Estate of Rutan

260 P.2d 111, 119 Cal. App. 2d 592
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 10, 1953
DocketCiv. No. 19219
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 260 P.2d 111 (Estate of Rutan) 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 Rutan, 260 P.2d 111, 119 Cal. App. 2d 592 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

119 Cal.App.2d 592 (1953)

Estate of ANNA C. RUTAN, Deceased. FARMERS AND MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK OF LOS ANGELES, as Trustee, etc., Petitioner and Appellant,
v.
THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OF DENVER, as Executor, etc., et al., Contestants and Appellants; EMILY CLARKE RUTAN, Respondent.

Civ. No. 19219.

California Court of Appeals. Second Dist., Div. One.

Aug. 10, 1953.

Chandler P. Ward for Petitioner and Appellant.

Larwill & Wolfe, Thomas A. Wood, Stevens Weller, Jr., Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, E. H. Conley and Robert F. Schwarz for Contestants and Appellants.

Combs & Hoose, Lee Combs, Thomas J. Kelley and Harned Pettus Hoose for Respondent.

DRAPEAU, J.

Anna C. Rutan, a widow, executed her last will on August 26, 1937. After her death on July 24, 1941, it was duly admitted to probate and its terms were incorporated in decrees of distribution entered on April 20, 1942, and July 27, 1943, respectively.

The dispositive provisions of the will may be summarized as follows:

By article second, testatrix gave her clothing, jewelry, personal effects and real estate "to my granddaughter Donna Rutan."

By article third, she gave her residuary estate to Farmers and Merchants National Bank of Los Angeles in trust, conditioned as follows: *594

(a) To pay the entire net income in monthly installments "to my granddaughter Donna Rutan." If the income be insufficient to pay $200 per month, to invade the corpus for that purpose, but in that event to deduct the advancement of corpus from the bequest of $5,000 under paragraph (b).

(b) Two years after testatrix' death to pay "to my granddaughter Donna Rutan" $1,000 from corpus. Ten years thereafter to pay to said Donna $5,000. These bequests to lapse in the event of distribution of the trust estate "under the terms as hereinafter provided prior to the date upon which either or both of these bequests shall become due."

(c) "Upon my granddaughter Donna Rutan reaching the age of fifty (50) years, I direct my Trustee herein named to distribute all of the corpus of my trust estate then remaining in its hands, to her."

(d) "Should my granddaughter Donna Rutan predecease me or die before reaching the age of fifty ... to pay the net income of my trust estate to her children living at the time of my demise. Upon the youngest of said children reaching the age of twenty-one years, I direct my Trustee to distribute the corpus of my trust estate then existent, share and share alike, to said children."

(e) "... Should my granddaughter Donna Rutan predecease me or die during the existence of this trust, leaving no children, I direct that my Trustee continue to administer my trust estate for the time and in the manner as follows:"

(1) To distribute two-thirds of the income monthly for the remainder of her life to Emily Clarke Rutan.

(2) To distribute one-third of the income monthly to C. A. Rutan during his natural life.

(3) Upon the demise of Emily Rutan, "to distribute two-thirds of the corpus of my trust estate to my heirs-at-law, in the manner and amounts, as provided by the laws of the State of California."

(4) "Upon the demise of the survivor of the remaining two beneficiaries under this paragraph of my will, to distribute the remainder of the corpus of my trust estate to my heirs-at-law" in the same manner.

(5) "Should any of the beneficiaries named in this paragraph of my will predecease me or be deceased at the time when this paragraph of my will would become operative for their benefit were they living, I direct that portion of the corpus of my trust estate, the income on which would have *595 gone to them were they living, be distributed to my heirs-at-law" in like manner.

(i) "The duration of this trust shall in no event nor by any possibility, extend beyond the death of the last surviving of the following persons: Donna Rutan, Emily Clarke Rutan, C. A. Rutan, and the children of Donna Rutan, living at the time of my demise."

The trust was declared to be one for maintenance; spendthrift and disinheritance clauses were included, as well as other provisions not material at this point.

A stipulation of facts discloses that testatrix, a widow, died July 24, 1941; that her only child, Roscoe C. Rutan, predeceased her; that said son was married to Emily Clarke Rutan, and that Donna Rutan was their sole issue.

When testatrix died, her nearest surviving relatives were:

Tabular Material Omitted

Mr. C. A. Rutan, one of the beneficiaries of the trust, and the brother- in-law of testatrix, died in April, 1942.

Dr. Chambers, brother of testatrix, died March 29, 1949, without issue, and the United States National Bank of Denver is executor of his estate.

Donna Rutan died January 5, 1951, during the existence of the trust and prior to attaining the age of 50 years, unmarried and without issue.

Anna Kepner Mertz died January 18, 1951, and George J. Arblaster is administrator of her estate.

Edith Kepner Mathis died during the pendency of this appeal, i.e., October 3, 1952, and Ben H. Brown, Public Administrator, as administrator of her estate, has been substituted in her place.

Emily Clarke Rutan, the mother of Donna, is the sole heir-at-law and next of kin of Donna Rutan, and is the duly appointed administratrix of Donna's estate.

It was stipulated in open court that Donna Rutan was 37 years of age when she died.

On July 26, 1951, Farmers and Merchants National Bank, as testamentary trustee, filed a petition for instructions regarding administration of the trust.

The questions there posed with respect to distribution of income and corpus of the trust estate, among others, required *596 an interpretation of the words used in the will and the decrees of distribution: "to my heirs-at-law in the manner and amounts as provided by the laws of the State of California." Specifically, whether those words "in the light of other provisions of said will and decree(s) of distribution," referred to Donna Rutan (who was the sole heir at law of testatrix at the latter's death), or referred to persons who were heirs at law of testatrix at the time of the death of Donna Rutan.

The family tree, which forms part of the record on appeal, reveals that when Anna C. Rutan died, Donna Rutan, her granddaughter, was her sole heir at law. When Donna died, Anna's sole heirs were her maternal first cousins Mertz and Mathis, now deceased.

Among other things, the trial court found:

"VI. That it is true that the testamentary trust wholly terminated upon the death of Donna Rutan on January 5, 1951."

"VII. That it is true that Donna Rutan was the sole heir at law of the decedent herein who died July 24, 1941, and that C. A. Rutan having died in April, 1942, before the Testamentary Trust became operative for his benefit and upon the death of Donna Rutan as herein found, the entire trust estate became on January 5, 1951, and now is, distributable to Emily Clarke Rutan, as Administratrix of the Estate of Donna Rutan, deceased, under and pursuant to the intent expressed and manifest in the Last Will and Testament of Anna C. Rutan."

"VIII. That it is true that Testatrix when she used the words heirs at law in her will, used and intended to use the same in the ordinary and legal meaning and referred to her heirs at law living at the time of her demise; that it is true that the only heir at law of Anna C.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P.2d 111, 119 Cal. App. 2d 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-rutan-calctapp-1953.