Estate of Mitchell

58 P. 549, 126 Cal. 248, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 710
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1899
DocketSac. No. 629.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 58 P. 549 (Estate of Mitchell) 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 Mitchell, 58 P. 549, 126 Cal. 248, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 710 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

—Appeal by the executors of the testator’s estate from an order making partial distribution to certain lega *249 tees and directing a certain sum to be paid to the county treasurer of Stanislaus county as collateral - inheritance tax. The cause was here on a former appeal, and the facts are quite fully stated in the opinion on that appeal and need not be repeated at this time. (Estate of Mitchell, 121 Cal. 391.) Briefly, the court below had, by an order dated September 11, 1896, denied the petition of certain legatees for a partial distribution, - the hearing of which was duly noticed. Subsequently, the legatees served personal notice upon the executors, but upon no others, of a motion to vacate the order denying the petition and to grant the petition. The executors objected to the hearing on the ground that no notice had been served upon other interested parties, and on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction. The court granted the motion and made an order vacating the first order denying the petition, and also ordered the distribution prayed for. This order was made February 27, 1897. The executors appealed from this last order, and it was reversed here and “the cause remanded for further proceedings.” The reversal was ordered on account of two errors specifically pointed out, to wit: 1. That the order relieved the legatees from the necessity of giving any bond; and 2. It ordered “the whole of the legacies paid, as shown by the will, without deducting therefrom the sum of eleven hundred and sixty-six dollars and sixty-six and two-thirds cents paid to each of the legatees after the original hearing and before the final hearing.” The point raised as to the sufficiency of the notice of the motion to confer jurisdiction to make the order was remarked upon by Mr. Commissioner Searls, who wrote the opinion, but in promulgating the decision the question as to the sufficiency of the notice was not decided. One of the judges especially disclaimed expressing any opinion upon it, and another judge concurred in the judgment simply. The question was, we think, left open. Remittitur went down August 8, 1898. On August 10, 1898, the attorneys for the legatees served notice on the executors (which was filed August 11, 1898) that they would, on August 23, 1898, move the court for an order of partial distribution “in conformity with the decision of the supreme court .... made and filed on the seventh day of July, 1898. Said motion will be made upon the said decision now on file herein and the papers, *250 records, arid folios herein.” No notice of this motion was served otherwise than upon the executors personally. It was stipulated that the motion might be heard August 29, 1898, the executors “reserving all rights to said executors to make objection to the jurisdiction of the court to hear the motion; and to such other objection as goes to the right of the petitioners to have distribution made to them in the present proceedings.” The motion was heard August 29th, the executors making objection to the jurisdiction; the petitioners introduced the remittitur and the opinion filed by this court July 7, 1898, whereupon the motion was submitted and the court made an order of the date of the hearing granting the petition and ordering the distribution prayed for. The two errors, pointed out in the opinion of this court on the former appeal, were corrected, but otherwise the order was in effect about the same as the order of February 27, 1897. It is from this last order the executors now appeal.

"When the order of February 27, 1897, was reversed it m> longer had any vitality or force, and the result was to leave the proceeding where it stood before that order was made. (2 Freeman on Judgments, sec. 481.) The order of September 11, 1896, denying the petition, thereupon came into full force and effect, and it has never been vacated or set aside. The subsequent order granting the petition did not operate to vacate the order of September 11, 1896, denying the petition. (Freeman on Judgments; sec. 104 a.) As was said in Nuckolls v. Irwin, 2 Neb. 60: “When a judgment is once entered of record it must stand as the judgment until it is vacated, modified, or disposed of by some means provided by law; entering additional judgment entries is not one of them.” We do not think the situation was such as to justify the rule sometimes applied by which the subsequent judgment by implication is held to vacate the former judgment. A judgment, when pronounced, must stand until set aside or reversed on appeal. (Stearns v. Aguirre, 7 Cal. 443.) We do not think the case of Paige v. Roeding, 96 Cal. 389, and Colton etc. Co. v. Swartz, 99 Cal. 278, can aid respondents, for the bill of exceptions presents all the facts, and we cannot presume that the court vacated the first order before proceeding to hear the last motion. Assuming that the court had jurisdiction to make an order vacating this first order, we do not see under what rule or by what *251 authority the court afterward, while this original order remained in force and without taking any steps to vacate it, proceeded, by motion merely and upon no notice other than to the executors, to hear the original petition a second time and make an order granting it. When the first order was made it was final so far as the hearing upon the petition at that time was concerned, and it was an appealable order. That part of the order vacating the first order may not have been appealable if that had been its only purpose. (Estate of Hickey, 121 Cal. 378.) But it also ordered distribution, which was an appealable order. The appeal was taken from the entire order, and when reversed the reversal operated to reverse that part of the order vacating the first order. As the record now appears, the court heard and determined the petition a second time, reversing its former judgment while that judgment stood unappealed from and after it had withstood the only attack made upon it by the motion to vacate it. , It is true the first order denied the petition “without prejudice to making another application.” But this saving clause did not make the order less effective in determining the issues as then presented; and as to preserving any right in the legatees to make another application, it was unnecessary. While the order was final and appealable so long as it stood unassailed in that proceeding, there was nothing in it to prevent another petition being filed and heard whenever the legatees might believe a more favorable showing for them could be made, or' it was by them thought probable that the court might take a different view of the matter, or the condition of the estate had changed so as to make the distribution proper.

2. But, aside from this view of the matter, the objection to the order of February 27, 1897, as well as to the order of August 29, 1898, from which this appeal is taken, already briefly referred to, stands in the way of affirming the latter order. The notice of the motion to vacate the order of September 11, 1896, and the notice of the second motion to hear the petition were served only upon the executors. Ho notice was given by posting as prescribed by section 1663 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 549, 126 Cal. 248, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mitchell-cal-1899.