fornia concerns the right of petitioner Ida Kraemer, a citizen and resident of East Germany, to inherit all or any part of her son’s estate under the provisions of section 259 of the Probate Code of California.
The superior court sitting in probate found that petitioner Ida Kraemer is the mother of Harry Kurt Kraemer and the sole heir entitled to distribution of his whole estate consisting of real and personal property. During the court hearing on her petition to determine heirship it was established that decedent was a naturalized citizen of the United States of America and at the time of his death was a resident of the County of Los Angeles.
[717]*717We adopt certain portions of the Memorandum of Opinion of the trial judge, the Honorable Joseph H. Call, as the opinion of this court 1
“It is strongly contended by the petitioner, Ida Kraemer, that section 259 of the Probate Code is in conflict with and therefore inoperative, as against the provisions of the 1923 Treaty with Germany.3 And, further, that section 259 of the [718]*718California Probate Code is invalid because it is an invasion by the State into the field of foreign affairs, which is exclusively reserved for and preempted by the federal government.
“These questions were originally determined by the United States Supreme Court in Clark v. Allen (1947) 331 U.S. 503 [91 L.Ed. 1633, 67 S.Ct. 1431, 170 A.L.R 953]; 331 U.S. at p. 516 [91 L.Ed. at p. 1645, 67 S.Ct. at p. 1438, 170 A.L.R. 953], In that case it was held in part that the rights secured by the 1923 Treaty with Germany, as to realty, were in terms of a right to sell within a specified time, plus a right- to withdraw the proceeds[;] that those rights extended to German heirs of ‘any person’ holding realty in the United States, regardless of citizenship; and that the disposition of realty is governed by the treaty, and that its provisions prevail over any conflict with provisions of the California law.
[719]*719their personal property within the territories of the other country, and that it does not cover personalty located in the United States which a United States citizen undertakes to leave to German Nationals’. (Italics added.)
“It was further held that sections 259 and 259.2 of the California Probate Code were not unconstituitional as an extension of State power into the field of foreign affairs exclusively reserved to the federal government, and that California had not entered into the forbidden domain of negotiating with a foreign country or of making a compact with it contrary to article I, section 10 of the federal Constitution.
“In the Estate of Knutzen (1948) 31 Cal.2d 573 [191 P.2d 747] a case involving the construction of section 259 of the Probate Code, et seq., the California Supreme Court carefully analyzed and recognized the holding in Clark v. Allen, supra. In that connection it is important to note paragraph 5 of the ruling of California Supreme Court at page 578 in which the court states:
“Paragraph 5: ‘While §259.2 as enacted in 1941, and as reenacted in 1947, provided for escheat if no heirs were found eligible to take the property, the primary purpose of the legislation was not to establish a procedure for escheat or for defeasance of any interest of nonresident aliens to inherit. Hence the proper construction is that sections 259 et seq., are laws of succession, that they constitute limitations on the power of aliens to inherit and the nonresident aliens are made ineligible to inherit, and acquire no rights in the estate in the absence of reciprocal rights of American citizens to inherit property in the country in which such aliens are resident.’
“In the case of Zschernig v. Miller (1968) 389 U.S. 429 [19 L.Ed.2d 683, 88 S.Ct. 664] the United States Supreme Court resolved a factual and a legal situation very much conforming to the case at issue. The Zschernig case involved proceedings by East German next-of-kin of an Oregon intestate against the administrator and Oregon officials for determination of heirship in favor of the next-of-kin.
‘ ‘ The Oregon State Board had requested that the property be escheated to the State of Oregon. The Circuit Court in Multnomah County decreed that the property be escheated to the State, and the next-of-kin appealed; the Oregon Supreme Court (243 Oregon p. 567) modified the decree, but held that the next-of-kin could take the realty involved but not the personalty, and the next-of-kin appealed. The appellants, or [720]*720next-of-kin, are the sole heirs of the decedent, and the decedent was a resident of Oregon.
“Justice Douglas speaking for the majority of .the United States Supreme Court, in analyzing the Oregon Revised Statute, which stated conditions under which an alien not residing in the United States or its territories can take property in Oregon through succession or testamentary disposition, held that the Oregon Revised Statute, section 111.0705 constituted an intrusion by the State into the field of foreign affairs which the Constitution entrusts to the President and Congress. (Emphasis added.)
“In arriving at this conclusion it was pointed out by Justice Douglas among other things that the Oregon Revised Statute, supra, provides for escheat where the' nonresident claims real or personal property unless the nonresident establishes certain requirements. One of the requirements is, the existence of a reciprocal right of a United States citizen to take property on the same terms as a citizen or resident of the foreign country. (See footnote 5(1) (a).)
“In this respect it is to be noted that this requirement is a substantial restatement or duplication of the requirement set forth in section 259 of the Probate Code of the State of California.
“The Oregon Supreme Court had held that the next-of-kin in East Germany could take the Oregon realty involved by reason of Article IV, of the 1923 Treaty with Germany. (Footnote 3, supra.) But by reason of the same article as construed [721]*721in Clark v. Allen the next-of-kin in East Germany could not take the personalty located, in the United States. (Emphasis added.)
“Justice Douglas, speaking for the majority of the Court, points out that the United States Department of Justice, appearing as amicus, submitted that although the 1923 Treaty is still in force, Clark v. Allen should be overruled insofar as it construed the personalty provision of Article IY. The portion of Article IY requested to be overruled by the Justice Department speaks of the right of ‘nationals of either High Contracting Party’ to dispose of ‘their personal property of every kind within the territories of the other. ’
“In this connection the Court reaffirmed its position that such literal language and its long consistent construction as held in Clark v. Allen, ‘. .
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fornia concerns the right of petitioner Ida Kraemer, a citizen and resident of East Germany, to inherit all or any part of her son’s estate under the provisions of section 259 of the Probate Code of California.
The superior court sitting in probate found that petitioner Ida Kraemer is the mother of Harry Kurt Kraemer and the sole heir entitled to distribution of his whole estate consisting of real and personal property. During the court hearing on her petition to determine heirship it was established that decedent was a naturalized citizen of the United States of America and at the time of his death was a resident of the County of Los Angeles.
[717]*717We adopt certain portions of the Memorandum of Opinion of the trial judge, the Honorable Joseph H. Call, as the opinion of this court 1
“It is strongly contended by the petitioner, Ida Kraemer, that section 259 of the Probate Code is in conflict with and therefore inoperative, as against the provisions of the 1923 Treaty with Germany.3 And, further, that section 259 of the [718]*718California Probate Code is invalid because it is an invasion by the State into the field of foreign affairs, which is exclusively reserved for and preempted by the federal government.
“These questions were originally determined by the United States Supreme Court in Clark v. Allen (1947) 331 U.S. 503 [91 L.Ed. 1633, 67 S.Ct. 1431, 170 A.L.R 953]; 331 U.S. at p. 516 [91 L.Ed. at p. 1645, 67 S.Ct. at p. 1438, 170 A.L.R. 953], In that case it was held in part that the rights secured by the 1923 Treaty with Germany, as to realty, were in terms of a right to sell within a specified time, plus a right- to withdraw the proceeds[;] that those rights extended to German heirs of ‘any person’ holding realty in the United States, regardless of citizenship; and that the disposition of realty is governed by the treaty, and that its provisions prevail over any conflict with provisions of the California law.
[719]*719their personal property within the territories of the other country, and that it does not cover personalty located in the United States which a United States citizen undertakes to leave to German Nationals’. (Italics added.)
“It was further held that sections 259 and 259.2 of the California Probate Code were not unconstituitional as an extension of State power into the field of foreign affairs exclusively reserved to the federal government, and that California had not entered into the forbidden domain of negotiating with a foreign country or of making a compact with it contrary to article I, section 10 of the federal Constitution.
“In the Estate of Knutzen (1948) 31 Cal.2d 573 [191 P.2d 747] a case involving the construction of section 259 of the Probate Code, et seq., the California Supreme Court carefully analyzed and recognized the holding in Clark v. Allen, supra. In that connection it is important to note paragraph 5 of the ruling of California Supreme Court at page 578 in which the court states:
“Paragraph 5: ‘While §259.2 as enacted in 1941, and as reenacted in 1947, provided for escheat if no heirs were found eligible to take the property, the primary purpose of the legislation was not to establish a procedure for escheat or for defeasance of any interest of nonresident aliens to inherit. Hence the proper construction is that sections 259 et seq., are laws of succession, that they constitute limitations on the power of aliens to inherit and the nonresident aliens are made ineligible to inherit, and acquire no rights in the estate in the absence of reciprocal rights of American citizens to inherit property in the country in which such aliens are resident.’
“In the case of Zschernig v. Miller (1968) 389 U.S. 429 [19 L.Ed.2d 683, 88 S.Ct. 664] the United States Supreme Court resolved a factual and a legal situation very much conforming to the case at issue. The Zschernig case involved proceedings by East German next-of-kin of an Oregon intestate against the administrator and Oregon officials for determination of heirship in favor of the next-of-kin.
‘ ‘ The Oregon State Board had requested that the property be escheated to the State of Oregon. The Circuit Court in Multnomah County decreed that the property be escheated to the State, and the next-of-kin appealed; the Oregon Supreme Court (243 Oregon p. 567) modified the decree, but held that the next-of-kin could take the realty involved but not the personalty, and the next-of-kin appealed. The appellants, or [720]*720next-of-kin, are the sole heirs of the decedent, and the decedent was a resident of Oregon.
“Justice Douglas speaking for the majority of .the United States Supreme Court, in analyzing the Oregon Revised Statute, which stated conditions under which an alien not residing in the United States or its territories can take property in Oregon through succession or testamentary disposition, held that the Oregon Revised Statute, section 111.0705 constituted an intrusion by the State into the field of foreign affairs which the Constitution entrusts to the President and Congress. (Emphasis added.)
“In arriving at this conclusion it was pointed out by Justice Douglas among other things that the Oregon Revised Statute, supra, provides for escheat where the' nonresident claims real or personal property unless the nonresident establishes certain requirements. One of the requirements is, the existence of a reciprocal right of a United States citizen to take property on the same terms as a citizen or resident of the foreign country. (See footnote 5(1) (a).)
“In this respect it is to be noted that this requirement is a substantial restatement or duplication of the requirement set forth in section 259 of the Probate Code of the State of California.
“The Oregon Supreme Court had held that the next-of-kin in East Germany could take the Oregon realty involved by reason of Article IV, of the 1923 Treaty with Germany. (Footnote 3, supra.) But by reason of the same article as construed [721]*721in Clark v. Allen the next-of-kin in East Germany could not take the personalty located, in the United States. (Emphasis added.)
“Justice Douglas, speaking for the majority of the Court, points out that the United States Department of Justice, appearing as amicus, submitted that although the 1923 Treaty is still in force, Clark v. Allen should be overruled insofar as it construed the personalty provision of Article IY. The portion of Article IY requested to be overruled by the Justice Department speaks of the right of ‘nationals of either High Contracting Party’ to dispose of ‘their personal property of every kind within the territories of the other. ’
“In this connection the Court reaffirmed its position that such literal language and its long consistent construction as held in Clark v. Allen, ‘. . . does not cover personalty located in this country and which an American citizen undertakes to leave to German nationals. ’
“It is significant to note that the Court refused to accept the invitation to re-examine their ruling in Clark v. Allen, stating that, ‘For we conclude that the history.and operation of this Oregon statute makes clear that § 111.070 is an intrusion by the State into the field, of foreign affairs which the Constitution entrusts to the President and the Congress. ’ (Emphasis added.)
“The Supreme Court then, referring to Clark v. Allen, stated that:
“ ‘We held in Clark v. Allen that a general reciprocity clause did not on its face intrude on the federal domain. ... We noted that the California statute, then a recent enactment, would have only “some incidental or. indirect effect in foreign countries.. . .”’
‘ ‘ The Court then proceeds to state:
[722]*722caprice of government officials, whether the representation of consuls, ambassadors, and other representatives of foreign nations are credible or made in good faith, Avhether there is in the actual administration in the particular foreign system of law any element of confiscation.’ (Emphasis added.)
‘‘ And of special interest respecting the above quotation see the recent cases of Estate of Larkin (1966) 65 Cal.2d 60 [52 Cal.Rptr. 441, 416 P.2d 473], and Estate of Chichernea (1967) 66 Cal.2d 83 [57 Cal.Rptr. 135, 424 P.2d 687], In the Larkin ease, and in the Ghiehernea case our California Supreme Court upheld the right, in contemplation of section 259 of the Probate Code, of Californians to leave their estates to beneficiaries residing in the Soviet Union, and in the Ohichernea case the Court likewise upheld the right of Californians to leave their property to persons residing in Romania. In coming to this conclusion in the Larkin case the California Supreme Court stated:
“ ‘Section 259 does not require that foreign governments have the same judicial system as ours, nor even an independent judiciary. All that it requires is that there be no discrimination shoAvn.in inheritance matters as between the nationals of that 'country and the residents and citizens of our oavu. ’
“The conclusions, however, of the United States Supreme Court in the Zschernig case are that such statutory restrictions do constitute an intrusion by that State into the field of foreign affairs which the Constitution entrusts to the President and the Congress, and further the Court stated that:
“ ‘. . . Yet, such forbidden state actiAdty . . . has infected each of the three provisions of Section 111.070 as applied by Oregon. ’ (Emphasis added.)
“It must again be remembered that subdivision 1, of the Oregon Revised Statutes respecting reciprocal rights is, in substance, a restatement of section 259 of the California Probate Code and if State activity has infected subdivision 1 of the Oregon Revised Statute it has certainly infected section 259 of the California Probate Code. And it might be further pointed out that the United States Supreme Court in Zschernig v. Miller, supra, in coming to this conclusion further states:
“ ‘As we read the decisions that followed in the wake of Clark v. Allen, we find that they radiate some of the attitudes of the “cold war,” where the search is for the “democracy quotient” of a foreign regime as opposed to the Marxist [723]*723theory.6 . . . And this has led into minute inquiries concerning the actual administration of foreign law, into the credibility of foreign diplomatic statements, and into speculation whether the fact that because some received delivery of funds should “not preclude wonderment as to how many may have been denied ‘ the right to receive.’ . . .” ’
‘‘ The Court, thereafter, goes on to state:
“ ‘As one reads the Oregon decisions, it seems that foreign policy attitudes, the freezing or thawing of the “cold war,” and the like are the real desiderata.8 Yet they, of course, are [724]*724matters for the Federal Government, not for the probate courts. ’
“It may be noted that in footnote 8, as just indicated, the Court indicates that such attitudes are not confined to the Oregon courts, and states that representative samples from other states include statements from the New York courts, Pennsylvania courts, as well as California. In the latter respect the footnote is quoted as follows:
“ ‘A California Judge, upon being asked if he would hear argument on the law, replied, ‘No, I won’t send any money to Russia!’ The judge took ‘judicial notice that Russia kicks the United States in the teeth all the time,’ and told counsel for the Soviet claimant that ‘I would think your firm would feel it honor bound to withdraw as representing the Russian Government. No American can make it too> strong.’ Berman, Soviet Heirs in American Courts (1962) 62 Colum. L.Rev. 257, fn. 3.
“Thereafter, the Court in the Zschernig case in again discussing all three parts of section 111.070 (Oregon Revised Statute) concludes as follows:
“ ‘This is as true of (1) (a) of § 111.070 as it is of (1) (b) and (1) (e).’
“And thereafter in paragraphs 4 and 5 the United States Supreme Court further concludes that:
“ ‘ It seems inescapable that the type of probate law that Oregon enforces affects international relations in a persistent and subtle way. The practice of state courts in withholding remittances to legatees residing in Communist countries or in preventing them from assigning them is" notorious.10 The several States, of course, have traditionally regulated the descent and distribution of estates. But those regulations must give way if-they impair the effective exercise of the Nation's foreign policy. . . . The Present Oregon law is not as gross an intrusion in the Federal domain as those others might he. Yet, as we have said, it has a direct impact upon foreign relations and may well adversely affect the power of the central government to deal with those problems. The Oregon law does indeed illustrate the dangers which are involved if each State, speaking through its probate courts, is permitted to establish its own foreign policy. ’ ‘Reversed. ’
[725]*725“From this holding it is clear that the United States Supreme Court has clearly held that the Oregon Revised Statute section 111.070, and each subdivision or part thereof, . is an intrusion by the State into the field of foreign affairs which the Constitution entrusts to the President and the Congress. ’
“And consequently, under the same rationale, section 259 of the Probate Code of the State of California,, which is substantially a restatement of subdivision 1 of the Oregon Revised Statute, must also fall, and for the same reason.
“It was held in' Clark v. Allen that the rights secured by the 1923 Treaty, as to realty, were in terms of a right to sell within a specified time, with a right to withdraw the proceeds . . . and that these rights extended to German heirs of ‘any person’ holding realty in the United States, regardless of citizenship, . . . and the disposition of realty is governed by the treaty, and its provisions prevail over any conflicting provision of California law. It was further held that as to personalty, that the treaty refers only to the rights of nationals of either country to dispose of their personal property in the other country, and that it does not cover personalty located in the United States which a United States citizen undertakes to leave to German Nationals. (Emphasis added.)
“It follows that the right of alien heirs under the Treaty, — ‘Nationals of either High Contracting Party . . .’ to dispose personal property of every kind within the territories of the other, . . does not cover personalty located in this country and which an American citizen-national undertakes to leave to German nationals.’ On the other hand, if the decedent is a citizen-national (oT non-citizen-national) of the United States of America, and the personalty is located in this country, the question of its inheritance or succession then, is determined by local or State law, Lyeth v. Hoey, 305 U.S. 188 [83 L.Ed. 119, 59 S.Ct. 155, 119 A.L.R. 410]; and Irving Trust Co. v. Day, 314 U.S. 556 [86 L.Ed. 452, 62 S.Ct. 398, 137 A.L.R. 1093]; People v. Roach, 76 Cal. 294 [18 P. 407].
“Where these rights may be affected by an overriding fed-' eral policy, as where the Treaty makes different or conflicting arrangements, the State law must give way. But, as in this case, where there is no treaty governing the rights to succession to the personal property the disposition or the right of succession is governed by the laws of the State of California.
[726]*726‘ ‘ Section 671 of the Civil Code respecting the taking hold, or disposing of real or personal property provides as follows:
“Who May Own Property. Any person, whether citizen or alien, may take, hold and dispose of property real or personal, within this state.
‘‘ Section 225 of the Probate Code respecting"succession provides in part as follows:
“No Surviving Spouse Nor Issue. If the decedent leaves neither issue nor spouse, the estate goes to his parents in equal shares, or if either is dead to the survivor. . .
“Section 1026 of the Probate Code respecting the succession by a nonresident alien to property in California provides as follows:
“Alien Succeeding To Property. A nonresident alien who becomes entitled to property by succession must appear and demand the property within five years from the time of succession ; otherwise, his rights are barred and the property shall be disposed of as escheated property.
“From these sections it is clear that Ida Kraemer, the mother of decedent and Petitioner for Determination of Heir-ship, is entitled to full distribution of the within estate of Harry Kurt Kraemer, and that the State of California is entitled to no right or title therein or distribution thereof.”6
The judgment is affirmed.
Stephens, Acting P. J., and Reppy, J., concurred.