Huron College v. Yetter

177 P.2d 367, 78 Cal. App. 2d 145, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1450
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 1947
DocketCiv. 15611
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 177 P.2d 367 (Huron College v. Yetter) 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
Huron College v. Yetter, 177 P.2d 367, 78 Cal. App. 2d 145, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1450 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

Elizabeth G. Kimmel died January 25, 1931, leaving a will which was duly admitted to probate. In such will, plaintiffs and others were named beneficiaries and defen *147 dant Judd H. Tetter was appointed executor. He qualified as such executor February 27, 1931.

Defendant Anna Graham Bartlett is a sister of the testatrix, while defendant Elizabeth Bartlett Tetter is the daughter of defendant Anna Graham Bartlett and is the wife of the aforesaid executor.

Twelve orders of the probate court approving annual accounts were made in the matter of the estate of Elizabeth G. Kimmel, deceased, during the period from May 17, 1932, to November 15, 1943, both inclusive.

Plaintiffs instituted this action in equity by which a judgment is sought setting aside the orders approving the foregoing accounts, requiring the individual defendants to account as surviving partners of the decedent, and for damages in a sum equivalent to “47% of eight thousand ($8,000.00) dollars.”

Plaintiffs’ complaint embraced three causes of action, the first of which alleged that the principal asset of the estate consisted of an orange grove of approximately 10 acres immediately adjacent to an orange and lemon grove of similar acreage owned by the defendants Anna Graham Bartlett and Elizabeth Bartlett Tetter at the time of the death of said Elizabeth G. Kimmel. At the time of the death of the testatrix, the two groves were being operated by defendant Judd H. Tetter conjunctively as a partnership arrangement. That defendant executor failed to procure an accounting from the survivors of said partnership; that defendant Judd H. Tetter, in collusion with his codefendants Anna Graham Bartlett and Elizabeth Bartlett Tetter, continued to operate the Kimmel grove in conjunction with the Bartlett grove without authorization of law or order of the court, borrowed money for said operation, illegally used the credit of said Kimmel estate and incurred excessive obligations against said estate in favor of said defendants in such amounts as to practically absorb the equities of plaintiffs in said estate. That defendant Judd H. Tetter commingled funds of said estate with his own and the funds of said defendants Anna Graham Bartlett and Elizabeth Bartlett Tetter, and appropriated funds of said estate to his own use without authority of law or approval of the court.

It was further alleged in the complaint that the aforesaid twelve annual accounts were approved by the court, that no appeal was seasonably taken therefrom, and that such orders *148 are now final. It is then set forth that said annual accounts did not contain the true status of the estate and that, in the interest of equity and justice, the orders approving said accounts should be vacated and set aside. That the plaintiffs were nonresidents of the State of California, were not given any notice whatever of the filing of said accounts, nor of the contents thereof, and “had no opportunity or reason to doubt the good faith of said executor until in August, 1944, when the respondents through their attorney sought to purchase the interests of appellants for an amount considerably under the appraised value of said estate.”

The second cause of action has been abandoned.

By their third cause of action, plaintiffs adopted certain of the allegations pleaded in their first cause of action, and further alleged that defendant executor, in collusion with his codefendants, and “with intent to defraud and cheat these plaintiffs, wrongfully and illegally, and in defiance of the orders of the court, so managed and manipulated the said Kimmel grove since the death of the said Elizabeth G. Kimmel as to wipe out the entire equity of these plaintiffs in said grove, and with the intent to eventually acquire the same at their own figure, ’ ’ by failing to terminate and close the proceedings, by incurring excessive obligations against said orange grove property, by failing to keep plaintiffs “informed as to the true status of affairs,” and by false statements as to obligations allegedly existing against said estate.

General and special demurrers were separately interposed by each defendant. These were overruled and a joint answer filed specifically denying the allegations of fraud, deception, collusion and mismanagement of the estate as charged in the complaint. By their answer, defendants also pleaded as an affirmative defense that any and all claims on the part of the plaintiffs were barred under the terms and provisions of section 337, subdivision 2; section 338, subdivision 4; section 339, subdivision 1; and section 343 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

When the cause was called for trial, plaintiffs dismissed and abandoned the second cause of action contained in their complaint, leaving for trial the first and third counts. When the first witness was produced and sworn, defendants objected to the introduction of any testimony on the ground that the complaint did hot, in either of the counts therein contained, state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that in any event, the claims were barred under the applicable *149 statutes of limitations as pleaded. The court sustained the objection and ordered judgment for the defendants for their costs. Prom such judgment, as well as from the order sustaining defendants’ objection to the introduction of any evidence, plaintiffs prosecute this appeal. Does the complaint state a cause of action is the sole question presented ?

We are persuaded that the query must be answered in the negative. A veritable forest of authorities indicate that equitable relief from the effect of a judgment or decree may only be obtained upon allegations and proof of extrinsic and collateral fraud. As stated in Caldwell v. Taylor, 218 Cal. 471, 477 [23 P.2d 758, 88 A.L.R. 1194] (quoting in part from United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U.S. 61, 65 [25 L.Ed. 93], “ ‘In all these cases, and many others which have been examined, relief has been granted on the ground that by some fraud practiced directly upon the party seeking relief against the judgment or decree that party has been prevented from presenting all of his ease to the court.’ (Italics ours.) This definition has become the well recognized and standard definition of extrinsic fraud. . . . It . . . must not be the fraud which is in effect the issue in controversy.” So in a case such as the one now before us, equitable relief cannot be granted when the fraud alleged could have been relieved by the probate court itself, and the injured party had legal notice of the probate proceedings in time to make his objections to such proceedings, and was not prevented from so doing by some fraud on the part of the other parties. (Caldwell v. Taylor, supra, at p. 477.)

In the instant case it cannot be inferred from the allegations of the complaint that respondents or any of them, by act or omission, prevented appellants from presenting their contentions to the court on any of the twelve hearings had upon the orders settling current accounts.

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Bluebook (online)
177 P.2d 367, 78 Cal. App. 2d 145, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huron-college-v-yetter-calctapp-1947.