In Re Estate of Mollenkopf

129 P. 997, 164 Cal. 576, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 508
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 6258.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 129 P. 997 (In Re Estate of Mollenkopf) 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 Mollenkopf, 129 P. 997, 164 Cal. 576, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 508 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal from an order admitting a certain document to probate as the last will of deceased, and appointing the petitioner William Mollenkopf executor thereof without bond as specified therein.

The material facts on this appeal are substantially as follows: The petition for the probate of said alleged will came on for hearing on March 19, 1912, at ten o’clock A. M. At that time no written grounds of opposition had been filed. One of the attorneys of the contestant (Juliana R. de Long, mother of deceased) announced to the court that written *578 grounds of opposition to the probate had been mailed in Los Angeles to the clerk of said court the day before, and were then due in San Francisco, and that a copy thereof had been served on petitioner’s attorney the day before. The court announced that “as some of the witnesses had come from Los Angeles, he would hear their testimony preliminarily and without prejudice to the rights of the contestant.” Witnesses were then called and examined on behalf of the petitioner, and gave testimony that the will was duly executed, and that deceased was of sound mind and not acting under duress, fraud, etc. The court then stated that it would continue the further hearing of the matter to two o ’clock p. m. of the same day, which was done. Prior to that time the written opposition to the probate was filed in the office of the clerk of said court, and the same showed, by affidavit attached thereto, that it had been served by copy on the attorney for the petitioner, by the leaving of such copy in his office with a person in charge thereof under the circumstances and in the manner specified in subdivision 1 of section 1011 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This written opposition was in proper form, and to use the language of In re Stewart, 100 Cal. 249, [34 Pac. 707], “set forth many alleged facts which, if true, established the invalidity of the asserted will.” When the matter came on for further hearing at two p. h., the written opposition on file, with proof of service, was brought to the attention of the court. The court then ruled that as the written opposition was not on file at ten a. m. of that day, the same should be disregarded, and also that the attorney for petitioner had not received sufficient notice. Thereupon the order admitting the will to probate and appointing petitioner executor was made, without any other disposition of the written opposition to probate.

It is not disputed that if the written opposition was properly served on petitioner’s attorney and was not filed too late to entitle it to be considered, it was a bar to the admission of the alleged will to probate, until disposed of in the manner provided by law. Such disposition involved an opportunity to those interested in the will to answer the opposition, and a trial of the issues thus made, by a jury if either party so requested.

*579 It is not suggested by respondent that service of the written opposition, by copy, was not made on petitioner on March 18, 1912, in all respects as required by law, and we are satisfied that the affidavit attached to the written opposition sufficiently showed due service.

Our law nowhere in terms prescribes when the written opposition must be filed, in the case of a contest before probate, in order to entitle it to be considered. Notice of the time appointed for the probate having been provided, it is declared in section 1306 of the Code of Civil Procedure that, “at the time appointed for the hearing, or the time to which the hearing may have been postponed, . . . the court must hear the testimony in proof of the will.” In section 1307 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is declared that “any person interested may appear and contest the will,” and in section 1308 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that “ if no person appears to contest the probate of a will, the court may admit it to probate on the testimony of one of the subscribing witnesses only,” etc. By section 1312 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is declared that “if any one appears to contest the will, he must file written grounds of opposition to the probate thereof,” etc. Obviously, to be effectual as a contest before probate, the written opposition must be filed before the alleged will is admitted to probate, but there is nothing in the provisions of our code that in terms makes it ineffectual if filed at any time prior to the admission of the will to probate. The statute contemplates, of course, that it will be filed at or before the time designated in the notice for the hearing of the-petition for probate, and inasmuch as, in the absence of a contest, the formal proofs as to execution, etc., may be and are ordinarily then received and the alleged will admitted to probate, a party desiring to contest will naturally file his opposition at or prior to the time so designated. But the person proposing to contest before probate does not forfeit his right to do so merely by reason of failing to file his opposition at or prior to the time so designated in the notice for the hearing.

It has been held that if the contest is properly instituted before the time to which the hearing on the petition is continued, it is in time and must be considered. This is practically held in Estate of Stewart, 100 Cal. 246, [34 Pac. 706]. It is true that in that case the opposition was on file at the *580 original time fixed for hearing, hut there was then lacking proof of service thereof on certain parties other than the petitioner who were required by the statute to be served. A motion to strike the opposition from the files on the ground that the same had not been filed or served as required by law was made, and this motion was taken under advisement until two p. m. of the same day. Before that time arrived, contestant supplied such proofs, but the lower court held that they should have been filed at ten a. m. and came too late. It therefore struck the opposition from the files and admitted the will to probate. This court held: 1. That the absence of such proof of service was no warrant for a disregard of the contest as to the petitioner for probate, as to whom proof of service was on file; and 2. Assuming that such absence of proof rendered the opposition ineffectual, nevertheless, the furnishing of such proof “before the hour to which the matter had been continued” sufficiently answered the objection of petitioner; in other words, that if all the requirements of the law as to the institution of a contest are complied with at or prior to the time to which the hearing on the petition is continued, the contest is in time, even though none of such requirements was complied with at or. prior to the time designated for hearing by the notice. In the case just cited, this court said that “under these circumstances, we see no ground upon which the order appealed from (the order admitting the will to probate) can be affirmed.” That a contest initiated after the time originally appointed for the. hearing of the petition but before the hour to which such hearing has been postponed, is in time, has twice been held by the supreme' court of Montana, upon statutes substantially similar to ours. (See Raleigh v. District Court, 24 Mont. 306, [81 Am. St. Rep. 431, 61 Pac. 991] ; State v. District Court, 25 Mont. 355, [65 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
129 P. 997, 164 Cal. 576, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-mollenkopf-cal-1913.