Huber v. Lutheran High School Ass'n of Southern California

31 Cal. App. 3d 126, 107 Cal. Rptr. 89, 1973 Cal. App. LEXIS 1058
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1973
DocketCiv. 11458
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Cal. App. 3d 126 (Huber v. Lutheran High School Ass'n of Southern California) 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
Huber v. Lutheran High School Ass'n of Southern California, 31 Cal. App. 3d 126, 107 Cal. Rptr. 89, 1973 Cal. App. LEXIS 1058 (Cal. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

Opinion

AULT, J.

The United California Bank, executor and testamentary trustee under the will of George Huber, and three charitable remaindermen: Lutheran High School Association of Southern California; the Braille Institute of America, Inc.; and the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania, appeal from an order directing the bank as testamentary trustee to distribute probate income held by it in the amount of $59,253.95 to respondent Gertrude Huber.

Factual Background

In September 1965 Dr. George Ulrich Huber died testate, survived by his elderly, unmarried sister Gertrude, who is the respondent in this appeal, and by his widow Margaret, whom he had married six months before his death. Dr. Huber’s first wife, Anna Scheuer Huber, predeceased him in *129 1964, ending their 54-year marriage. Under Anna’s will, Dr. Huber was entitled to receive the residue of her estate only if he survived distribution of the estate. As her executor, Dr. Huber had inventoried assets in the estate at approximately $50,000. He died before the estate was distributed.

Dr. Huber’s will was admitted to probate in November 1965. With respect to Margaret, the will provided: “I am intentionally making no provision in this will for my said wife, Margaret Ellen Huber, since she has sufficient resources and income for her own support, and she also has the right to life care and residency at the Wesley Palms Retirement Home, 2404 Loring Street, San Diego, California.” The will contained alternate provisions for distribution of the residue of Dr. Huber’s estate.

A. If Gertrude should “survive distribution” of the estate, the residue was given to United California Bank in trust for her benefit. The trustee was directed to sell the securities and invest the proceeds in savings and loan accounts, to charge all expenses of administering the trust to the corpus, and to pay the “net” income of the trust to Gertrude during the balance of her lifetime; Gertrude’s interest in the principal and/or income of the trust was not to be subject to claims of creditors. On Gertrude’s death the trustee was directed to pay $14,000 in specific bequests and to distribute the remaining portion to the three remaindermen. (Paragraphs Twelve and Thirteen.)

B. If Gertrude should not “survive distribution” of the estate, the $14,000 in specific bequests were to be paid, and the balance distributed to the three remaindermen directly, without the intervention of any trust. (Paragraphs Five through Eleven.)

United California Bank and William J. Taft, 1 as coexecutors of the estate, filed an inventory and appraisement showing the value of the assets in Dr. Huber’s estate to be $534,606.87.

The estate was immediately confronted by claims and multiple lawsuits filed by Margaret and by Anna’s heirs:

A. Margaret Huber filed a creditor’s claim for $37,227.92 because of a promissory note she had signed allegedly at Huber’s request; in addition she contended Huber had made her an inter vivos gift of securities worth $163,000.

B. The heirs of Anna Huber contended $330,496.66 of the assets inventoried in Dr. Huber’s estate rightfully belonged in Anna’s estate.

In March 1968 the claim of Anna’s heirs was compromised and settled *130 for the sum of $194,000, to be paid from the assets of the George Huber estate directly to the heirs of Anna Huber. The agreement was signed by the Anna Huber heirs, the three remaindermen under George’s will and by the United California Bank as executor of both estates. [Apparently the bank succeeded George Huber as executor of Anna’s estate.]

On April 25, 1968, the probate court signed an order which approved both the compromise and the executors’ current account. The executors were ordered to pay the Anna Huber heirs $194,000 from the assets of the estate, pay certain extraordinary fees, retain $75,000 in the estate, and distribute the balance of the assets [approximately $202,000] to the United California Bank as trustee, “subject to the claims of creditors, claimants, the United States Government and the State of California,” to be held and administered in accordance with Paragraph Twelfth of the will. While there is nothing in the record on appeal or in the superior court probate file to support it, the bank and the remaindermen tell us on appeal that the preliminary distribution was authorized by their oral stipulation in open court on April 23, 1968.

Included in the funds distributed to the trustee by the April 25, 1968, probate order was a sum in excess of $50,000, which represented income accumulated during probate. Shortly after this preliminary, but major, distribution to the trustee, Gertrude Huber filed her first petition for an order instructing the trustee to distribute to her the net income accumulated during probate administration and distributed to the trustee. The United California Bank, as trustee, filed written objections to the motion on many grounds. The objections were supported by a memorandum of points and authorities filed on behalf of the bank as executor and the three charitable remaindermen, all represented' by the same attorneys. The objections pointed out that Margaret Huber was contending that the sum of $163,000 was not properly a part of the George Huber estate. The court denied Gertrude’s petition without prejudice on June 11, 1968.

In August 1968 the bank filed its first account as trustee and reported it had received from the executor $55,951.73 as probate income and that this sum “has been held and kept invested in savings and loan accounts.” The amount was corrected and reduced to $53,417.72 by the court’s order approving the account. Again in 1970 the bank as trustee reported, in its second account, that “the sum of $53,417.72 is undistributed probate income held in temporary investment.” In 1971 the bank as trustee reported simply that it was holding assets of $ 183,253.56, without specific mention of probate income.

*131 Margaret Huber’s claims against the estate were finally resolved in 1971, when this court affirmed the judgment of the trial court which had awarded her $26,059.54 plus interest on her creditor’s claim and which had denied her claim for $163,000 based on an alleged inter vivos gift. The executor thereafter paid Margaret some $37,000 [the amount of the judgment plus interest].

In February 1972 Gertrude Huber, by this time 82 years old, filed her second petition for an order instructing the trustee to distribute probate income to her and supporting points and authorities. The bank as trustee objected on the ground Gertrude had not survived “distribution” of the estate. [The estate has been open since 1965.] The memorandum points and authorities were filed in the name of the bank as executor and the three remaindermen, all represented by the same attorney.

On February 29, 1972, the probate court ordered the bank to distribute to Gertrude Huber all the net probate income in its possession, to wit, the sum of $59,253.95. Of this, $53,417.72 accrued prior to April 23, 1968; $5,836.23 accrued thereafter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Cal. App. 3d 126, 107 Cal. Rptr. 89, 1973 Cal. App. LEXIS 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huber-v-lutheran-high-school-assn-of-southern-california-calctapp-1973.