Ginocchio v. Coffman

59 P. 385, 127 Cal. 128, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 611
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1899
DocketS.F. No. 1899.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 59 P. 385 (Ginocchio v. Coffman) 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
Ginocchio v. Coffman, 59 P. 385, 127 Cal. 128, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 611 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

*129 THE COURT.

The administrator appeals from an order charging him with interest, on settlement of his second account, from the date of the settlement of his first account.

In his second account, which was filed February 16, 1898, after an order of the court had been made to show cause why he should not make the account, the administrator charged himself with seven thousand nine hundred and seventy-nine dollars and seventy-nine cents balance cash on hand from last report. The first account was settled July 28, 1891. In the second account, which is duly verified, the administrator makes a statement explanatory of his failure to close the estate; that on January 18, 1891, an action was commenced against him, as administrator, in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, for an amount in excess of the funds in his hands belonging to the estate, and that the suit was still pending; that it had been several times set for hearing at his request, and at the time of filing the account was set down for hearing' February 23, 1898. Some few items of expenditures, since the-settlement of the first account, were allowed and the account was settled, showing a balance of cash on hand of seven thousand six hundred and thirty-seven dollars and twenty-one cents, and the court charged the administrator with legal interest on this balance from July 28, 1891, amounting to three thousand four hundred and thirty dollars.

When the account came on to be heard, on February 28, 1898, the day fixed for the hearing, the attorneys for the heirs at law being present, the hearing was continued to March 14th and again to March 16th, on which last day the attorneys for the heirs made certain oral statements by way of objections to the account and report. They claimed that the administrator should be charged with interest from July 28, 1891, and in support of the claim stated that the first account as settled showed that all the debts and expenses and charges of administration had been fully paid, and that the only necessity for not closing the estate was the pendency of the lawsuit referred to above; that no proper efforts had been made by the administrator to bring the case to trial, which he could have done by-due diligence, and that the continued excuse of the administrator of the pendency of said suit showed had faith and a desire- *130 to avoid the final settlement; that the report failed to show what, if anything, the administrator had done toward the investment of the money held by him or to give any explanation for the long delay in bringing said action to trial. The bill of exceptions then shows that, upon the foregoing objections being made, the administrator, by his attorney, denied all intentional delay in the trial of said cause, and claimed that he had been making efforts to compromise the action; that the cause was set for trial February 23d, and had not been reached on the calendar; that he was not bound to make further explanation or report, or to do more than charge himself with the balance of the money in his hands, which he had done. The hearing was thereupon placed on the reserved calendar, to be restored for further hearing upon motion of the administrator or any of the heirs represented by their attorneys; and later, upon motion of the heirs, the hearing was fixed for November 23, 1898, and was regularly continued to .December 5, 1898, when the account came on to be heard, all parties being represented by attorneys. The bill of exceptions then proceeds as follows: “The heirs, by their aforesaid attorneys, announced that they desired the account to be then and there finally heard, and the administrator’s liability to the estate fixed and adjudicated. They thereupon showed to the court by the records of said estate and the matters and things which appeared to the court, as per settlement of the first account, and the administration thereof since said time, that upon the settlement of the first account there was no necessity for the further administration of said estate except the fact of the existence of the suit against the administrator aforesaid”; that the said suit had not been brought to trial by the administrator notwithstanding six months had elapsed since the last continuance of the hearing of this account; that during this intervening period the heirs had arranged a compromise of said suit with the plaintiff therein for the sum of one thousand dollars, conditioned upon its immediate payment by the administrator, subject to the approval of the court; that the administrator was urged by the heirs "to pay this amount; “that said administrator, in reply to the demands of said heirs, admitted (as he had previously thereto) that he had no money of said .estate in his hands with which to pay said compromise sum of' *131 one thousand dollars”; that about July 3, 1898, said administrator had prepared a petition, which was in the hands of the heirs, praying the order of the court for authority to pay said sum in compromise of the suit, and that after signing and verifying the petition he asked that it be not filed for a few weeks, promising that within that time he would secure the money to compromise said suit; that he then left the state; that the heirs had written him demanding the settlement of the suit and the settlement of his account, but that he has taken no action touching such matters; that the heirs are still able to compromise the suit for one thousand dollars if the administrator should be ordered to effect the compromise; that since the heirs made their objections at the hearing, March 16, 1898, the administrator had made no offer to change or modify his position then taken that he was not called upon to do so. The bill of exceptions shows that “the matter was submitted by the administrator and the heirs without further proceedings, no objections being made or suggested by any person.”

1. Appellant now claims that the foregoing statements were not established by any evidence, but were nothing but statements made by the attorneys of the heirs at the hearing, and that there was no evidence whatever submitted to establish these statements. The bill of exceptions states that the heirs “showed to the court” by the records and “the matters and things which appeared to the court, as .per settlement of the first account, and the administration thereof since said time,” the facts which we have summarized. If there was no evidence to support these statements, it was the duty of the administrator to object to their thus going into the bill. He complains that they were all inserted by way of amendments, and that the court had no right to include this matter because they were but unsupported statements of counsel at the hearing. This should have been made .to appear in the bill of exceptions if such was the fact. On the contrary, the judge certifies to the correctness of the bill as the administrator’s bill of exceptions, and the hearing- was had on what purports to be a summary of the evidence as now certified to us without objection. Under these circumstances, we must treat the bill as correctly setting forth what occurred. (Hyde v. Boyle, 89 Cal. 590.)

*132 2. Appellant further contends that the objections to the account cannot be considered because they were not made in writing, citing section 1635 of the Code of Civil Procedure and Estate of More, 121 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
59 P. 385, 127 Cal. 128, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ginocchio-v-coffman-cal-1899.