of restoration of the adoption papers was recorded November 9, 1937, and three days later the present will contest was instituted. It appeared from the judgment roll that the restoration proceedings had been instituted by a stranger to the proceedings and that no service or notice was given to .the executrix of the will, to the legatees, or to any person other than to Henrietta Akers. When this judgment roll was offered in evidence the trial judge refused to admit it on the ground that the judgment was void on its face. The trial judge offered appellant full opportunity to offer other evidence of the fact of adoption, but this offer was refused. The trial court thereupon, on motion of respondents, dismissed the petition to revoke the probate of the will.

Appellant contends that at the time the judgment roll in the restoration proceeding was presented in the will contest, the judgment of restoration had become final; that respondents at least had constructive knowledge of the restoration judgment a few days after it was rendered when the will contest was filed by appellant; that respondents did not move in any court to have the judgment of restoration set aside, did not move under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, nor bring an independent suit in equity to have the judgment set aside; that these three remedies were the only remedies open to respondents; that a collateral attack cannot be now made on the restoration judgment. Respondents re *486 ply that the judgment of restoration is void on its face, and therefore was totally ineffectual for any purpose. With this contention we agree.

The judgment roll that was refused admission into evidence discloses the following:

The petition for the restoration of the adoption papers was not filed by the appellant Henrietta Akers, but was filed by one Rose Cuneo, who alleges that she is a “personal friend and well acquainted” with Henrietta Sehuhrer, who is now Henrietta Akers, and also well acquainted with the real mother and father of Henrietta, as well as with the decedent and her husband, and “as such friend of the respective parties named herein, is probably the only person who is familiar or remembers anything in relation to the adoption of” appellant. It should be mentioned that, at the time this petition was filed, the blood mother and father of Henrietta were dead, as well as decedent and her husband, and that Henrietta Akers was then an adult, and, so far as the record shows, laboring under no disability of any kind. There are no other allegations in the petition showing any interest of Rose Cuneo in this petition, nor any allegation that the petition was brought on behalf of Henrietta Akers.

The petition then recites that in June, 1897, a proper petition for the adoption of Henrietta Akers was filed in San Francisco by Emilie Klepsch and her husband; that the petition came on for hearing before Judge Coffey, then a judge of the Superior Court in and for the City and County of San Francisco; that petitioner Rose Cuneo, the mother and father of Henrietta, Henrietta, and Mr. and Mrs. Klepsch were all present in court at the hearing of the adoption proceeding; that in open court the proper documents were signed and Judge Coffey signed the decree of adoption. The petition then recites that all of the original documents relating to the adoption were destroyed in the 1906 fire. Petitioner Rose Cuneo prays that the documents be restored.

The statute under which the court purported to act in restoring the adoption record is entitled: “An act relating to the restoration of court records which have been lost, injured or destroyed by conflagration or other public calamity.” (Stats. Ex. Sess. 1906, p. 73; Deering’s Gen. Laws [1937] Act 1028.) Section 1 of the act provides for restoration of destroyed documents when a certified copy exists. *487 Section 2 is the section applicable to the present ease, it covering situations where a certified copy does not exist. So far as pertinent here, this section provides that whenever in any action or special proceeding any court record is lost, injured or destroyed by any public calamity, and no certified copy exists “any party or person interested therein may make written application to the court to which the same belongs, verified by affidavit or affidavits, showing such loss, injury or destruction . . . and that such loss, injury, or destruction, unless supplied or remedied will or may result in damage to the party or person making such application, and thereupon such court shall cause notice of such application to be given, as provided in section ten hundred and ten to ten hundred and seventeen inclusive of the Code of Civil Procedure”. (Italics ours.) The act then provides that if satisfied by the showing made, the court shall make an order restoring the lost, injured or destroyed record “which order shall have the same effect that such original would have had if the same had not been lost, injured or destroyed, so far as concerns the party or persons making such application, and the persons who shall have been notified, as provided for in this section”; that judgments and records in in rem proceedings may be restored “upon like notice to all persons who have appeared therein, and notice by publication or postings to all persons who have not appeared for not less than ten days, as the court may order, and the same when restored shall have the same effect upon all persons who have been personally served with notice of such application as the original, and as to all other persons the same shall be prima facie evidence of the contents of such original”.

This statute is but one of a series of acts passed as a result of the destruction of the public records of San Francisco by the fire of 1906.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 P.2d 987, 36 Cal. App. 2d 483, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-klepsch-calctapp-1940.