Estate of Sanderson

375 P.2d 37, 58 Cal. 2d 522
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1962
DocketL. A. No. 26462
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 375 P.2d 37 (Estate of Sanderson) 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 Sanderson, 375 P.2d 37, 58 Cal. 2d 522 (Cal. 1962).

Opinion

58 Cal.2d 522 (1962)

Estate of ELMER L. SANDERSON, Deceased. BALBENA S. SYSTER, as Administratrix, etc., Contestant and Appellant,
v.
THE ROMAN CATHOLIC BISHOP OF SAN DIEGO et al., Defendants and Respondents.

L. A. No. 26462.

Supreme Court of California. In Bank.

Oct. 9 1962.

Robert A. Kaiser, Jeremiah F. O'Neill, Jr., and John E. Nolan for Contestant and Appellant.

Howard S. Dattan, Victor E. Urias and Quintin Whelan for Defendants and Respondents.

SCHAUER, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a petition to determine heirship, approving and settling accounts of the executor, ordering payment of fees, and decreeing distribution of the estate to certain charitable beneficiaries named in decedent's will. We have concluded that the trial court correctly determined that by reason of a substitutional dispositive clause of the will contestant-appellant may not avoid the charitable gifts, and that on the specified ground the judgment should be affirmed insofar as relevant to that controlling issue.

From the record it appears that decedent executed his will on January 24, 1957, and died eight days later, on February 1, 1957. By the terms of the will the entire estate was bequeathed to certain charitable institutions. The will further provides as follows: "In the event that any bequest or devise *524 in this Will be declared void by reason of any statute in effect at the time of my death restricting or prohibiting testamentary gifts to charity, then I give, devise and bequeath the amount or amounts thereof to Charles F. Buddy and Thomas Ackerman of San Diego, California, as joint tenants, and without imposing or attempting to impose any legally enforceable obligation upon them, request that they carry out my wishes as expressed in this Will."

At the time the will was executed Charles F. Buddy was the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of San Diego, and it is undisputed that the "Thomas" Ackerman named in the will was intended to refer to Richard Ackerman, Auxiliary Bishop of San Diego.

The will was offered for probate in February 1957, and before expiration of that month decedent's sole survivor and heir, his brother Harvey Syster, [fn. 1] filed objections to probate. Mr. Syster, in his verified specification of objections to the will, alleges "That ... the purported dispositions in said document are within the purview of Probate Code, Section 41, [fn. 2] of the State of California; that Harvey Syster, brother of the said decedent, requests that said provisions be declared invalid."

Mr. Syster died in June 1957 and his widow, as administratrix of his estate, carries on his attack against the dispositive provisions of the will. Following various proceedings (see Estate of Sanderson (1959) 171 Cal.App.2d 651 [341 P.2d *525 358]), the will was admitted to probate (see Estate of Sanderson (1960) 183 Cal.App.2d 740 [6 Cal.Rptr. 893]), and in November 1959 petition for final distribution was filed. In December 1959 Mrs. Syster, in her capacity as "Administratrix of the Estate of Harvey Syster, Contestant," filed objections to the petition for final distribution and reasserted the ground, among others, which her husband had advanced in his objections to probate of the subject will, i.e., "that the purported dispositions in said document are within the purview of Probate Code, Section 41"; and in February 1960 she (here also acting as the duly qualified representative of her deceased husband) filed a petition to determine heirship. [fn. 3] Following a trial on the two matters the court in a single judgment ordered the petition to determine heirship dismissed and the estate to be distributed in accordance with the terms of the will. This appeal by Mrs. Syster (of course, in her representative capacity) followed.

We have concluded that it is unnecessary to determine whether the trial court erred in dismissing the petition to determine heirship. This is true because in the circumstances of this case the ultimate result must be the same regardless of whether the dismissal order be affirmed or reversed. [1a] However, to preclude implication of support for erroneous inferences, it is appropriate to point out that the trial court in making the order of dismissal appears to have had the view that under our decision in Estate of Bunn (1949) 33 Cal.2d 897, 900-901 [3] [206 P.2d 635], Mrs. Syster was not a person entitled to carry on the contest or assert that the dispositive provisions of the will violated Probate Code section 41. In this the trial court was mistaken. It was not Mrs. Syster as an individual claiming in her own right who was objecting to distribution under the will; it was Mrs. Syster solely in her capacity as qualified personal representative of Harvey Syster, surviving (and subsequently deceased) brother of Elmer L. Sanderson (Syster), who was carrying on Harvey's claim to the property interest which he had asserted during his lifetime. *526

[2] Nothing which we said in the Bunn case (see also Estate of Hughes (1962) 202 Cal.App.2d 12, 18 [8- 11] [20 Cal.Rptr. 475]) precludes the personal representative of decedent's surviving heir from carrying on and prosecuting by appropriate legal proceedings the attack on the validity of the charitable bequests which had been initiated by the surviving heir. In the Bunn case the heir entitled to challenge the will died without having asserted any appropriate claim. We there (pp. 900-901 [3] of 33 Cal.2d) quoted from a decision of the Supreme Court of Iowa (Karolusson v. Paonessa (1928) 207 Iowa 127 [222 N.W. 431, 433]) and reasoned, " 'If such designated parties [the relatives listed in the statute] do not challenge the bequest to charity, it does not lie in the mouth of any other person to challenge it. It may often happen that a testator will make a bequest to charity ... and leave a surviving spouse, and the spouse will fully acquiesce in such charitable bequest and wish that the will be carried out in its entirety. Could it be said that, under the statute, the mere fact of the existence of a surviving spouse would enable some other person, such as a distant collateral heir, to challenge the bequest to charity? We think not. [Citations.]' " (Italics added.) And the opinion continues (p. 901 of 33 Cal.2d), "Nor is the administratrix of the estate of Mrs. Bunn's husband [in the circumstances there extant] in any better situation, for the right to contest a will on this ground [violation of Probate Code section 41] has been held to be purely personal, to be narrowly restricted, and one which does not pass to the representative of a decedent as a part of his estate. [Citation.]"

[1b] In the case at bench, however, the first step in the proceeding to establish the personal claim of the heir was taken by him when he filed objections to probate specifically asserting that he was "the brother and sole heir at law of said decedent ... [that] the purported dispositions in said document [the will] are within the purview of Probate Code section 41 ... [and that he] Harvey Syster, brother of the said decedent, requests that said provisions [of the will] be declared invalid." Thus the heir himself made the election and asserted the claim. This he was entitled to do. [3] We are of the view that Harvey's claim of heirship to the property of Elmer's estate, as thus evidenced and asserted is of the nature of a property right (Estate of Baker (1915) 170 Cal. 578, 585-588 [150 P.

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375 P.2d 37, 58 Cal. 2d 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-sanderson-cal-1962.