Hodgkins v. American Trust Co.

55 P.2d 279, 12 Cal. App. 2d 237, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1015
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1936
DocketCiv. 10086
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 55 P.2d 279 (Hodgkins v. American Trust Co.) 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
Hodgkins v. American Trust Co., 55 P.2d 279, 12 Cal. App. 2d 237, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1015 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

NOURSE, P. J.

On the denial of a petition for ratable partial distribution, the probate court determined the persons to whom, and the manner in which, distribution should be 4iade. The appellants are the granddaughter and the brother, respectively, of the testatrix. They state three questions are involved in the appeal, but concede that if the question o|£ the abatement of the legacies is determined favorably to them, the other points may be deemed waived. We coniine our examination to this question as the order must be reverse)! on that ground.

The question involves an interpretation of sections 750, 751 and 752 of the Probate Code. General legacies upder the will aggregated $59,000, of which sum $25,000 was bequeathed to kindred of the testatrix and the remainder to persons not related. The will was executed in January, 1929, and at that time testatrix had property more than suffidient to meet all bequests. At the time of her death, values had decreased so that little more than $28,000 was on hand) for distribution. The appellants contended on the hearing of the petition for distribution that the general legacies to persons not related to the testatrix should first abate under the provisions of section 752 of the Probate Code. The respondents *239 took the position that this section gives preference to spouse and kindred in the matter of debts alone, and in support of their position cite and rely on Estate of Apple, 66 Cal. 432 [6 Pac. 7], as the only authority in this state covering the subject.

The Apple Estate involved a case where the testator died a resident of Nevada leaving several demonstrative legacies covering bonds which were not in this state at the time of his death. Administration was taken on other personal property located here, and the probate court assumed to distribute the bonds as well. Since the bonds were insufficient to meet the legacies in full, distribution was made on the theory that the legacies to the kindred were to be preferred over those to others. The Supreme Court stated that the question involved on the appeal was whether the law of the domicile controlled, it being conceded that the law of Nevada made no distinction between legacies to kindred and legacies to those not related. All the justices agreed that the law of Nevada controlled and that the abatement should be applied ratably to all legacies. A majority of the court then stated that, even if the law of California should govern, the same result would follow. The discussion on this subject is what respondents rely upon as controlling here. The appellants correctly point out that that part of the opinion is obiter dictum and two of the justices concurring in the first part of the opinion expressed the same view in respect to the portion relating to the law of this state.

But an opinion is not to be disregarded wholly because it is obiter dictum. The real criticism goes to those portions of an opinion which assume to determine matters outside the issues and hence not fully discussed and considered. That criticism is not applicable to the portion of the Apple opinion which discusses the California statutes. But even so, the opinion is not controlling at this time because of the radical change in the statutes involved. It will be noted that the conclusion was based almost exclusively on the position of the code sections as they stood at that time. Emphasis is laid on the fact that, as originally enacted, section 1359 of the Civil Code related to the order of resort to property of the estate for payment of debts, that section 1360 related to the order of resort to legacies for the payment of debts and that section 1361, which gave a preference to legacies to spouse or kindred, *240 immediately followed these sections. It was then said that because of this arrangement of the sections, it appeared.to be the intention of the legislature to prefer, such legacies as to payment of debts alone, and that the following section 1362 relating to abatement was complete in itself and had ho relation to the preference given in the preceding section. It should be noted here that the entire portioji of the opinion relating to this subject is confined to the question of I debts. Nothing is said as to the liability for family allowance or expenses of administration. Section 1361 was given th,e subtitle “Legacies, how charged with debts,” and the opinion expressly holds and emphasizes that the preference to spouse and kindred related to debts only. Yet section 1359, as amended in 1874, provided that the family allowance aiid expenses of administration must be paid “before any debts are paid”. We can see no reason why the preference giv.en by section 1361 should not apply to these matters as well! as to the debts of the estate, except that the statute does not say so, and if we added them to the section, that would be judicial legislation.

As the arrangement of the code sections was relied on in the interpretation given in the Apple opinion, their rearrangement in the Probate Code, has a significant bearing upon the interpretation of the sections as they now stand. The Probate Code is a revision and restatement of the entire subject matter, and we must look to the provisions of that code as written. The office of the court “is simply to ascertain and declare what is in terms or in substance contained (in a statute), not to insert what has been omitted, or to omit what has been inserted”. (Sec. 1858, Code Civ. Proc.) ;

Section 750 of the Probate Code relates to the order ¿f resort to estate assets for payment of debts, expenses of administration, and family allowance, all of which items are p^it on the same basis in so far as liability for payment is concerned. This section embraces provisions formerly found in sections 1560, 1562 and 1563 of the Code of Civil Procedure, arjd in section 1359 of the Civil Code. The final clause of the' new section reads, "and thereafter all other property devised and bequeathed is liable for the same, in proportion to the value or amount of the several devises and legacies, but specific devises and legacies are exempt from such liability if it ap *241 pears to the court necessary to carry into effect the intention of the testator, and there is other sufficient estate”.

Section 751 of the new code embraces some of the provisions of section 1360 of the Civil Code with little change in language, but with the omission of the fourth subdivision of the old section. Section 752 is a complete,new draft embracing provisions of sections 1361 and 1362 of the Civil Code. Section 751 has been given the sub-title, “Order of resort for payment of legacies”; section 752 carries the subtitle, “Order of abatement-of legacies”.

A careful reading of these sections discloses a manifest intention of the legislature to make them all-inclusive of the subjects therein contained. Section 750 makes all property of the estate primarily liable for payment of the debts, expenses of administration, and family allowance, and declares the order in which the property shall be resorted to for those purposes. The only exception is property covered by specific devises and legacies under certain circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.2d 279, 12 Cal. App. 2d 237, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodgkins-v-american-trust-co-calctapp-1936.