Estate of Olcese

36 P.2d 215, 1 Cal. App. 2d 72, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1231
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 1934
DocketCiv. 1141
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 P.2d 215 (Estate of Olcese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Olcese, 36 P.2d 215, 1 Cal. App. 2d 72, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1231 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

The appeal herein is taken by Olcese Kramer, an heir at law of Louis V. Olcese, deceased, from an order of the superior court allowing and approving a special account rendered by the administrators of the estate of said decedent.. The account contained a statement of receipts and disbursements during the period which intervened between May 22, 1932, and December 5, 1932. Upon the rendition of the account appellant filed objections thereto *74 in which he attacked three items of disbursement. His objections were overruled and disallowed and from the order approving the account in full this appeal has been prosecuted.

The first item to which objection was made is one which shows payment by the administrators of the sum of $12 for costs incurred by them in intervening in an action instituted by a corporation known as the Texas Company against the Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association. The complaint in this action sought recovery from the Bank of America of the sum of $4,800 which was alleged to have been received by the bank for the use and benefit of the Texas Company. The record indicates that the following facts were developed with respect to this litigation: During the year 1930 the above-mentioned bank was acting as administrator of the estate of Louis V. Olcese, deceased. In such capacity it executed a lease of certain real property of the estate to the Texas Company and as consideration therefor received the sum of $4,800. During the month of September, 1930, the order by which the bank had been appointed general administrator of the estate was reversed on appeal therefrom and in the month of October, 1930, the order appointing the bank special administrator was annulled by the Supreme Court of California. Thereafter negotiations were entered into between the various parties interested in the estate which finally resulted in the execution of a ratification agreement by such parties and by the bank. This agreement provided in brief that all parties interested in the estate ratified, confirmed and approved the entire administration of the estate which had been conducted by the bank and agreed, with certain specified exceptions, that its final account as administrator theretofore filed should be settled, allowed, and approved. In this account the bank charged itself with the receipt of the sum of $4,800 from the Texas Company. The bank’s account as administrator was allowed and approved on January 13, 1932. New administrators of the estate were subsequently appointed by the court and to these new administrators the bank paid over the balance of the money which was shown to be due the estate by the bank’s final account. In the meantime, the Texas Company had become concerned with respect to the status of its lease which had been executed *75 by the bank whose order of appointment as administrator of the estate had been reversed. On January 26, 1931, the Texas Company demanded .in writing that a valid lease of the property should be issued to it within three weeks thereafter or that the Texas Company be reimbursed in the full amount of its expenditures in connection with the lease. No new lease was executed and no reimbursement was made. Thereupon on April 20, 1931, an action was instituted by the Texas Company in the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco, wherein the plaintiff sought to recover the sum of $4,800 which it had paid as consideration for the execution of the lease. This action was brought against the bank in its individual capacity. The complaint contained no allegation that the bank had received the money in its representative capacity as administrator of the estate of Olcese. No mention was made of the estate and no effort was made by this action to impose any liability upon the estate. Nevertheless, the administrators who succeeded the bank elected to intervene in the action and as administrators they filed a complaint in intervention. In so doing they paid out the sum of $12 as fees and in their account they included this item as a proper item of expense incurred by them in the process of administration.

Appellant contends that since the action brought by the Texas Company was instituted against the bank in its individual capacity and no effort was made to impose a liability upon the estate, the administrators of the estate were not justified in intervening in the suit and that their action in this regard, taken without leave of the court by whom they were appointed, was purely voluntary and officious. On the other hand, respondents point to the fact that, by the ratification agreement, all parties interested in the estate, including appellant, had expressly ratified all acts of the bank as administrator, that one of such acts was the lease executed to the Texas Company, and that, in its final account which was specifically approved by the ratification agreement and which was subsequently allowed and settled by the court, the bank charged itself with the receipt of the sum of $4,800 from the Texas Company, and that this sum was included in the funds of the estate which were paid over by the bank to the administrators of the *76 estate. From this it is argued particularly in the brief filed by attorneys for the bank as amici curiae, that the action of the administrators in intervening in the litigation brought by the Texas Company against the bank was not officious, but was entirely justified since, if the Texas Company should succeed in its suit, the administrators of the estate could be certain that a claim would be made against the estate by the bank for reimbursement, whereas if the Texas Company should fail in its action the estate would be absolved of any liability to the bank.

Unhappily, there is not included in the record a copy of the pleading filed by the administrators in the action filed by the Texas Company. We may assume that it took the form of a complaint in intervention. We are not, however, apprised of the position taken by the administrators in this pleading. It does appear that the intervention took place without approval of the court by whom the administrators were appointed and without the consent of appellant.

The situation with respect to the intervention is rendered more complicated because of the presence in the ratification agreement of a certain provision the correct interpretation of which is a subject of sharp dispute between counsel and by reason of the fact that there is now pending in the Superior Court of Kern County an action instituted by the bank against all parties to the ratification agreement wherein the bank seeks revision of the ratification agreement and for a declaration that, in the event a judgment is obtained by the Texas Company against the bank which becomes final, the amount of such judgment shall be paid out of the estate. The record fails to disclose whether or not the Texas Company action has proceeded to trial.

The provision in the ratification agreement whose interpretation forms the subject of dispute is in the following language:

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36 P.2d 215, 1 Cal. App. 2d 72, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-olcese-calctapp-1934.