Gordon v. Nichols

195 P.2d 444, 86 Cal. App. 2d 571, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1655
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 6, 1948
DocketCiv. 16232
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 P.2d 444 (Gordon v. Nichols) 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
Gordon v. Nichols, 195 P.2d 444, 86 Cal. App. 2d 571, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1655 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory judgment in favor of plaintiff Gordon ordering the accounting, partition and sale of real property owned by said plaintiff and defendant as tenants in common.

The complaint alleges that upon the death of Laura L. Dickinson on September 18, 1940, the property here involved descended to appellant Evalyn M. Nichols and to Jean Louise Hayward Black in equal shares; that said Black assigned *573 10 per cent of her interest to plaintiff Durkee, and 40 per cent of her interest to the respondent Gordon, and that the probate court made distribution on February 24, 1944, to the said parties as follows: 50 per cent to appellant Nichols, 40 per cent to respondent Gordon and 10 per cent to Durkee. It is also alleged that appellant as the duly appointed administratrix of the estate of Laura L. Dickinson, deceased, collected certain rents, issues and profits for which she accounted in said probate proceedings, and that although a demand had been made upon appellant for an accounting, she has failed and refused to do so since the entry of the decree of distribution in said estate.

Appellant answered, denying generally and specifically each and every allegation of the complaint and for a separate defense alleged herself to be the sole owner of the proprty in question.

The court found it to be true (1) that the property in question descended to appellant Nichols and Black, as alleged; (2) that Black by assignments transferred her one-half interest in said property to Durkee, as to a 10 per cent interest, and to respondent Gordon, as to a 40 per cent interest; (3) that the decree of final distribution distributed the property accordingly; (4) that appellant Nichols as administratrix collected the rents, issues and profits from such property, made certain expenditures as set forth in her accounts rendered in the probate proceeding, and continues to collect the rentals on said property.

The court further found that an action was commenced in the Superior Court in and for the County of Los Angeles, entitled Jack Edwin Reed (also known as Jerre Edwin Nichols) by Evalyn M. Nichols, his guardian, plaintiff, vs. Jean Louise Hayward (Black); Chloe Gordon (now Cly) ; Monte Cly; P. E. Durkee, et al., defendants, and that a notice of attachment dated March 31,1944, was recorded; that execution issued therein in the sum of $57.42; that thereafter the interest of P. E. Durkee in the property described was sold on the 27th day of April, 1944, to one Max Weidner for $84.74; that on May 8, 1945, said Weidner transferred to A. T. Nichols the certificate of sale and conveyed to said Nichols the property therein described; and that said A. T. Nichols on May 19, 1945, by grant deed conveyed to appellant Evalyn M. Nichols all of his interest in the described property. The court found that by reason of the foregoing that the 10 per cent interest of Paul E. Durkee, in and to said property and *574 the rents, issues and profits thereof, is now owned by appellant Evalyn M. Nichols. Further, that a partition could not be made without great prejudice to the owners and that a sale is necessary; that an accounting should be made of all rents, issues and profits from the realty described which have accrued and are due and owing to respondent Gordon as to a 40 per cent interest and to appellant Nichols as to a 60 per cent interest.

The interlocutory judgment accordingly decrees that appellant owns a 60 per cent interest in the property and respondent 40 per cent thereof, orders appellant to render an accounting, and orders that the property be sold and the proceeds be divided between the parties in proportion to their respective interests.

Adverting to the decree of distribution in the estate of Dickinson, the assignments by Black to Durkee and respondent Gordon were inferentially approved, since the property was distributed to them as their respective interests appeared in such assignments, said decree further providing:

“ (5) That no determination is made by this decree as to the relative rights, priorities, or other effects of the action commenced by Jack Edwin Reed or his filing of lis pendens therein, or the attachment or judgment in favor of A. T. Nichols ... or the rights, priorities, of effects of any attaching, judgment, or other lien claimant against the interest in this estate which descended to Jean Black, as against said Jean Black, P. E. Durkee, Monte Cly, or Chloe M. Gordon, but all such matters are expressly reserved and relegated to other forums for determination.”

During the trial herein a certified copy of such decree of distribution was introduced in evidence as plaintiff’s Exhibit One, at which time the trial court commented with reference to clause 5 thereof, above quoted, as follows: “I take it that one of the purposes of this action is to have the court make such a determination.”

It is here asserted by appellant that the finding of the trial court that respondent Gordon is the owner of a 40 per cent interest in the realty here involved is unsupported by the evidence.

This 40 per cent interest is claimed by respondent under the assignment heretofore mentioned, which was approved by the probate court and made part of its decree of distribution. However, between the time the assignment was executed and *575 its approval by the court, sections 530 and 530.1 of the Probate Code were repealed and section 1020.1 was enacted.

Appellant takes the position that the repeal of sections 530 and 530.1, supra, terminated any right that respondent acquired under such assignment, and that, since statutes operate prospectively, unless otherwise provided, respondent could not take advantage of the new section 1020.1, supra. In other words, that any right respondent had under the assignment expired with the repeal of said sections 530 and 530.1, and therefore appellant takes the entire interest of Black by virtue of the judgment in favor of A. T. Nichols.

On January 18, 1941, when the assignment to respondent Gordon was executed, sections 530 and 530.1 of the Probate Code, (effective Sept. 18, 1939) provided that such assignments were wholly unenforceable, unless filed in the probate proceedings and approved by the court after hearing of special petitions presented therefor, and further that such assignments were not entitled to recordation until so approved.

These two sections were effectively repealed and a new section 1020.1 enacted as of September 12, 1941.

Estate of Lund, 65 Cal.App.2d 151, 153 [150 P.2d 211], points out that section 1020.1 and the former section 530.1 “appear to have been enacted in an attempt by the Legislature to give the probate court some control, at least for the purpose of distribution, over agreements providing compensation for services- of so-called ‘heir-hunters.’ . . . Prior to the enactment of said section (1020.1) and its forerunner [530.1] the probate court had no jurisdiction to determine the issue of the validity of an assignment upon the distribution of an estate. (Estate of Howe, 161 Cal. 152 [118 P.

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Bluebook (online)
195 P.2d 444, 86 Cal. App. 2d 571, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-nichols-calctapp-1948.