In Re Estate of Heberle

95 P. 41, 153 Cal. 275, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 452
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1908
DocketL.A. No. 2079.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 95 P. 41 (In Re Estate of Heberle) 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
In Re Estate of Heberle, 95 P. 41, 153 Cal. 275, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 452 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an appeal from an order sustaining, without leave to amend, demurrers to the petition of Jacob Heberle and Eva Dickhof for partial distribution to them, as heirs at law, of a portion of the estate of George Heberle, deceased, it being the contention of petitioners that as to this portion he died intestate. The petitioners’ status as *276 heirs at law is not in question. The only question is whether or not from a construction of the will of deceased intestacy resulted as to the property in controversy.

The deceased by his will, after directing the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, devised and bequeathed to trustees all the rest and residue of his estate upon specified trusts. By the seventh paragraph of his will he directed certain real property upon Spring Street in the city of Los Angeles, called for convenience the Spring Street property, of the estimated value of sixty-five thousand dollars, to be held by the trustees for the term of five years “and then the same by said trustees to be conveyed to the children of my deceased brother Martin Heberle, late of Miamisburg, Montgomery County, state of Ohio, share and share alike.” It is conceded by all parties to this litigation that this trust is void. (Estate of Walkerly, 108 Cal. 628, [49 Am. St. Rep. 97, [41 Pac. 772] ; Estate of Cavarly, 119 Cal. 408, [51 Pac. 629] ; Estate of Fair, 132 Cal. 523, [84 Am. St. Rep. 70, 60 Pac. 442, 64 Pac. 1000] ; Estate of Dixon, 143 Cal. 511, [77 Pac. 412] ; Estate of Sanford, 136 Cal. 97, [68 Pac. 494].) At the time of his death the testator still owned the Spring Street property. The question to be answered is what disposition is to be made of it. Admittedly, if intestacy results as to this property, the petitioners are entitled to share in it.

Reading the whole will, we find, next, this clause: “In case I should dispose of said property, then it is my will that my trustees pay over to the said children or grandchildren of my said deceased brother the amount received by me for said property. It being my will that the said children and grandchildren of my deceased brother shall receive from my estate the said real estate or its value.” By the fourteenth paragraph the testator empowers the trustees to convert real estate into money by sale. The seventeenth paragraph, however, is a limitation of this general power, and reads as follows: 1 ‘ That the power to sell my real estate, as set forth in the fourteenth subdivision, shall not affect my said Spring Street property, which is not to be sold, but is to be kept and distributed to the children of my said deceased brother, Martin.” The trust created by paragraph seven being void in its creation, no estate as to the Spring Street property passed to the trustees. If in the will there are no other apt words disposing of the *277 property upon the failure of this trust, intestacy as to it must be the result. The trial court found those words in the seventeenth subdivision of the will above quoted, and in view of the fact that a construction which favors testacy is always preferred to one resulting in intestacy (Dunphy’s Estate, 147 Cal. 96, [81 Pac. 315]), it may not be said that the interpretation is not a permissible one. The seventeenth paragraph contains a direction for the “distribution” of the Spring Street property to the children and grandchildren. While it may be argued that the word has reference to distribution by the trustees under the trust, yet it is not a word aptly used for such purpose, while it is apt in its application to a direct devise; It is equally open to the construction, therefore, that the distribution to the children is to be at the hands of the court. As is said in Estate of Dunphy, 147 Cal. 96, [81 Pac. 315], the word “distributed” is not a technical word in conveyancing and is not usually found in deeds. “If it have any legal technical meaning it has such meaning with reference to decrees of distribution in probate courts.” It appears that while the testator designed in case he died possessed of the Spring Street property, that that property should be held for five years, yet that if the Spring Street property had been sold, they were to receive in money the amount obtained from such sale directly, and not through the medium of trustees. The paramount idea in the testator’s mind, therefore, was not that the property should descend to his beneficiaries through a trust, but that, with or without a trust, they should with certainty receive property to that value from his estate. Under the wording of this instrument, therefore, the trial court was correct in holding that its conclusion that the trust was void did not, in contemplation of the other language employed in the will, so defeat the testator’s intent as to render imperative a finding of intestacy.

For which reason the decree appealed from is affirmed.

Hearing in Bank denied.

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Bluebook (online)
95 P. 41, 153 Cal. 275, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-heberle-cal-1908.