Haberly v. Haberly

149 P. 53, 27 Cal. App. 139, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 102
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1465.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 P. 53 (Haberly v. Haberly) 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
Haberly v. Haberly, 149 P. 53, 27 Cal. App. 139, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 102 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The plaintiff in this action recovered a judgment against the defendant as the administrator of the estate of George W. Haberly, deceased, in the sum of eight hundred dollars, with interest thereon from the twenty-ninth day of March, 1901. George W. Plaberly died in the city and county of San Francisco on the fifth day of December, 1910. Thereafter, on March 11, 1911, his brother, William T. Haberly, was appointed administrator of his estate with the will annexed. Prior thereto, to wit, on the twenty-fourth day of January, 1911, William T. Haberly had been appointed as the guardian of the person and estate of his mother, Rose Haberly, an insane person. On August 31, 1911, William T. Haberly, as guardian of Rose Haberly, presented to the judge of the superior court in which the estate of George W. Haberly, deceased, was pending for probate, a claim in the sum sued for, which claim was rejected by the *141 judge. On November 29, 1911, William T. Haberly, as guardian of Rose Haberly, instituted an action on the rejected claim in the estate which he represented as administrator. Demurrers to the complaint and an amended complaint in the action were sustained, and subsequently one B. T. Morton was appointed guardian ad litem, of Rose Haberly, who, for a cause of action in a second amended complaint alleged practically all of the matters and things set forth in the complaint originally filed by William T. Haberly.

At the outset it is insisted that the trial court should not have entertained jurisdiction of the action in the face of the objection that the papers, pleadings, and proof showed that the appointment of the guardian ad litem was suggested by the defendant William T. Haberly. Because of this fact it is contended that the motion for judgment of dismissal made by the counsel who defended the action, and was the attorney for the residuary legatee under the will of the deceased, should have been granted because, as was claimed, the action was one in effect wherein the same person was appearing as both plaintiff and defendant.

It is the rule .ordinarily, and for reasons that are obvious,it that courts will not entertain jurisdiction of an action where the plaintiff and defendant are in fact one and the same person ; but the rule has no application to the facts of the present case. The claim of the plaintiff against the estate of George W. Haberly, deceased, having been rejected by the court in which the estate was pending, relegated her to an action upon the claim; and she could not be deprived of that remedy merely because the guardian of her person and estate happened to be at the same time the administrator of the estate of the deceased. The suggestion that a guardian ad litem be appointed for the purpose of bringing suit was apparently made in good faith, and it does not appear here that the action was instituted for the purpose of procuring a collusive judgment. That the action was defended in good faith is evidenced by the vigorous defense interposed by the. counsel who, nominally representing William T. Haberly, in fact appeared in and defended the action as the attorney for the residuary legatee under the will of the deceased, who was the one person most interested in the defense of the action.

Conceding for the sake, of argument that the plaintiff’s complaint was demurrable upon the ground of uncertainty in *142 certain particulars, nevertheless the error, if any, in the order overruling the demurrer does not appear to have placed the defendant at a disadvantage; and therefore, after judgment rendered upon the facts, must be held to have been harmless. (Hu ffner v. Sawday, 153 Cal. 86, [94 Pac. 424] ; Widemann v. Digges, 21 Cal. App. 342, [131 Pac. 882].)

The pleaded and proven facts of the case upon which the claim of the plaintiff was founded are substantially these: The Eintracht Bund, a fraternal society of which Frederick Haberly, deceased, the husband of the plaintiff, was a member, had, after the plaintiff had been declared incompetent and during the period of her incompetency, paid the sum of eight hundred dollars to George W. Haberly, a son, for and on account of the insurance which became due and payable upon the death of Frederick Haberly. Frederick Haberly left a last will and testament, in which he specifically bequeathed the sum due upon his death for life insurance from the Eintracht Bund, to his son, George W. Haberly, who was also nominated and subsequently appointed as the administrator of the father’s estate. The trial court, in accord with the allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint, found that “in his lifetime . . . Frederick Haberly was a member of the Eintracht Bund, a benevolent society of San Francisco . . . ; and upon the death of said Frederick Haberly, by reason of his membership in said society the sum of $800 became due and payable to his widow . . . Rose Haberly; that on the 29th day of March, 1901, George W. Haberly, a son of . . . Rose Haberly, received said sum of $800 from the Eintracht Bund . . . for and on behalf of his mother . . . who was then, ever since has been and now is incarcerated in the state hospital for the insane at Stockton.”

The principal point made in support of the appeal relates to the insufficiency of the evidence to support the foregoing findings; and deals largely, if not entirely, with the construction which should be placed upon the by-laws of the Eintracht Bund which designated the persons who might become the beneficiaries of its insurance. It is conceded that the by-law in question was a controlling constituent of the contract for insurance entered into between the Eintracht Bund and Frederick Haberly; and that the will of the latter was of no avail if it named as a beneficiary of the insurance a person not entitled thereto under the by-law. The by-law in question was *143 printed and promulgated in the German language, and although offered and received in evidence upon the trial the trial court had, as we have, only liberal translations of the same. The translation of Mr. Frederick Huber, a member of the Eintraeht Bund and who participated in the preparation of its by-laws, was that “A married member must leave the money either to his wife or children; and it is not necessary for him to make _a will because the money belongs to the widow; and if there is no such widow the children. He can make a will if he wants to, but he cannot thereby affect the persons to whom the money will be paid upon his death. If there is no such children, and the member not living with his wife, then he can make a will. It is only when there is no children and the wife is dead (that) he can make a will.”

Henry Gumbell, the treasurer of the Eintraeht Bund, testified as a witness for the plaintiff for the purpose of translating the by-law in question; and in that behalf was questioned and made answers as follows:

“Q. Would you kindly read those provisions to which I have referred?
“A. (reading). The insurance of a married member goes to his wife—
“The Court: Q. A married member must insure to his wife?
“A. Tes, or to his children if he don’t have no wife.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
149 P. 53, 27 Cal. App. 139, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haberly-v-haberly-calctapp-1915.