Estate of Loyd

167 P. 157, 175 Cal. 699, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 746
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1917
DocketL. A. Nos. 4488, 4489.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 167 P. 157 (Estate of Loyd) 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 Loyd, 167 P. 157, 175 Cal. 699, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 746 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

By the first of these appeals this court is asked to review an order made by the court in probate, in terms directing the executors of the estate of George E. Loyd, deceased, who died testate, who at the time of his death was a resident of the state of California and whose will was pro *701 bated in this state, “to sell all of the lands owned by said deceased at the time of his death in the state of Iowa, and to transmit the proceeds arising from the sale thereof to the county of Los. Angeles, state of California, for distribution in accordance with the laws of the state and in pursuance of the last will and testament of said George E. Loyd, deceased; be it further ordered, that if the said executors fail, neglect, or refuse to sell the said land situated in the state of Iowa owned by the said George E. Loyd at the time of his death, that they show cause in this court on or before the first day' of September, 1915, at 10 o ’clock A. M. of that day, why they should not be removed as executors of the last will and testament of George E. Loyd, deceased, and why an administrator with the will annexed should not be appointed in their stead to execute the power of sale,” etc.

The appeal in L. A. No. 4489 is from the decree of the court removing the executors for disobedience of the order above quoted. The questions presented upon both appeals are interrelated. Wherefore one consideration will do for both.

Respondent’s objection addressed to appeal in L. A. No. 4488, that the order itself is not appealable because “it is not an order to sell real estate, but is an order requiring the executors to proceed to execute the will or to show cause why they should not be removed, ’ ’ is frivolous. Section 963, subdivision 3, of the Code of Civil Procedure, grants a right of appeal from an order “against or in favor of directing the partition, sale or conveyance of real property,” precisely such order as was here made.

George E. Loyd, deceased, married in the state of Iowa and accumulated property therein. Twelve children were born to him and they and his wife, who also survived him, are all recognized as devisees under his will. Eight or nine years before his death Loyd and his wife moved to California and here resided until his death. He acquired property in this state; it was his domicile, and his will was here probated. Besides his property in California he left properties of large value—some of it real estate—in the state of Iowa. Charles Hicks, not mentioned in the will, entered proceedings in the estate to have his status declared as that of a bastard son of the deceased, who, in writing, signed in the presence of a competent witness, had acknowledged himself *702 to be the father of the child. He prevailed in his effort (Estate of Loyd, 170 Cal. 85, [148 Pae. 522]) and was thus instituted as a pretermitted heir of the deceased, since his name was not mentioned, nor was he in any way referred to in the will.

All the property in California testator gave, - devised, and bequeathed to his wife, with the provision that whatever remained at the time of her death should be divided amongst his children. All the property in the state of Iowa the will directed should be “sold by my executors for such price as they deem proper, at public or private sale, without order or orders of sale from any court, but subject to approval of the court having jurisdiction of such matters in the county wherein such property is situated.” The proceeds arising from this disposition of the Iowa properties were to be distributed equally amongst his twelve children. The realty in Iowa was and is of large value. The widow'made her election to take not under the will but under the laws of California and the laws of Iowa. This determination gave her an estate in the real property in Iowa. All the devisees of the Iowa real property under the will, including the widow, elected to take the Iowa lands in kind. This election, if good, destroyed the power of the executors under the will to convert these lands into money. When the executors were cited to show cause and ordered to make the sale of the Iowa real estate, they answered, with evidence, establishing this election of the devisees and the widow to take in kind. But it being conceded, or at least not successfully questioned, that the laws of Iowa do not recognize any right of inheritance in a pretermitted heir, as do the California laws, and as under no ancillary proceedings could Charles Hicks by inheritance succeed to any interest in the Iowa real estate as such, its disposition being unquestionably controlled by the laws of that state, it is at once apparent that it became greatly to the interest of Charles Hicks to cause the Iowa real estate to be sold and the proceeds of the sale brought to California for distribution, as thus only, if at all, he could obtain a share of it. To this end, therefore, these proceedings were directed in the probate court and resulted, so far as that court was concerned, in the success of his efforts. Thus having sufficiently outlined the matter in controversy, we may proceed to a consideration of the merits.

*703 1. The status of Charles Hicks as a pretermitted heir is completely determined by section 1387 of the Civil Code, and his rights as such pretermitted heir are wholly defined by sections 1306 and 1307 of the same code. Section 1306 deals with the rights of a child born after the making of a will; section 1307 with the rights of an omitted child (or children of a deceased child). But in their essence the rights are identical, so that it is for convenience merely that they have been defined in separate sections. Section 1307 deals specifically with the rights of Charles Hicks, but in both sections the language of the code defining those rights is practically identical, so that the constructions put by this court upon section 1306 have direct applicability upon the question of the meaning of section 1307. By section 1306 the after-born child “succeeds to the same portion of the testator’s real and personal property that he would have succeeded to if the testator had died intestate.” By section 1307 the omitted child “has the same share in the estate of the testator as if he had died intestate, and succeeds thereto as provided in the preceding section,” the language of which we have just quoted. It is manifest that upon reason alone such a child does not and cannot take under the will, since he is permitted to take because he has been omitted from the will. The intent of the testator as expressed in such a will is clear. It is to give his property to others to the exclusion of the omitted heir, and this intent is not affected by the fact that the omission to name the pretermitted heir was or was not intentional. As the omitted heir, in contemplation of the law entitling him to inherit, was never in the testator’s mind, by no stretch of imagination can it be said that the testator designed any of the provisions of his will to apply to that heir. In accordance with, this reasoning our cases all hold, as necessarily they must, that such an heir does not and cannot take under the will, but takes (wherever by will the testator has disposed of all of his property) in opposition and in hostility to that will. (Pearson v. Pearson, 46 Cal. 609; Estate of Wardell, 57 Cal. 484; In re Grider, 81 Cal. 571, [22 Pac. 908]; Smith v.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P. 157, 175 Cal. 699, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-loyd-cal-1917.