Estate of Larkin

416 P.2d 473, 65 Cal. 2d 60
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1966
DocketL. A. 27652; L. A. 27653
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 416 P.2d 473 (Estate of Larkin) 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 Larkin, 416 P.2d 473, 65 Cal. 2d 60 (Cal. 1966).

Opinion

TOBRINER, J.

The present eases, consolidated for appeal, require us to construe and apply section 259 of the Probate Code which restricts the freedom of Californians to leave their property to nonresident aliens. That statute makes the validity of such gifts conditional upon the existence of reciprocal rights, on the part of United States citizens, to share without discrimination in estates governed by the law of the foreign beneficiary’s own country.

The beneficiaries in the present eases are citizens and residents of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.). In both cases the trial court received extensive evidence, both testimonial and documentary, concerning the written law and actual practice of the Soviet Union in matters of inheritance involving citizens of the United States, Without contradiction that evidence establishes that United States citizens share in Soviet estates upon the same terms and conditions as do Soviet citizens and that United States citizens have received, and from all present indications will continue to receive, economically significant interests in Soviet estates. Accordingly, we conclude that the requisite reciprocity has been established and that the wishes of the decedents may be honored.

The appellant in both of the present eases is the State of California, which seeks to escheat to itself the property of the decedents. 1 It relies upon Probate Code section 259.2, which provides for the escheat of gifts which fail for want of the reciprocity required by Probate Code section 259, if there are no other qualified takers.

Section 259 conditions the validity of testamentary gifts to nonresident aliens upon the ‘ ‘ existence of a reciprocal right upon the part of citizens of the United States to take . . . property upon the same terms and conditions as residents and citizens of the respective countries of which such *64 aliens are residents. . . . ” 2 By clear and unambiguous language the statute evidences a legislative determination to prevent the passage of California property to the residents of nations which discriminate against our citizens in matters of inheritance. Nothing in the language or history of the statute suggests that the Legislature, in restricting the freedom of our citizens to dispose of their property, sought to impose upon the whole world the system of property ownership and descent which prevails in California.

The reported decisions of our courts confirm the view that section 259 seeks equality of treatment for our citizens rather than identity of substantive law or governmental structure. (Estate of Knutzen (1948) 31 Cal.2d 573 [191 P.2d 747]; Estate of Kennedy (1951) 106 Cal.App.2d 621, 629 [235 P.2d 837] ; Estate of Reihs (1951) 102 Cal.App.2d 260 [227 P.2d 564].) As the court noted in Estate of Miller (1951) 104 Cal.App.2d 1, 12 [230 P.2d 667], “ [S]ection 259 does not require that foreign countries have the same judicial system as ours, nor even an independent judiciary. All that it requires is that there be no discrimination shown in inheritance matters as between the nationals of that country and the residents and citizens of our own. ’ ’

Other authorities concur in this view of section 259. Thus the Oregon Supreme Court, in denying the claims of certain German heirs for want of the reciprocity required by the Oregon statute, carefully distinguished that statute from our own, noting that the two differ significantly in their language. The court concluded that the California statute “determines the reciprocal quality of rights by comparing the inheritance right of Americans with the inheritance rights of residents of the foreign country, whereas Oregon compares the rights of Americans to inherit in Germany with the rights of Germans to inherit in Oregon.” (In re Krachler’s Estate (1953) 199 Ore. 448 [263 P.2d 769, 776].) A commentator notes that, “The majority among the reciprocity statutes content themselves with securing equal treatment of their citizens abroad with the nationals of the respective countries. The reciprocity provision in the California Surrogate [sic] Code ... is of this type.” (Lenhoff, Reciprocity in Function (1953) 15 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 44, 53.) Similarly, California Estate Administration (Cont. Ed. Bar) page 708, declares: “Section 259 uses *65 the words ‘reciprocal right’ to mean merely that United States residents and citizens have the same rights as residents and citizens of the alien’s country to take from estates in that country. It does not require that equal rights be granted by the inheritance laws of the two countries.” (See also Recommendation and Study Relating to the Right of Nonresident Aliens to Inherit (1959) 2 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. p. B-16.)

Though section 259 requires only the demonstration of a “reciprocal right” on the part of our citizens “to take property upon the same terms and conditions” as residents of the foreign country itself, we doubt that mere equality of treatment would suffice. We would almost certainly not find the requisite reciprocity with respect to a country which permitted no inheritance at all, or which made the enforcement of inheritance rights subject to official whim or caprice. Though the statute speaks in terms of equal treatment, we believe that it necessarily imports a requirement that the inheritance rights recognized in the foreign country meet some minimal standard of economic substantiality and that it be shown that such rights are regularly recognized in practice.

On the other hand, the fact that another country recognizes property interests of different scope and content than those which prevail in California, establishes its government on a different pattern than our own, or embraces a political philosophy rejected by our people, does not necessarily negate the existence of reciprocal inheritance rights. Section 259 does not confer upon our courts a broad charter to invalidate gifts made by our citizens to the residents of countries whose patterns of government, political philosophies, or domestic or foreign policies we dislike. We may require no more than a demonstration that the law of the foreign country, as written and as consistently applied in practice, enables our citizens to inherit economically significant property interests on terms of full equality with the residents of that country.

Section 1875 of the Code of Civil Procedure now provides that questions concerning the nature and content of foreign law constitute matters of law, as to which our courts should take judicial notice. In discharging their new responsibilities under the statute, the courts are empowered to “resort ... to appropriate books or documents of reference” and to solicit “the advice of persons learned in the subject matter.”

The records in the present cases contain voluminous *66

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416 P.2d 473, 65 Cal. 2d 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-larkin-cal-1966.