Estate of Warner

92 P. 191, 6 Cal. App. 361, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 136
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 4, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 357.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 92 P. 191 (Estate of Warner) 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 Warner, 92 P. 191, 6 Cal. App. 361, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 136 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

*363 ELLISON, J.

One Adam Warner died intestate in Sacramento county in January, 1906, and soon thereafter the appellant, his widow, filed a petition in the superior court of that county, asking that she be appointed administratrix of his estate. The respondent, a son of the deceased, filed a petition asking that he be appointed administrator of said estate, and also filed a contest to the petition of the widow.

The respondent concedes that the appellant is the widow of the deceased, and would ordinarily be entitled to administer upon his estate, but by his pleadings makes the claim that by virtue of the provisions of a certain written agreement she is not entitled to succeed to any part of the personal estate of the deceased, and therefore is not entitled to letters of administration. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1365.)

It appears from the record that just prior to the marriage of the appellant and deceased they entered into a written agreement with each other, the material parts of which are as follows: Adam Warner, in consideration of the marriage thereafter to be performed, agreed to support appellant and her minor daughter and to pay to the appellant the sum of $100 per year, and agreed that at his death she should receive out of his estate, without administration, the sum of $1,000. In consideration of the marriage to be performed and of the covenants and agreements to be kept and performed .on the part of the said Adam Warner, and in further consideration of the said Adam Warner paying to appellant the said sum of $100 per annum and of her receiving from his estate at his death the sum of $1,000, she “does hereby relinquish and disclaim any and.-right, claim or interest in or to the property of the said first party (Adam Warner) either as heir or otherwise.”

By this agreement, the appellant relinquished all claim in and to the property owned by Adam Warner at the time of the marriage and also all interest in any property he might have at the time of his death, and if still enforceable, prevents her from succeeding as heir to any of the personal property of the deceased.

The language of the instrument is not consistent with the theory that they were contracting in respect only to the property then owned by the deceased. The words “relinquish *364 all claim in and to the property of Adam Warner, as heir or otherwise,” cannot be thus limited.

“It must first be observed, that by the law no inheritance can vest, nor can any person be the actual or complete heir of another till the ancestor is previously dead. Nemo est haeres viventis.” (Blaelcstone, vol. 2, p. 208.)

When appellant relinquished all claim to the property of the deceased as his heir, she was not merely relinquishing her claim in and to property then owned by him. She had in mind that deceased might die before she did without having made a will, at which time, and not before, she would occupy the position of being his heir, and she contracted that when that event happened and that time came she would claim nothing from his estate by inheritance.

It is unnecessary to enter into any lengthy discussion of the meaning and effect of this agreement, because the supreme court had it under consideration in the case of Warner v. Warner, 144 Cal. 618, [78 Pac. 24], and in reference to it said: “The relinquishment and disclaimer of the defendant of all right and interest in and to the property of the plaintiff ‘either as heir or otherwise’ was an agreement on her part not to seek to deprive him of any of his property during his lifetime or to assert any claim thereto adverse to him during his lifetime or any claim of inheritance thereto at his death.”

The suggestion of counsel that, notwithstanding the agreement, the appellant succeeds to one-half of the community-property and to one-third of the acquisitions of the deceased as his separate property cannot be accepted.

Whatever interest the wife acquires in the community property .or the husband’s separate property she acquires as heir (Cunha v. Hughes, 122 Cal. 111, [68 Am. St. Rep. 27, 54 Pac. 535]; Estate of Burdick, 112 Cal. 387, [44 Pac. 734]), and when she relinquished her rights as heir she relinquished her right to a part of the community property and to the subsequent acquisition to the separate property.

As to the $1,000, if she gets it at all, it will not be because the law of descent casts it upon her, but under the terms of the contract.

Thus construing the written agreement of the parties, it is clear that if it is to have legal effect and to be held binding according- to its terms, appellant is not entitled to letters of administration. (In re Davis, 106 Cal. 455, [39 Pac. 756].)

*365 But appellant, by an answer to the opposition, alleged matters which she claimed would result in a finding that the agreement was not legally binding upon her, at least in its present form. In this answer she alleged: That the agreement was entered into as the result of fraud, stating in what the fraud consisted; that the agreement was entered into as the result of a mutual mistake, as to the terms and conditions incorporated into it, stating in what the mistake consisted; that the consideration of the agreement was inadequate and disproportionate to the value of the property of the husband; that the agreement was waived by the said' Adam Warner in his lifetime; that said Adam Warner failed and refused to support the minor daughter of appellant during his lifetime and failed to make any provision for the payment of the $1,000.

A demurrer' both general and special was interposed to this answer and by the court sustained, and the answer was stricken out. The special demurrer was on the ground that the court, sitting in probate, could not inquire into these matters of fraud, mistake and so forth, alleged in the answer.

The order sustaining the demurrer was general and does not state on what particular grounds it was based, and if correct upon any ground or for any reason should be sustained.

It is stated in the brief of appellant, and not denied by respondent, that the demurrer was sustained upon the ground that the court sitting in probate had not jurisdiction to try these issues raised by the answer; and not much, if any, question is raised as to the technical sufficiency of the answer as a pleading.

We are of opinion that the answer was good as against a general demurrer.

The allegation that the deceased did not perform the terms and conditions of the contract on his part to be performed and did not educate the daughter of the appellant, we think raised a material issue. It seems the respondent was of the same opinion, for, in his petition and opposition, he alleged such performance on the part of the deceased, and the court has found such performance. So it would seem that the matter was deemed material by both the respondent and the lower court. We think that where a woman in an antenuptial contract releases all her rights in the property of her intended *366

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Bluebook (online)
92 P. 191, 6 Cal. App. 361, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-warner-calctapp-1907.