Goldy v. Duncan

53 P. 30, 120 Cal. 634, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 824
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1898
DocketSac. No. 379
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 P. 30 (Goldy v. Duncan) 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
Goldy v. Duncan, 53 P. 30, 120 Cal. 634, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 824 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

BELCHER, C

Theodore E. Weed died intestate in the county of Yolo, in this state, on the twenty-sixth day of March, 1896, being at that time a resident of said county, and leaving-an estate therein, consisting of real and personal property, of the value of about twenty thousand dollars. He left no wife or children and no next of kin residing in this state, unless the appellant, Mary L. Goldy, was so residing.

On April 2, 1896, H. C. Duncan, the public administrator of the county, duly filed a petition praying that letters of administration upon the said estate be issued to him, and thereafter, on the thirteenth day of the same month, Mary L. Goldy filed her petition, stating that she was a niece of said decedent, and praying that letters of administration upon the estate be issued to her.

The two petitions were heard together, and thereafter, on June 5, 1896, the court made and filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and ordered and adjudged that letters of administration on the estate be issued to the petitioner, H. C. Duncan. The eburt found “that the petitioner, Mary L. Goldy, was not a Iona fide resident of this state at the time her petition was filed herein, nor was she a Iona fide resident of this state at the time of the trial,” and as a conclusion of law that she was not competent or entitled to serve as administratrix.

There are two appeals in the case. The first was taken August 3; 1896, and is from the order granting the petition of the public administrator for letters of administration upon the estate of said deceased and refusing appellant’s application for such letters; and the second was taken February 7, 1897, and is from an order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial.

Appellant contends that the findings were not justified by the evidence, and whether they were justified or not is the only question which need be considered.

. . At the hearing J. W. Hughes was called as a witness for appellant and testified that he had been the legal adviser of the said [636]*636•deceased for many years, and at the time of his death had in his possession many of his papers. He then stated: “Upon the death of Mr. Weed I telegraphed the fact to his relatives at Stamford, Connecticut, and for some of them to come out and take charge of the estate. In response to my telegram, a brother of Mm. Goldy came "out immediately; he had never been in Cálifornia before," I" learned from him that his sister, Mrs. Goldy, -had some years before lived in California, and in response to telegrams she came out, and on arriving at my office in Sacramento signed her petition for letters of administration herein. Several telegrams passed between us. I can produce them.” On objection of counsel for appellant the telegrams were, excluded by the court.

S. N. Goldy, the husband of appellant, was called as a witness and testified, in substance, that his business was that of a civil engineer, and that he and his wife came to San Francisco in 1889 and rented a furnished flat at No. 180 Clinton Park in said city, where they lived until the summer of 1891, when they went east; that when he came to San Francisco he established an office on California street in that city, and when he went east he did so for the purpose of perfecting an invention on which he was then at work and obtaining patents thereon; that he then expected it would require eighteen months or two years to perfect his invention and obtain patents thereon, and intended, as soon as that should be accomplished, to return, to San. Francisco and establish a business there in connection with his invention; that his invention was a machine for cutting and polishing hard woods, making chair rounds, wagon and buggy spokes, fancy house furnishings, moldings and picture frames, and working up all character of hard wood requiring a high polish, and that the Pacific coast, and particularly San Francisco, was peculiarly adapted to the establishment of such a business; that in Í890 he registered and voted in San Francisco, and ever since he moved there in 1889 he had always considered and still considered that city his home, and had no other plans than' to reside there and carry on the business above described; that while in the east he registered at hotels as from San Francisco, and spent most of his time at Bridgeport, Connecticut, where he had a friend,' engaged in the foundry and machine business, [637]*637whom he employed to construct the greater portion of the castings and other parts of his invention which' were made of iron and steel and could be constructed more cheaply there than in California.

On cross-examination, the witness testified that he arrived in Sacramento the day before the trial, and that he had not been in San Francisco since he left there in the summer of 1891; that he completed the construction of his machine five or six months before he heard of the death of Mr. Weed, and had not made any preparation to return to California.

He was then asked by counsel for respondent:

“Q. If your machine can be more economically constructed in the east, and the hard woods procured there in large quantities, what reason can you give for saying that you intended to return to California? A. Well, I expected to go into the business of fruit raising with Mr. -, who was to furnish the capital.
“Q. Where did you expect to locate your fruit farm? A. At Bedding, California.
“Q. Where is Mr.-? A. He is dead. He died about two years ago.”

Mrs. Goldy was also called as a witness in her own behalf, and testified substantially as her husband did in regard to their coming to San Francisco in 1889, residing there until 1891, and then returning east. She said: “During all the time of our absence I considered California as our home, and intended to return to this state. I might not have returned so soon if it had not been for the death of my uncle.”

And on cross-examination she said: “When we went east in 1891 we gave up our rooms and took everything we owned with us.” “While in Bridgeport we rented rooms already furnished, .... where we lived for over two years. We were living there when we heard of uncle’s death. My husband always returned to Bridgeport when away on business.” “I would not have returned to California when I did had not uncle died. I came out to administer on his estate, and signed the petition for administration the day I arrived in Sacramento, before I went to San Francisco. When we heard of uncle’s death my brother started for California, expecting to administer on the estate. [638]*638„ . . . After my brother arrived in California we found out that lie could not administer on the estate, and, as I had at one time lived in California, they had me come out to administer on the •estate. I am living in the same rooms in San Francisco that we occupied at .Ho. 180 Clinton Park in 1890. I found them vacant and rented them by the month already furnished.”

The above was, in substance, all the evidence given at the hear- - ing, and the question is, Does it appear therefrom that appellant was a bona fide resident of this state at the time she made her application for letters, or at the time of the trial? If not, she was, under our statute (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1369), incompetent to serve as administratrix, and her application was properly denied.

Whether appellant was a bona fide

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 P. 30, 120 Cal. 634, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldy-v-duncan-cal-1898.