Estate of Orwitz

229 Cal. App. 2d 767, 40 Cal. Rptr. 545, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1044
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 21, 1964
DocketCiv. 21780
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 229 Cal. App. 2d 767 (Estate of Orwitz) 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 Orwitz, 229 Cal. App. 2d 767, 40 Cal. Rptr. 545, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1044 (Cal. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

AGEE, J.

Bess Orwitz, widow of Frank Orwitz, appeals from an order of the probate court, made in his estate proceedings, which determines certain issues contrary to her contentions.

Frank’s holographic will * names his brother Samuel as executor and leaves the principal asset in the estate,- which is an apartment building with storerooms on the ground floor, to Samuel in trust. The marital residence and the furniture therein are left to Bess. A general clause leaves the residue to Bess and Frank’s brother Jack, in equal shares.

The commercial property was appraised at $90,000, the home and furniture at $26,350, and miscellaneous personal property at $13,733.98, making a total estate of $130,083.98.

*769 The rentals from the commercial property approximate $1,000 per month. It was originally owned by decedent and his first wife. After their divorce and his subsequent marriage to Bess, decedent purchased the former wife’s half interest in his own name. The record does not disclose the source of the consideration paid for this half.

While Bess has never been a record owner of any interest in this property, we shall assume for the purpose of this appeal only that the half acquired after the second marriage is the community property of the decedent and Bess. (Civ. Code, § 164.) It is apparent from the will that the testator would not have agreed with this assumption.

Issue: Is the widow (Bess) required to elect whether she will take under the will or under the community property law? If an election is required, she cannot take under both. There is no express provision in the will relating to election.

In Estate of Wolfe, 48 Cal.2d 570, 574 [311 P.2d 476], the court stated: “The testator may, however, so frame his will as to present the problem whether an election is required. If the testator purported to dispose of both his and his spouse’s share of the community property, and it appears that the intent of the testator will be thwarted by giving literal effect to the will while recognizing the community property rights of the surviving spouse, an election should be required. The purpose of the election is to adjust the distribution of the property under the will to conform to the express or implied intention of the testator. . . . If the respondent

[widow] be required to make an election, she may repudiate the will and claim her statutory share of the community property or she may reject her interest under the law and claim under the will. She cannot take under both. If no election be required, one-half of the property found by the trial court to be community property would belong to the surviving spouse (Prob. Code, § 201) and she would be entitled to the additional interests conferred upon her by the will. [Citations.] ”

It is clear from the terms of the will before us that Frank intended to and purported to have the right to make disposition of the entire parcel of income property. He was an attorney at law and .there is no contention that he did not know when he made his will that he had no legal right, without obtaining her consent, to dispose of any community property share which his wife might have therein.

The will discloses a comprehensive plan for the distribution *770 of the entire estate. The widow was to receive the residence and furniture outright. The remaining personal property was left to her and Jack outright. Only the income property was placed in trust.

In disposing of the income property the testator always referred to it (paragraphs Fourth, Ninth and Thirteenth) as “my” property, whereas, in devising the residence he described it as “our” property.

It would be entirely unreasonable to hold that the testator’s intent was to set aside only three-fourths of the income property in trust. It is clear that, when he provided in paragraphs Fourth and Fifth that “One-half of the net income thereof to be paid to my wife Bess Orwitz” and “The other one-half of the net income thereof to be paid to my brother, Jack Orwitz,” the intention was to dispose of the entire income from the property and not just three-fourths thereof.

The testator certainly did not intend that an undivided one-fourth interest in said realty should vest in his wife, free of the trust. Such an interest would carry with it the right to bring an action in partition and thus thwart the testator’s intention to keep the property intact. It is consistent with such intention that he left the commercial property in its entirety to his brother Samuel, as trustee.

It is apparent from the will that the testator considered himself to be the sole owner of this property and believed that he had the right to require that it be kept intact. This is implicit in his directive in paragraph Fourth “not to sell my property better designated No. 135 West Portal Avenue, San Francisco, California, but to retain same in my Estate . . .” (italics added). Again, in paragraph Thirteenth, the testator directs that the trustee “shall not sell my said property #135 West Portal Avenue” unless it “shall depreciate in value and pay a net less than return of 6% on its marketable value or in the event its marketable value is in danger of great depreciation, ...” It is significant that decedent said “my” property, not “my share” of the property.

It is not reasonable to conclude that the testator thought that his wife would assert any community interest in this property. Whether she has such an interest in fact is not an issue to be determined herein.

In Estate of Emerson, 82 Cal.App.2d 510, 514 [186 P.2d 734], the court stated: “It is of no concern that he was mistaken in his belief that the wife had no community interest in the property devised. His manifest intention to devise the estate as an entirety, and irrespective of any right which *771 might be asserted on behalf of the marital community, is the controlling factor. ‘It is the testator’s intention, and not the ground upon which that intention rests, that must control in the interpretation of his will. A mistaken belief on the part of a testator that he has the unrestricted power to dispose of the property absolutely is immaterial. ’ (Estate of Moore, 62 Cal.App. 265, 274 [216 P. 981].) The testator’s intention that the estate in its entirety, and not merely his community interest therein, should be disposed of by his will was sufficient to put his widow to her election. ’ ’

We conclude, as did the court below and as stated in Estate of Wolfe, supra, as follows: “Under the circumstances, the assertion by the wife of her rights under the will and at the same time of her interest in the community property under Probate Code, section 201, are inconsistent. A required election is clearly indicated.” (P. 576 of 48 Cal.2d.) The language of the will under consideration herein is not reasonably susceptible of any other conclusion.

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229 Cal. App. 2d 767, 40 Cal. Rptr. 545, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-orwitz-calctapp-1964.