In re Estate of Kershow

2 Coffey 213
CourtSuperior Court of California, County of San Francisco
DecidedJanuary 18, 1902
DocketNo. 25,326
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Coffey 213 (In re Estate of Kershow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco 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 Kershow, 2 Coffey 213 (Cal. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

COFFEY, J.

The burden of proof being imposed upon the contestant, he should establish by a preponderance of evidence the issues tendered by him.

I. As to jurisdiction, this is found against the contestant, it appearing that decedent, Max Howard Kershow, was, according to his own sworn statement, a resident of the city and county of San Francisco on the nineteenth day of July, 1900, when he was registered as a qualified elector by the registrar and that he had not subsequently changed his residence. At the time of his death in this city and county he left estate herein consisting of money in bank and personal effects. These facts clothed the court with original jurisdiction ; but it is claimed by contestant that this court is devested of authority in the premises because of a judgment rendered in the orphans’ court of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July 10, 1901, admitting to probate a will of a date prior to the paper here propounded, the record of which proceeding is properly before this tribunal under the general issue, it not being necessary to plead it specially. As it might come in as evidence legitimately, and in that manner operate as a bar to this application, it must be considered in that connection, and it is for this court to appraise its legal value herein.

Summarized, the contention of contestant is that the judgment of the orphans’ court of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, admitting the will of decedent to probate in July, 1901, is binding upon this court, as a judgment in rem concluding all the world. To support this contention contestant relies upon certain citations in the notes to Bowen v. Johnson, 73 Am Dec. 53. I have read attentively these notes and the principal case, and I think the context fairly states the rule when it says that the probate of a will is unlike a judgment between parties subject to the jurisdiction of the court ren[217]*217dering it, in this: that being but a decree in rem, usually passed upon constructive notice only, it is confined in its operation to things within the state setting up the court which takes the probate. It has been so treated in the country from which we derive our jurisprudence, and in general, at least, by the courts and legislatures of our own. “Full faith and credit” is given to it abroad, when the same faith and credit is given to it which it has at home; and that is that it is to be conclusive evidence of the validity of the will, as affording title to things within the jurisdictional limits of the court at the death of the testator, whether such title comes in contest within or without those limits; but, de jure, no evidence whatever of title to things not then within those limits. The clause of the constitution of the United States referred to was not designed to extend the jurisdiction of local courts, or to extend beyond its just limits the operation of a local decree; but to provide a mode of authenticating evidence of the record of a judicial proceeding had in one state, so that the proper general result of it might be conveniently attained in every other state, against persons and things justly within the range of the proceeding. Notwithstanding this clause, a judgment in a suit between parties is, as such, void out of the state, as to parties not personally served, and not appearing to defend within the state whose court renders the judgment; although if the suit be commenced by attachment of things within the state, it is, without such service or appearance, good as a judgment in rem against those things, to condemn them to satisfy the judgment. As little does this constitutional provision extend the jurisdiction of a municipal court of probate to things beyond the limits of the state which sets it up, and is quite satisfied, in our judgment, “with leaving the probate of a will where it finds it, a decree local in its nature and operation”: Olney v. Angell, 5 R. I. 198, 73 Am. Dec. 62.

In this last cited case the same court said that it is old law that a will made in a foreign country and proved there must also be proved in England in order to dispose of personal property in England: Lee v. Moore, Palm. 163; Tour[218]*218ton v. Flower, 3 P. Wms. 369; Vanthienen v. Vanthienen, Fitzg. 204.

Following this rule so early established and so fully car- • ried out in the mother country, we apprehend it to be equally well settled by the decisions and legislation of the country that the effect of a decree proving a will, like that of a decree granting administration, is confined de jure to the territory, and things within the territory, of the state setting up the court. In their nature such decrees are decrees in rem passed by courts deriving all their authority from the state which institutes them, and, necessarily, in great part upon constructive notice only to those interested in the decrees; and it is difficult to see how a wider operation could be allowed to them, consistently with a just attention to the rights and claims, to the property of the decedent, of citizens of other states in which the property was at the time of his death. Whatever other operation is allowed to them is a mere matter of comity, which every state is at liberty to yield or withhold, according to its own policy and pleasure, with reference to its own institutions and the interests of its citizens: Boston v. Boylston, 4 Mass. 318; Goodwin v. Jones, 3 Mass. 514, 520, 3 Am. Dec. 173, Parsons, C. J.; Pond v. Makepeace, 2 Met. 114; Doolittle v. Lewis, 7 Johns. Ch. 45, 47, 11 Am. Dec. 389; Strong v. Perkins, 3 N. H. 517; Kittredge v. Folsom, 8 N. H. 111; Ives v. Allyn, 12 Vt. 589; Woodruff v. Taylor, 20 Vt. 65, 73; Budd v. Brooke, 3 Gill, 198, 43 Am. Dec. 321; Ward v. Hearne, Busb. 184; S. C., 3 Jones, 326; Wilson v. Tappan, 6 Ohio, 172; Bailey v. Bailey, 8 Ohio, 239; Embry v. Millar, 1 A. K. Marsh. 303; Sneed v. Ewing, 5 J. J. Marsh. 565, 22 Am. Dec. 41; Darby v. Mayer, 10 Wheat. 465, 469, 6 L. Ed. 367; Armstrong v. Lear, 12 Wheat. 169, 175, 176, 6 L. Ed. 589; Vaughan v. Northup, 15 Pet. 5, 10 L. Ed. 639; Stacy v. Thrasher, 6 How. 59-61, 12 L. Ed. 337; McLean v. Meek, 18 How. 16, 15 L. Ed. 277; Story on Conflict of Laws, 425, note and secs, 512-514a, and p. 431, note; 1 Williams on Executors, 204, note 1.

The legislation, we believe, of nearly all the states and certainly of our own, proceeds upon the supposition that such is the limited operation of a probate of a will had in a foreign [219]*219country or in another state; and provides some mode, in general analogous to that pursued in England with regard to a will which has received a Scotch probate, by which conclusive operation may be given to such a will within the state, full notice being given to all persons interested in order that they may appear and contest the validity of the same: R. I. Rev. Stats., c. 155, secs. 5-10; Dublin v. Chadbourn, 16 Mass. 433; Laughton v. Atkins, 1 Pick. 535; Trecothick v. Austin, 4 Mason, 34; Fed. Cas. No. 14,164; 1 Williams on Executors, 205, note, 1; Story on Conflict of Laws, sec. 513, and note 1, and cases cited.

We do not apprehend that article 4, section 1, of the Constitution of the United States extends to the operation of a probate of a will, as a judicial act of a state, beyond its own territory. “Full faith and credit” is given to such a decree when it is left where it is found, local in its nature and operation.

In Rhode Island, from which state the foregoing remarks are appropriated, application must be made to the court to permit the authenticated copy and probate to be filed and recorded. Notice must be given as in the case of an original application for probate.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Coffey 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-kershow-calsuppctsf-1902.