Estate of Roach

72 P. 393, 139 Cal. 17, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 764
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1903
DocketSac. No. 1101.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 72 P. 393 (Estate of Roach) 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 Roach, 72 P. 393, 139 Cal. 17, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 764 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Appeal by Margaret Copsey, formerly Margaret Roach, widow of deceased, from an order of sale of real estate in the above-entitled matter, on the-judgment-roll. George Roach died testate August 1, 1872, and on September 7, 1872, his will was duly admitted to probate, and the widow was duly appointed executrix. By the terms of the will she had a- life estaté in the property of deceased (all being community property), and, at her death, after deducting the share she was entitled to take under the laws of the state, the remaining one half was to be divided equally among the brothers and sisters of deceased, all of whom resided in Ireland.

The property consisted of four hundred acres of farming land situated in San Joaquin County, and a lot in the city of Stockton, and some money, grain, farming utensils, and other personal property. The farming land was inventoried at $25 per acre ($10,000); the city lot $1,000; money $300; grain and hay on hand $2,443.20; live-stock $739; other personal property (farming implements and household goods), $1,295, —in'all $15,477.20.

The executrix managed the estate until in September, 1901, when she rendered her first and final account and resigned her trust, and William C. Brown was duly appointed administrator with the will annexed. The account of the executrix was duly allowed, and showed that there was no remaining personal property, and it was decreed that the estate was *19 indebted to her in the sum of $379.24. On March 11, 1902, the administrator filed his petition for an order of sale of the whole or some part of the real property, which was granted May 23, 1902. It is from this order the appeal is taken. Appellant claims that the order of sale is void for want of jurisdiction of the court to make it. This alleged want of jurisdiction is predicated of insufficiency of facts set forth in the petition for sale, and in like and other defects in the order to show cause, and that the facts found failed to show any necessity for the sale. We must look to the statute in force at the death of the testator, at which time the estate vested in the devisees. (Estate of Packer, 125 Cal. 396.) It was held in that case that the court has no power to order the sale of real property after the title has vested in the heirs, “except for the purposes provided by the law in force at the death of the ancestor.” The law authorizing the sale, which was in force at the death of Roach, was section 155, and other sections of the Probate Act. (See 2 Hittell’s Gen. Laws, sec. 5S53.) Section 154 of that act provides when the personal property “shall be insufficient to pay .. . . the debts that may be outstanding against the deceased, and the debts, expenses, and charges of administration, the executor or administrator may sell the real estate for that purpose,” etc. It is not necessary to quote from section 155 the statement of facts required to appear in the petition for sale. The liability for which the sale may be ordered may be either a debt against the decedent or a debt, expense, or charge of the administration. It is not necessary to the right of the administrator to petition, or to the power of the court to order, a sale that there should first be a demand upon the administrator to sell. It is his duty to petition for sale whenever a necessity arises under the statute. The creditor or any one interested may make application if the administrator neglects to apply for the order, but we know of no statute that requires a demand to be made upon the administrator, as contended by appellant, before he can act. The petition shows that no personal property was in the hands of the administrator; it shows the amount of debts at the death t)f decedent, and that they are all paid except the balance due the executrix; that nothing is due or to become due for family allowance; that the debts and expenses of administration already accrued amount to $2,129.25, and to accrue amount to $948; a description of real estate and its condition and value *20 and that it is community property; the names and ages of the devisees and heirs of deceased; that the land does not now produce an income in excess of the expense of its cultivation, and does not yield an income sufficient to pay any part of the said debts, expenses, etc.; that the land is worn out, and can only be made profitable by changing the form of tillage from grain-growing to fruit-gro.wing, and that there is no personal property or money from which to pay the expense of changing the method of cultivation; that “all of the personal property of whatever nature or kind belonging to said estate, . . . received by said Margaret A. Copsey (now Margaret A. Roach), from the first day of August, 1872, and from the commencement of her administration to the date of the acceptance of her resignation as such executrix, and to the date of the allowance and settlement of her account as such executrix, had been fully and completely utilized and exhausted in the payment of debts outstanding against said decedent, and other payment of debts, expenses, and charges of administration during the period of her administration.” These facts are by the court specifically or generally found to be true, and, so far as we can see by a comparison of the petition with section 155 of the Probate Act, the facts bring the case within the statute.

There is no bill of exceptions bringing up to the evidence, and every intendment must be indulged in support of the order.

It is claimed as fatal to the sale that the order to show cause why the sale should not be made did not specifically describe the property. Reference is made in the order to the petition on file, in which the description did fully appear. Section 156 of the Probate Act does not require a description of the real estate to be given in the order, nor does section 1538 of the Code of Civil Procedure, of like import, make any such requirement, nor does section 1712 of the Code of Civil Procedure require such or any description of the property. The provision there is, that when a description has been published in a newspaper, “as required in the order to show cause,” etc., “such description need not be published in any subsequent notice of sale,” etc. Aside from the fact that no provision of the statute requires the order to show cause to describe the property, we can see no necessity for its containing a description which is given in the petition and fully

*21 apprises all interested parties at that stage of the proceedings of the land proposed to be sold.

The position of appellant that thirty days should have elapsed after the completed publication of the. order to show cause, before the court had jurisdiction of the persons interested in the estate is not tenable, even though some of such persons resided in Ireland. The statute provides that “a copy of the order to show cause shall be personally served . . . or shall be published at least four successive weeks in some newspaper, as the court or judge shall order,” and the order was duly published. (Probate Act, sec. 157; Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1538.) The court could proceed at once on completion of the publication of the order, at the time named in the order. There is no analogy between this method of obtaining jurisdiction of the person in probate proceedings and by the publication of summons in ordinary civil actions. The constructive notice given by the publication was sufficient. (Estate of Leonis, 71 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
72 P. 393, 139 Cal. 17, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-roach-cal-1903.