Haub v. Leggett

117 P. 556, 160 Cal. 491, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 537
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1911
DocketS.F. No. 5726.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 117 P. 556 (Haub v. Leggett) 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
Haub v. Leggett, 117 P. 556, 160 Cal. 491, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 537 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

Appeal by plaintiff from an order denying her motion for a new trial.

The action is to recover fifteen hundred dollars, alleged to be due plaintiff for services rendered and food supplied to the decedent in her lifetime. The evidence showed the following facts: Plaintiff presented to the defendants, as executors of the estate of said decedent, a claim for said sum for allowance as a claim against said estate. The executors allowed it for only five hundred dollars, and endorsed thereon and signed a statement to that effect. Thereupon the plaintiff presented the claim, so endorsed, to the judge of the superior court and requested him to act upon it. The judge allowed and approved it for five hundred dollars, and thereupon at the request of the plaintiff’s attorney it was filed in the office of the clerk of the court. Thereafter, within the time allowed by law this action was begun. Evidence was also given at the trial tending to prove the indebtedness.

The answer set up the allowance of the claim by the executors and the judge for five hundred dollars only, as a judgment, or adjudication, of the controversy, and in bar of the right to recover more than that sum. It also denied the alleged debt, as to the excess over five hundred dollars. The court made findings showing the presentation of the claim, the refusal to allow it for more than five hundred dollars, and the filing of the claim after such partial allowance, but made no finding upon the issues as to the merits of the claim. It was of the opinion that the allowance so made constituted a judgment for the amount allowed and a bar to any action upon the claim, and that therefore no further findings were necessary.

One ground of the motion for new trial was that the decision is against law, in that the court failed therein to find upon material issues. If the aforesaid allowance of the claim is not a bar to a subsequent action upon the claim as a whole, then the other issues were material and the new trial should have been granted upon that ground. (Swift v. Occidental etc. Co., 141 Cal. 166, [74 Pac. 700]; Black v. Harrison H. *493 Co., 155 Cal. 131, [99 Pac. 494]; Lyden v. Spohn Co., 155 Cal. 183, [100 Pac. 236].)

The executors, in support of the order appealed from, contend that the allowance of the claim by the executors and the judge, and the filing of it thereafter with the clerk, constitute a judgment upon the whole claim for the amount allowed, which has the effect of merging the claim in the order of allowance, so that under the familiar rule in regard to the merger of causes of action in judgments, the claim ceases to exist except in its transformed state and is reduced to five hundred dollars. It is conceded that if the claim as partially allowed had not been approved by the judge and filed, the plaintiff would have been at liberty to sue for the whole claim. The contention is that such approval by the judge and subsequent filing with the clerk is a complete estoppel preventing the plaintiff from claiming more than the part allowed.

The code provides that every claim, when allowed by the executor and judge must within thirty days thereafter “be filed in the court and be ranked among the acknowledged debts of the estate, to be paid in due course of administration.” (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 1497.) If a matured claim is rejected by the executor or judge, the holder is at liberty to bring suit thereon within three months after the date of its rejection, as the law was when these proceedings were taken. (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 1498.)! As it is now it is three months after service of notice of rejection. (Stats. 1909, p. 147.) If it is rejected by the executor or judge in part only and “the creditor refuse to accept the amount allowed in satisfaction of his claim” he cannot recover costs in such suit unless he recovers on the claim more than “that offered to be allowed.” (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 1503.) A judgment in an action against the executor upon a money demand against the estate “only establishes the claim in the same manner as if it had been allowed by the executor or administrator and a judge.” (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 1504.) The executor must, in his accounts, “exhibit all debts which have been presented and allowed.” (Secs. 1628, 1622.) Any allowed claim, so exhibited, mSy be contested by the heirs, and a trial by jury may be demanded thereon. (Sec. 1636.) Upon the settlement of such account the court must make an order for the payment of the debts (sec. 1647), and the executor thereupon becomes personally *494 liable to each creditor therefor and execution may issue against him. (Sec. 1649.)

These provisions show that an allowed claim against an estate does not attain to the dignity and force of an absolute judgment until, upon the settlement of an account, an order is made directing the executor to pay it. Prior to that time it ranks as an acknowledged debt, but it is still subject to contest by the heirs. It has not become conclusive in favor of the claimant. The decisions of this court have always recognized the inconclusive effect of an allowed claim. In Decks Estate v. Gherke, 6 Cal. 669, it was held that such allowance was conclusive upon the settlement of an account, in favor of an administrator who had paid the claim before filing such account. The decision was made in 1856. The aforesaid provision of section 1636 allowing the heirs to contest was not then in the statute. It originated in 1861. (Stats. 1861, p. 647.) This provision expressly changes the rule of Decks Estate v. Gherke, 6 Cal. 669, on this point. (See Estate of Fernandez, 119 Cal. 579.). Other decisions have repeatedly recognized the rule that the allowance of a claim is not the equivalent of an ordinary judgment. In Beckett v. Selover, 7 Cal. 228, [68 Am. Dec. 237]; Estate of Crosby, 55 Cal. 582; Estate of Hill, 62 Cal. 186; Weihe v. Statham, 67 Cal. 84, [7 Pac. 143], and Wingerter v. Wingerter, 71 Cal. 111, [11 Pac. 853], it was held that such allowance does not bind the heir in a proceeding for the sale of land. In Estate of Hidden, 23 Cal. 363, it was doubted whether it was binding on a creditor upon a contest of an account. In Magraw v. McGlynn, 26 Cal. 431, the court - says such allowed claim is a judgment “of a qualified character only,” and that the subsequent order for-payment upon settlement of an account is the final judgment. In Selna v. Selna, 125 Cal. 357, [73 Am. St. Rep. 47, 58 Pac. 16], it was said that even if it were conceded that the taking of an ordinary judgment for the price of land was a waiver of a vendor’s lien therefor, nevertheless the allowance of a claim therefor would not waive the lien, although the statement of the claim did not mention the lien. In Richardson v. Diss, 127 Cal. 58, [59 Pac. 197], the court held that, after the allowance of a claim on a note bearing fifteen per cent interest, the claim would continue to bear that rate. In Morton v. Adams. 124 Cal. 229, [71 Am. St. Rep. 53, 56 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P. 556, 160 Cal. 491, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haub-v-leggett-cal-1911.