Estate of Mitchell

75 P.2d 1048, 10 Cal. 2d 628, 10 Cal. 628, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 240
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1938
DocketS. F. 15643
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 75 P.2d 1048 (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, 75 P.2d 1048, 10 Cal. 2d 628, 10 Cal. 628, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 240 (Cal. 1938).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Cora E. Mitchell died in San Jose on December 25, 1928. She left a will naming as legatees and *630 devisees her surviving husband, John W. Mitchell, four children of a previous marriage, Zelma Reeve, Romayne 0. Reeve, Vernon J. Reeve, and Mabel I. Tates, and a daughter born of her marriage to Mitchell, Mary Anita Mitchell, now Mary Anita Phillips. John W. Mitchell was appointed executor of her will. In April, 1931, he filed his final account and petition for distribution. A decree settling his account and ordering distribution was entered on October 6, 1931. Zelma Reeve, Romayne 0. Reeve, Vernon J. Reeve and Mabel I. Yates appealed from the decree. Since that time John W. Mitchell died and Mary Anita Phillips was appointed administratrix of his estate, and is a respondent here in that capacity as well as in her individual capacity.

In her will Cora E. Mitchell left two parcels of real property to her daughter, Zelma Reeve. To each of her other four children she left a cash legacy of $5,000 and devised to them, share and share alike, all her unimproved real property in the city of San Jose. She provided a cash legacy of $20,000 to John W. Mitchell. She also left to him their home and furnishings in San Jose, and the “prune orchard and land on the east side of the Coyote Creek together with all equipment and farm implements; also the gravel pits on the Coyote Creek” for the term of his natural life with remainder share and share alike to the same four children. John W. Mitchell was named as residuary legatee.

The decree of distribution recites that just prior to her death Cora E. Mitchell paid to each of Romayne O. Reeve, Vernon J. Reeve, Mabel I. Tates and Anita Mitchell the sum of $5,000 in lieu of the cash legacy in that amount. The court, considering the legacies adeemed, did not order payment of that sum to each of the legatees named in the will. In accordance with the terms of the will the court ordered the home place and furnishings distributed to John W. Mitchell for life with remainder to the four children named by the will so to receive it. The same disposition was ordered of one additional piece of property containing about sixteen acres situate in Santa Clara County, which, by the description in the decree, shows it to be east of the Coyote Creek, and therefore “on the east side of the Coyote Creek” as described in the will. That this sixteen-acre parcel so distributed to Mitchell for life constitutes the “prune orchard” *631 named in the will is not disputed. All the rest of the known real property specifically devised, with the exception of that devised to Zelma Reeve and the San Jose lots left to the other four children, was ordered distributed to John W. Mitchell in fee.

On this appeal from the decree of distribution it is claimed that the court erred in deciding that the cash legacies to the four children were adeemed; further, that certain of the pieces of real property situated in Santa Clara County and distributed to John W. Mitchell in fee lie on the east side of the Coyote Creek and should have been distributed to him for life with remainder to the four children named so to take.

For the purpose of this appeal only the second point need be considered. The question is whether the record presented shows that the court erred in ordering distribution in fee to John W. Mitchell of certain parcels of land which lie east of Coyote Creek and which, if appellants are correct, should have been distributed to him for life only.

' The appeal was taken under the provisions of section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure. However, we are without the aid of a transcript of the evidence taken at the hearing of the petition for distribution for the reason that the notes of the reporter who attended the hearing and took down in shorthand the testimony of the witnesses were destroyed by fire when the court house of the county of Santa Clara was destroyed by fire on May 18, 1931, which was three days after the hearing was had and nearly five months before the decree of distribution was entered. The appellants made numerous attempts without success to be relieved from their unfortunate predicament caused by the fire all to the end that the cause be remanded, the issues be retried, and the litigants as well as this court have the benefit of a transcript of the evidence in the event of a subsequent appeal.

The respondents concede, in fact assert, and the appellants of course agree, that “there is nothing ambiguous or uncertain in the language of the will decreeing to Mitchell for his natural life the prune orchard and land east of Coyote Creek” and the “gravel pits”. It is also asserted by the respondents “that the will of said decedent is clear and unambiguous as to its legal construction, but contains a description of a devise of real property to John W. Mitchell *632 for his natural life which is imperfect or incomplete on its face”. Then only, say respondents, was it necessary for the court to receive evidence to identify the prune orchard property in order to carry out the terms of the will.

The weakness in the respondents’ position lies in the assumption as matter of law that the words “prune orchard and land” embrace within their meaning only land on which the prune trees are planted and that those words necessarily exclude for life tenancy other land owned by the decedent east of Coyote Creek. It is obvious that, in harmony with the respondents’ contention, the probate court’s conclusion that the only unit east of the Coyote Creek which was devised for life was based on its interpretation of the dispositive terms of the will, and that the word “orchard” referred only to the trees in the orchard and did not include the land in which the roots of the trees were imbedded. The respondents’ contention was and is for an interpretation of the language of the will which would restrict the word “land” to the land within the limits of the orchard, and as excluding any other land even though such other land may also be east of Coyote Creek.

We are not in accord with the respondents’ interpretation of the will. Webster’s International Dictionary, second edition, defines “orchard” as a “plantation or large enclosure containing fruit trees”. Funk & Wagnall’s New Standard Dictionary contains the definition: “A collection of trees cultivated for their fruit or other product: . . . also, the enclosure or ground containing such trees.” In Attorney General v. State Board of Judges, 38 Cal. 291, 296, the word was referred to as signifying an enclosure or assemblage of fruit or nut-bearing trees”. Webster’s definition of “an enclosure containing fruit trees” was adopted in Wright v. Sample, 162 Ala. 222 [50 So. 268], An “assemblage” alone without the connotation contained within the word “enclosure” would signify nothing in relation to an orchard. In truth, we have little need of reference to authority to lead us to the conclusion that the plain meaning to be ascribed to the language used is that the land with the trees thereon constitute the “orchard”, and that the testatrix used the word in such ordinary signification and intended to devise to John W. Mitchell for- life the orchard and the other land belonging to her lying east of the Coyote Creek. The court *633

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bank of California v. University of Southern California
211 Cal. App. 2d 75 (California Court of Appeal, 1962)
Bishel v. Faria
347 P.2d 289 (California Supreme Court, 1959)
Bernatas v. Honnert
328 P.2d 539 (California Court of Appeal, 1958)
Emeric v. Alvarado
2 P. 418 (California Supreme Court, 1884)
Wells, Fargo & Co. v. State Board of Equalization
56 Cal. 194 (California Supreme Court, 1880)
Brady v. Bartlett
56 Cal. 350 (California Supreme Court, 1880)
Robinson v. Doss
53 Tex. 496 (Texas Supreme Court, 1880)
Penry v. Richards
52 Cal. 496 (California Supreme Court, 1877)
Houghton v. Austin
47 Cal. 646 (California Supreme Court, 1874)
People v. Hastings
29 Cal. 449 (California Supreme Court, 1866)
People v. Reynolds
28 Cal. 107 (California Supreme Court, 1865)
Davis v. Davis
26 Cal. 23 (California Supreme Court, 1864)
Kelsey v. Abbott
13 Cal. 609 (California Supreme Court, 1859)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P.2d 1048, 10 Cal. 2d 628, 10 Cal. 628, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mitchell-cal-1938.