Estate of Sherman

56 P.2d 230, 5 Cal. 2d 730, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 458
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1936
DocketL. A. 15425
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 56 P.2d 230 (Estate of Sherman) 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 Sherman, 56 P.2d 230, 5 Cal. 2d 730, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 458 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

This appeal is from an order and judgment removing Mrs. Julia Louise Sherman as executrix of the last will of her deceased son, Lowell Sherman, and revoking letters testamentary theretofore issued to her in said estate matter.

Mrs. Sherman instituted proceedings by petition for the removal of .her coexecutor, Morry Cohn, on April 9, 1935, and Mr. Cohn retaliated thirteen days thereafter—April 22d —by filing a petition praying for her removal. Mrs. Sherman requested in her petition .for removal of Mr. Cohn that she be permitted to act as the sole and only executor. Mr. Cohn rejoined by offering in writing to act as the sole executor in the event the court should remove Mrs. Sherman. The proceedings were consolidated for the purpose of hearing and both parties (hereafter referred to as executors) were by the court’s order and judgment removed from office and their respective letters testamentary were revoked. Mrs. Sherman has appealed from said order and judgment of removal and revocation but no appeal was taken by Cohn, and the order has become final as to him.

On May 22, 1935, while proceedings were pending, Cohn filed his resignation to become final upon its acceptance by the court. No action was taken on his resignation by the court until the judgment was pronounced wherein said resig *734 nation was accepted after his removal had become accomplished.

The findings contain a recital that Cohn offered to resign as coexecutor, “provided the court would appoint a disinterested administrator with the will annexed ... in place of Julia Louise Sherman as co-executrix and Horry Cohn as co-executor”. Just what materiality said finding has to the proceedings is not apparent, inasmuch as the wishes or desires of an executor who resigns or who has actually been removed for cause and who has no beneficial interest in the estate are of no consequence and should not be considered for any purpose, advisory or otherwise, in the matter of the removal of a coexecutor or in the selection of a successor of the one removed. The written resignation of Cohn was absolute and free from conditions of any kind, as it must have been to meet the requirements of a resignation. The proposition of Cohn that he would resign provided the court would remove Mrs. Sherman from the executorship was a matter that was entitled to no consideration whatever in the determination of the question as to whether the mother of the decedent, who was his sole heir under the will, had forfeited her right to administer upon his estate. An early incipient breach between the executors was widened by Mr. Cohn’s action in procuring the allowance of two claims presented on his own behalf without notifying Mrs. Sherman of his intention to present them to the judge for allowance, and without informing the judge of Mrs. Sherman’s objections thereto, well knowing her opposition to their allowance, and also on account of his failure to inventory or account for certain real and personal property which it is claimed was purchased with the decedent’s money. Mr. Cohn’s proposal to resign in the event of Mrs. Sherman’s removal would have eliminated her authority to disallow his asserted claims and he would at least have gained the opportunity of securing their allowance by a single administrator appointed in accordance with his proposed plan. In all cases where real controversial grounds exist as to the allowance of claims against the estate of a deceased person the party asserting such claims should be put to his proof in establishing the validity of the same in the tribunal established for such purpose. Especially is this true where the party making the claims occupies *735 a close confidential and business relation with the decedent, as shown in the instant case.

There never was, at any time, a question as to the estate’s solvency. Practically at all times the amount of cash on hand was amply sufficient to take care of the estate’s indebtedness, to say nothing of valuable real and personal property, stocks and solvent securities as assets belonging to the estate.

Mrs. Sherman was a widow at the time of her son’s death, sixty-four years of age. He left no wife, children, brother or sister. The next of kin were his mother and an uncle and aunt. The mother and son resided together in a home owned by him situate in Beverly Hills, county of Los Angeles. The mother owned real property in her own right and it appears that she was fairly comfortably situated so far as finances go.

Lowell Sherman died December 28, 1934, at the age of forty-six years. He had been in poor health for a time—the duration of which does not appear in the record—prior to his demise. Evidently he was quite prominent in the motion picture industry as an actor and director and had enjoyed financial success commensurate with his prominence in motion picture circles. The appraised value of the estate, as found by the court, was $256,235.31, and the approximate amount of creditors’ claims, including federal and state inheritance taxes, federal income taxes and expenses of administration, would be approximately the sum of $80,000, leaving a clear balance of $176,623.51 to be distributed solely to Mrs. Sherman. The estate, according to the statement made by the attorney for the executors, who withdrew from the case at about the time the removal proceedings were before the court, was liquid, and was practically ready to be closed. This was no doubt correct, except as to the validity of certain money claims made by Cohn against the estate and the conflicting claims of Cohn and Mrs. Sherman as to the ownership of certain securities and real property to which Cohn made claim and refused to inventory. These matters precipitated the proceedings.

Letters testamentary were issued to Julia Louise Sherman and Morry Cohn on January 30, 1935, and they entered upon the performance of their duties. There was no serious discord until shortly before Morry Cohn presented for approval two claims against the estate, one in the sum of $2,670.32, that *736 sum being one-half of the proceeds of Pacific Shore Oil Company stock, property of Mr. Sherman, and the second for the sum of $3,385.55 on account of alleged increased salary allowances made by decedent during the last few months of his life.

Morry Cohn had been in the employ of Lowell Sherman as secretary and business manager for approximate^ seven years prior to his death. By no means does he make definite by his testimony the amount of salary he was receiving prior to and at the time that decedent apparently surprised him by a gratuitous and exceedingly generous raise in his salary. There is evidence tending to show that he was receiving $75 per week up to and including the larger portion of the year 1934, at which time he claims that his salary was increased to $10,000 per year, and in addition thereto he was to receive ten per cent of the yearly gross income of decedent on all sums over and above the sum of $125,000. His eoexeeutor disputed the validity of the claim for $2,670.32, which, according to Cohn’s own evidence, was at best but a gratuity on the part of the decedent, and also the second claim of $3,385.55, claimed as increase in salary. Both claims rest upon evidence which the application of the rule of inherent improbability would subject to a severe strain.

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Bluebook (online)
56 P.2d 230, 5 Cal. 2d 730, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-sherman-cal-1936.