Estate of Sidebotham
This text of 291 P.2d 965 (Estate of Sidebotham) 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.
Opinion
Estate of ROBERT RUSSELL SIDEBOTHAM, Deceased. W. A. ROBISON, as Administrator, etc., Appellant,
v.
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO et al., Respondents.
California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. Two.
Frank J. Fontes, Delger Trowbridge and Theodore M. Monell for Appellant.
Morris Lowenthal and Juliet Lowenthal for Respondents.
NOURSE, P. J.
Appeal from an order of the probate court, given on a petition of the public administrator, as administrator of the above entitled estate asking for instructions as to his right to use the moneys in his possession as assets of said estate for the payments of costs and counsel fees--including a daily transcript--in a certain pending litigation, instructing petitioner not to disburse any of said moneys in the defense of said action.
The petition showed that an action had been filed to impress a trust on behalf of a large number of persons, called in the action "O. A. Arthur et al.," on all assets of the estate in the hands of petitioner. (The action is a representative suit by and in behalf of the members of an association who claim that said assets were diverted by decedent and another defendant from the purposes of the association for which they had been furnished by the members.) The petition alleges that the plaintiffs in said action assert that no funds in the hands of petitioner can be used in the defense of said action and that they will try to enforce a personal liability *414 for the use of such funds for such purpose because said funds are trust funds, the expenditure of which is unauthorized, contrary to law and in excess of the jurisdiction of the court. At the hearing of said petition on April 25, 1955, Mr. Trowbridge, special counsel appointed to defend the action, appearing as witness for the administrator presented a partial statement of costs incurred in the amount of $21.65 and testified that merely for costs, aside from any counsel fees, an amount of $1,000 should be available to the defending attorneys for traveling expenses and the taking of depositions to check the evidence of numerous plaintiffs and hundreds of exhibits. Mr. Lowenthal, attorney for plaintiffs, objected to the petition. He stated as his position, without presenting any evidence, that there were other attorneys defending the case for other defendants; that plaintiffs, heard as witnesses, had established a large part of the claim and that a trust as to all would be established; that no depositions had to be taken because the evidence consisted of written documents; that too much ($10,000) had already been expended for attorneys' fees in the estate; that expenditures should await the outcome of the case: "If the money belongs to the trust, nothing can be paid at all"; that Mr. Trowbridge had been engaged by two sons of deceased and was actually still their attorney (this was not conceded by Mr. Trowbridge) and that the same should incur the obligation to counsel for the defense. Mr. Trowbridge pointed out that petitioner was not requesting attorneys' fees, but Mr. Lowenthal stated that the same applied to costs, as to which thousands of dollars had been paid for useless accountants' reports and investigators' interviews and that the stated requirements as to costs were too vague.
On May 4, 1955, the court gave a minute order "that no payments be made until the further order of the court" and on May 9 filed the formal order, from which the appeal is taken. The order recites an objection of Mr. Lowenthal, attorney of plaintiffs only "on the ground that all of the assets of the estate are trust funds and not part of the estate of said decedent, and that the court is without any jurisdiction to take any action to allow either costs or counsel fees or expenses out of trust funds." The evidence of Mr. Trowbridge is stated. The court further finds that the estate in this jurisdiction amounts to approximately $100,000, that according to the belief of petitioner there is moreover more than $25,000 in other jurisdictions, and that the ownership of the moneys in the possession of the petitioner has not been *415 finally determined. The order then denies "the application for an order of this court authorizing the disbursement of any costs or counsel fees for any said purposes" and instructs petitioner not to disburse any moneys of the estate to defend the action of O. A. Arthur et al.
Appellant urges that the administrator is under duty to defend the assets in his possession from attack by legal action, even though they may be claimed as trust assets by strangers to the estate and that the administrator is entitled to have reimbursement of the reasonable costs of such defense out of the funds in his hands even if the defense is unsuccessful and the funds are found to be trust funds. The order denying the administrator the use of any and all funds for the defense of said action is urged as error either as a refusal to exercise the court's discretion in the matter or as an abuse of said discretion. Appellant does not ask this court to exercise its judgment on what are proper expenditures, or whether a "daily transcript" is proper or to allow any counsel fees but to reverse the order and to direct the trial court to allow proper expenses in its discretion. The plaintiffs in the "Arthur et al." action, as respondents, concede that the administrator should not be prevented from defending the action and that the probate court has power to instruct him to use for that purpose funds in his hands, but they contend that the order attacked does not correctly express the intention of the trial court, that the trial court intended only to decide in its discretion that the need for further expenses had not properly been shown and that therefore authorization was denied without prejudice to the administrator's right to have such authorization on a further showing. Respondents support the denial of authorization with extensive factual contentions of the same tenor as stated at the hearing below.
It is obvious that we cannot consider the contention outside the record that the order does not express the true intention of the court. An analysis of the order itself shows that the only recitals which can be considered as intended to give a motivation of the order are the contention of respondents that no trust funds may be used for the defense of the action and the finding that the ownership of the moneys in the possession of the petitioner has not been finally determined. These were the reasons given by the administrator in his petition for the desirability of his obtaining instructions. The order therefore seems to sustain the contentions of respondents recited in the petition and in the order and stated by *416 Mr. Lowenthal for respondents at the hearing in somewhat vaguer terms among other arguments not recited in the order. At any rate the order contains no indication whatever of a conditional and dilatory character as contended by respondents.
[1] The duty of the administrator of an estate as such to defend against a claim that part of the funds found in the hands of the decedent were trust funds is clearly expressed in Elizalde v. Murphy, 11 Cal.App. 32, 36-37 [103 P. 904], where the issue was whether the sureties on the administrator's bond were responsible to the estate for the alleged trust fund so long as the action in which it was claimed remained pending. It was there said:
"While, as was said in the department opinion in Elizalde v. Elizalde, 137 Cal. 634, 642, [66 P. 639, 70 P.
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291 P.2d 965, 138 Cal. App. 2d 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-sidebotham-calctapp-1956.