Griffin v. Kellas

200 P.2d 139, 89 Cal. App. 2d 43, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 995
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1948
DocketCiv. No. 3723
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 200 P.2d 139 (Griffin v. Kellas) 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
Griffin v. Kellas, 200 P.2d 139, 89 Cal. App. 2d 43, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 995 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

H. H. Welsh, an attorney, aged 88 years, died on February 17, 1945. He left an estate valued in excess of $600,000. His will was dated July 21, 1944, and the codicil thereto was dated January 20, 1945. They were both duly admitted to probate. Pétitioners John K. Griffin and Frank L. Pettey qualified as executors, By the terms [45]*45of the will decedent devised to the Regents of the University of California, in trust, several thousand acres of land in Madera and Fresno Counties and 200 shares of stock in the Standard Oil Company. One thousand dollars was left in trust for the erection and rebuilding of the old Millerton court house. To John K. Griffin was left a gold watch, to Jennie B. Rigby a Buick automobile, to the decedent’s nephew, Arthur Atchinson, $22,000 in cash, to Edward L. Kellas certain personal property in addition to $5,000 in cash, and to Amy J. Forrest $5,000. In paragraph NINETH he devised certain described real property and profits thereon to John K. Griffin, as trustee, to hold and manage and to pay Dorothy Lee Griffin from the income $250 per month for life, and the remainder to her issue, if any, and if none, then the corpus of the trust was to revert to John K. Griffin, Jennie B. Rigby and James B. Griffin, share and share alike. Paragraph B of the codicil (hereinafter referred to as paragraph NINATII) revoked paragraph NINSTII of the original will and in lieu thereof provided that the certain described real property and income therefrom be managed by the same trustee but directed that Dorothy Lee Griffin receive $125 per month for life and Amy J. Forrest receive a like sum for her life. In other respects the provisions of the codicil were similar to the provisions of paragraph NINHTH of the original will. Paragraph TENTH provided specifically:

1 ‘ TENTH: I give, devise and bequeath the gifts set forth in Paragraph Nineth hereof free and clear of all Hens, debts, demands, claims, commissions, fees, expenses of administration and taxes of all kinds levied or assessed against said property at the time of my death or in virtue of my death or the transfer of said property, including inheritance and federal estate taxes, and including income taxes of all kings accruing prior to the distribution of my estate and I direct that all of said liens, debts, demands, claims, commissions, fees, expenses of administration and all of said taxes be paid from the other gifts made in this will in proportion to the value thereof as set forth in the inventory and appraisement filed in my estate proceedings.”

Under paragraph ELEVENTH all of the residue of decedent’s estate was left to John K. Griffin, Jennie B. Rigby and James B. Griffin, share and share alike.

Appellants and cross-respondents, as executors, and Jennie B. Rigby and John K. Griffin, individually and as residuary legatees, state in their brief that “Every question and every [46]*46issue arising upon these appeals find their origin in the unfortunate language employed in paragraph TENTH of the testator’s will. The question and issue presented is, how is paragraph TENTH of the will to be interpreted and construed in respect to charging the devisees and legatees named in the testator’s will, other than those named in paragraph B of the codicil, for the debts, taxes and expenses which said paragraph B clearly lifts from the beneficiaries named in said paragraph and places the burdens thereof on the decedent’s other devisees and legatees,” i. e., “shall paragraph TENTH of the will be interpreted and construed so as to charge all of the testator’s devisees and legatees, except those exempted by paragraph TENTH of the will proportionately with the general debts of the estate, accrued and unpaid taxes existing at the time of the testator’s death, expenses of administration and all other liens, debts and charges that the law does not specifically place elsewhere, or shall said paragraph TENTH be interpreted and construed so as to charge and satisfy such debts, claims, taxes and expenses wholly from the residuary portion of the testator’s estate?” (Italics ours.) It is conceded by all parties that the decedent’s estate is entirely solvent and that there remain sufficient funds under the residuary clause of the will to meet all disputed demands or claims against it.

The executors presented their first account and petition for ratable distribution. Hellas, Crittenden, Regents of the University of California and Forrest filed objections thereto. No question is raised as to tite correctness of the account pertaining to receipts and expenditures. The trial court, in interpreting the terms of the will and codicil, in connection with the statutes claimed to be applicable, found:

(1) “That paragraph X of said will is not ambiguous or uncertain; that decedent, by means of said paragraph X, designated by said will that gifts contained and specific property described in paragraph IX, as modified by paragraph B of the Codicil thereto, should pass free and clear of all liens, debts, claims, commissions, fees, expenses of administration and taxes of all kinds which might lawfully be levied or assessed against the gifts contained or specific property described in said paragraph IX, as modified by paragraph B of the Codicil, or the income therefrom, or the right to take or inherit said gifts or described property, and designated that if any of said charges were lawfully levied or assessed against said gifts or said specific property, or the right to inherit such [47]*47gifts or property, then such charges so levied or assessed were intended and designated to he borne proportionately by all the other gifts in said will.”

With this interpretation of paragraph TENTH there can be and there is apparently no disagreement.

(2) “That decedent did not and did not intend or purport by the provisions of paragraph X of said will to designate that all liens, debts, demands, claims, commissions, fees, expenses of administration and taxes assessed against said estate should be charged proportionately against all of the gifts in said will; that decedent did not and did not intend or purport by the provisions of said paragraph X to designate that the residuum of said estate should be relieved of any liens, debts, demands, claims, commissions, fees, expenses of administration and taxes, or proportionate part thereof, with which said residuary estate would be chargeable under the provisions of Probate Code, Section 750, in the absence of such designation; that decedent did not and did not intend or purport by the provisions of said paragraph X to designate that the general and specific legacies, devices, and bequests or gifts contained in said will, except the gifts set forth in paragraph IX, as modified by paragraph B of the Codicil thereof, should be chargeable proportionately with said residuary legacy, with a share of all liens, debts, demands, claims, commissions, fees, expenses of administration, and taxes levied or assessed against said estate.” (Italics ours.)

The court then found that the petition for ratable distribution, as supplemented, was contrary to the terms of the will and the law applicable, and did not correctly set forth the items chargeable against the gifts contained in the will and accordingly did not represent the net amount due to the legatees and devisees after deduction of charges. The court then ordered:

(1) That the petition be denied insofar as such petition purports to charge any debts, expenses of administration, taxes, etc., “in any manner other than as herein set forth.”

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Related

Estate of Welsh
200 P.2d 139 (California Court of Appeal, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 P.2d 139, 89 Cal. App. 2d 43, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-kellas-calctapp-1948.