Genberg v. Snyder

92 P.2d 479, 33 Cal. App. 2d 544, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 267
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1939
DocketCiv. 6244
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 479 (Genberg v. Snyder) 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
Genberg v. Snyder, 92 P.2d 479, 33 Cal. App. 2d 544, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 267 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*545 THOMPSON, J.

The executor of the last will of Marian E. Pomin, deceased, has appealed from an order allowing him $2,978.30, in compensation for extraordinary services under the provisions of section 902 of the Probate Code, on the ground that it is inadequate.

Only one question is involved on this appeal. It is contended the court abused its discretion in allowing the executor only about one-half of the compensation which he demanded for extraordinary services since there was no oral evidence to refute the testimony of expert witnesses in his behalf to the effect that the services were reasonably worth $6,000.

The deceased died July 10, 1,936, possessed of an estate valued at $182,579.70, consisting of real property of the value of about $70,000, including a summer resort on Lake Tahoe known as 1 ‘ Pomin’s Eesort ’ ’; furniture and equipment of the value of about $17,000; securities in the nature of stocks and bonds of the value of $31,769.09; cash on hand in an amount in excess of $38,000; jewelry appraised at $1300 and other personal property. One annual account was settled prior to the final account. The executor was allowed regular commissions for administering the estate in the sum of $2,978.30. His attorney was allowed regular fees in a similar amount. In his final account which was filed in May, 1938, the executor asked for additional compensation for extraordinary services amounting to $6,000 and his attorney demanded $1250 for his unusual services. The court allowed the attorney’s fees in the full amount demanded, and that item is not involved on this appeal. The court in its discretion allowed the executor as additional compensation the same amount which he was paid as regular commissions for administering the estate, .to wit: $2,978.30. The unusual services of the executor consisted of supervising the operation of the summer resort through one season, settling a lawsuit which was brought against the estate for alleged damages amounting to $29,000 and adjusting a claim of $150 for revenue taxes. The suit was compromised by paying the plaintiff therein the sum of $19,356.64. We are not informed of the merits of that compromise. The executor did not personally maintain the summer resort. He employed Mabel Swain as a manager, who was paid from the estate a salary of $1250 in 1936 and $1800 in 1937. The season lasted from May to September. Dur *546 ing the time the executor acted as executor of the estate he was employed as the active manager of the Polk-California branch of the American Trust Company at San Francisco. But he did visit the Pomin Resort “week ends, and at other times while it was open”. He spent seven days there at one time, and devoted much time to its maintenance.

The executor and three expert witnesses testified that his extraordinary services were reasonably worth $6,000. The heirs filed an opposition to the allowance of the additional compensation claimed by both the executor and the attorney. The matter was, however, submitted to the court for determination on the evidence adduced by the executor, together with the proceedings of the estate, which were before the court. The court found that “the facts disclosed by the evidence did not warrant the allowance of . . . said sum of $6000.00”; that said sum “was excessive and the executor was not entitled to be allowed . . . more than the sum of $2978.30 for said extra . . . services”.

The court thereupon allowed the executor the sum of $2,978.30 as compensation for extraordinary services, which is exactly the amount previously allowed for his regular services for administering the estate. From that order this appeal was perfected.

There appears to have been no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial judge in allowing the executor only $2,978.30 as compensation for extraordinary services in connection with his probating the estate of said deceased person, in spite of the fact that no oral evidence was adduced to rebut the testimony of expert witnesses called by the executor to prove the value of such services. We are of the opinion a probate judge, who has before him all of the proceedings of an estate, together with evidence of the exact nature of extraordinary services performed incident to probating it, is not bound to fix' the compensation therefor, under section 902 of the Probate Code, at the estimated value testified to by expert witnesses produced by the executor, even though no witness is called to dispute their opinions in that regard. It is the province of the trial judge, under such circumstances, in the exercise of sound discretion, to determine the weight of the evidence and the value of the services performed and to allow the executor or attorney such sum “as the court may deem just and reasonable for any extraordinary services”. (Sec. 902, Prob. *547 Code; Zimmer v. Kilborn, 165 Cal. 523 [132 Pac. 1026, Ann. Cas. 1914D, 368]; Estate of Broome, 162 Cal. 258, 263 [122 Pac. 470] ; Estate of Larzelere, 4 Cal. App. (2d) 483, 486 [41 Pac. (2d) 362]; Estate of Parker, 186 Cal. 671 [200 Pac. 620].)

Section 902 of the Probate Code authorizes the court to determine and award only “such further allowances . . . as the court may deem just and reasonable for any extraordinary services”. In the ease of Zimmer v. Kilborn, supra, an appeal from a judgment which was rendered for less than the amount claimed in a suit for an assigned claim of a special administrator and his attorney for services rendered by both, in which there was no evidence to rebut the plaintiff’s expert testimony as to the value of the services performed, the judgment was affirmed. The court said:

“The first point made by the appellant is that there was no evidence to justify the verdict as to the amount of the recovery. It is true that all of the expert witnesses sworn on behalf of plaintiff testified that the services rendered were of greater value than five hundred dollars. . . . The fact that the defendant offered no evidence to contradict that of the attorneys who testified regarding the value of the services rendered by plaintiff’s assignors did not prevent the jurors from considering the matter in the light of their own experience nor cut them off from the right to return a verdict in favor of plaintiff for a sum less than that mentioned by any witness if, in their discretion, they believed the amount returned by their verdict a sufficient compensation for the work performed. The opinions of experts in such cases as this are not binding upon the jury. (See Spencer v. Collins, 156 Cal. 298, 303 [20 Ann. Cas. 49, 104 Pac. 320], and cases cited.) ”

The preceding case determines the very point contended for by the appellant in the present proceedings. Here it is insisted there is a clear showing of an abuse of discretion on the part of the judge in allowing less than any witness testified the extraordinary services were worth.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 479, 33 Cal. App. 2d 544, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genberg-v-snyder-calctapp-1939.