Estate of Rudman

193 P.2d 39, 85 Cal. App. 2d 270, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 906
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1948
DocketCiv. 16347
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 39 (Estate of Rudman) 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 Rudman, 193 P.2d 39, 85 Cal. App. 2d 270, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 906 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

BARTLETT, J. pro tem.

This is an appeal from a decree

of partial distribution rendered in the estate of Lottie C. Rudman, deceased. Upon the hearing had in connection with the petition for partial distribution and the objections thereto, the parties stipulated as to all of the facts. From that stipulation we learn the following: The property ordered distributed by this decree consisted of cash derived from the sale of real estate described in the inventory on file. This real estate was bought by one Jacob Wiekstrom, a widower, on November 8, 1933. He caused the property to be conveyed to himself, his sister Lottie C. Rudman, and his sister’s husband, Emil R. L. Rudman, as joint tenants, with the right of survivorship. Of the three joint tenants, Jacob Wiekstrom died first, without making any conveyance of his interest in the property; the second to die was Emil R. L. Rudman, who also made no conveyance of his interest. We are concerned here with the estate of Lottie C. Rudman, who also died without having made any distribution of the property by will or conveying any interest in it during her lifetime.

The court ordered the property distributed to the heirs at law of Lottie C. Rudman, of whom the respondent, Grace V. Renard, is one. Hallie Breese, Hanna Heden and Hilda Olsson are nieces and the next of kin of Emil R. L. Rudman. Hallie Breese, who is the appellant herein, holds the interest of the other nieces of Emil R. L. Rudman by assignment. Appellant’s contention is that by reason of the provisions of section 229 of the Probate Code the court erred in not distributing one-half of the property to the next of kin of Emil R. L. Rudman.

Section 229 of the Probate Code reads as follows:

“If the decedent leaves neither spouse nor issue, and the
*272 estate or any portion thereof was separate property of a previously deceased spouse, and came to the decedent from such spouse by gift, descent, devise or bequest, or became vested in the decedent on the death of such spouse by right of survivor-ship in a homestead or in a joint tenancy between such spouse and the decedent, such property goes in equal shares to the children of the deceased spouse and to their descendants by right of representation, and if none, then to the parents of the deceased spouse in equal shares, or if either is dead to the survivor, or if both are dead, in equal shares to the brothers and sisters of the deceased spouse and to their descendants by right of representation. ’ ’

The question then is simply this: By the death of Emil R. L. Rudman and the consequent vesting in Lottie C. Rudman of the entire title to the property, did any of the separate property of her predeceased husband become vested in Lottie C. Rudman?

In considering this matter we must bear in mind that the entire consideration for the property which was in joint tenancy was paid by the brother of Lottie C. Rudman and that being the case, no part of the consideration could have or did come from the deceased husband or his family or the community property of Emil R. L. Rudman and Lottie C. Rudman.

Appellant, in her opening brief, refers to three cases. The first of these is Estate of Putnam, 219 Cal. 608 [28 P.2d 27]. That ease held that where a decedent had inherited property from a prior husband and from the proceeds of its sale bought corporate stock issued to herself and her present husband in joint tenancy with right of survivorship, and thereafter they conveyed it back to the decedent, section 229 of the Probate Code does not apply to the case, and the stock was properly distributed to the surviving heir of the decedent who died intestate. In the course of its decision the court stated, on page 611.:

“The reason and purpose of Section 229 of the Probate Code is, in the absence of testamentary disposition, to turn the property back to the family from which it came, rather than to permit it to descend to the wife’s family. In other words, the section was designed to benefit the natural objects of the bounty of the former owner.”

The partial decree of distribution in this case before us turned the property back to the family from which it came.

*273 The second case to which appellant refers us is Estate of Harris, 9 Cal.2d 649 [72 P.2d 873], in which the property which was the subject of the joint tenancy was a bank account created by the deceased and her predeceased husband. The following paragraph of the syllabus sets forth the holding of the court in respect to the question which concerns us here:

“The creation of a joint bank account is a gift inter vivos, and under section 229 of the Probate Code, as amended in 1931, the insertion of the word ‘gift’ in said section, conferred upon the relatives of the predeceased spouse, specified in said section, the right to take as heirs of the surviving spouse such separate property as by the creation of a joint tenancy ownership therein had been given by the predeceased spouse to the surviving spouse.”

It differs from the case before us in that none of the separate property of Emil R. L. Rudman went into the creation of the joint tenancy involved.

The third case appellant cites is Sears v. Rule, 45 Cal.App.2d 374 [114 P.2d 57], wherein the court stated that under the provisions of section 229 of the Probate Code the property should revert to the predeceased husband “for the reason that it was given to her by her husband in joint tenancy ...”

In all of these cases the property which became vested in the decedent was separate property of her predeceased husband without doubt. This does not bear on the problem involved here which is: Did any of the separate property of the predeceased husband become vested in Lottie C. Rudman ? As the property came to her from the original grant the property was her separate property, and no property came to her as a transferee of her deceased husband. A long line of California decisions so holds. These decisions are all reviewed in a decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit in Tooley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 121 F.2d 350. In that ease the husband died leaving an unpaid income tax of $16,507. During his lifetime he and his wife held property in joint tenancy which terminated on his death. The commissioner attempted to hold this property liable for his income tax, claiming that the widow was a transferee of the property from her husband. After a careful consideration of all the eases on the subject the court makes this flat declaration: “In California the survivor of a joint tenancy holds the full estate by virtue of the original grant *274 of the joint tenancy and not as a transferee from the deceased co-tenant.”

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Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 39, 85 Cal. App. 2d 270, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-rudman-calctapp-1948.