In Re Estate of Niccolls

129 P. 278, 164 Cal. 368, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 354
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 3294.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 129 P. 278 (In Re Estate of Niccolls) 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 Niccolls, 129 P. 278, 164 Cal. 368, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 354 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

Robert Niccolls, a resident of the county of San Diego, died intestate, leaving property in that county *370 and elsewhere. His heirs were his- widow, Prances Niccolls, and a number of nephews and nieces. Upon the nomination of the widow, W. R. Rogers was appointed administrator of the estate.

Included in the estate was a lot, with a dwelling -thereon, in the city of San Diego. The widow petitioned to have this property set apart to her as a homestead. Objections were filed by various other heirs. After a hearing, the court made its order setting said property apart as a homestead and vesting it absolutely in the widow. The contesting heirs appeal from the order and from a subsequent order denying their motion for a new trial.

The order setting apart the homestead contained findings that no homestead had been selected and recorded during the lifetime of the decedent, and that the property involved was community property. The latter finding is attacked as unsupported by the evidence. That the finding is material is not to be questioned. Where no homestead has been selected during the lifetime of the decedent, the court in probate, in setting apart a homestead from the separate property of the decedent, can set it apart for a limited period only. Under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, as originally enacted, the power of the court was not so restricted. (Mawson v. Mawson, 50 Cal. 539). Section 1468 was, however, amended in 1881 [Stats. 1881, p. 8], by the addition of this clause: “If the property set apart be a homestead, selected from the separate property of the deceased, the court can only set it apart for a limited period, to be designated in the order, and the title vests in the heirs of the deceased, subject to such order.” The added provision might seem, at first glance, to refer to the case of property which had been selected as a homestead during the lifetime of the decedent. It is, however, settled by the decisions of this court that this is not its proper construction. The new clause applies to homesteads set apart in probate proceedings, no homestead having been theretofore selected. Its effect, as to such cases, is to alter the rule declared in Mawson v. Mawson, 50 Cal. 539, and to take from the court the power to assign a homestead absolutely except where the property set apart is community property. (In re Schmidt, 94 Cal. 334, [29 Pac. 714] ; Lord v. Lord, 65 Cal. 84, [3 Pac. 96] ; In re Noah, 73 *371 Cal. 590, [2 Am. St. Rep. 834, 15 Pac. 290] ; In re Lahiff, 86 Cal. 151, [24 Pac. 850].)

We think the appellants are clearly right in their contention that the finding of the community character of the property in question is not supported hy the evidence. It is undoubtedly the rule that all property acquired by either spouse during the existence of the marriage is presumed to be community property, and that the burden of overcoming the presumption by clear and satisfactory evidence rests upon the party claiming that the property is separate. (Smith v. Smith, 12 Cal. 216 ; Althof v. Conheim, 38 Cal. 230, [99 Am. Dec. 363] ; Davis v. Green, 122 Cal. 364, [55 Pac. 9].) Here, however, the evidence regarding the acquisition of the property was without substantial conflict, and giving it the strongest possible construction in favor of the respondent, it pointed indisputably to the conclusion that the house and lot in controversy were not community property.

Robert Niccolls, the decedent, and Prances Niccolls, the respondent, were married in Pennsylvania in 1854. Shortly after their marriage they took up their abode in Bloomington, Illinois, and resided there until 1881 or 1882, when they moved to San Diego, in this state, where they remained until the husband’s death. Testimony with respect to their property before and after marriage was given by Mrs. Niccolls. Concerning some details there was more or less uncertainty in her testimony. This was due, no doubt, as the witness herself said, to a slight impairment of memory—-a condition which was not surprising in view of her advanced age and the length of time that had elapsed since the events of which she was speaking. But, taking her testimony in its aspect most favorable to her, it appears that, at the time of the marriage, Mrs. Niccolls owned real estate in the state of Illinois, of the value of five thousand dollars. Her husband also owned some property. With the proceeds of the property of both, the husband purchased land in Illinois. Prom 1854 to 1860 or 1861, the husband, who was a physician, practiced his profession. Prom 1861 to 1865, the period of the Civil War, he was attached to the forces of the United States as an army surgeon, in which capacity he earned a fixed salary. After the war, he resumed his residence in Bloomington. He did not again engage in medical practice, but *372 occupied himself with buying and selling land, and loaning money, generally on mortgage security. The capital employed in these ventures was made up of the proceeds of the property which his wife had owned before marriage, together with the property which he had owned and his subsequent earnings. No distinction was made between the husband’s property and that belonging to his wife. All was handled and controlled by the husband. As Mrs. Niccolls expressed it, “everything was his and everything was mine. ... I expected him to do what was right.” When the couple moved to California, Dr. Niccolls brought with him a part of the accumulations he had thus made, and with this he acquired the property in controversy and a ranch in San Diego County. He never practiced his profession in California, nor did he follow any other occupation in this state. The character of the property owned by himself and his wife did not, therefore, change after they had taken up their residence in San Diego.

The question, then, is what, according to the law of the state of Illinois, was the character of the property owned and acquired by Dr. and Mrs. Niccolls in that state, and by them brought to California. “If a husband and wife acquire personal property in one state and then remove with the same into a state in which the community law prevails, the law of the state where they lived when the property was, acquired will govern as to whether it be separate or community property.” (Ballinger on Community Property, sec. 47 ; Kreamer v. Kreamer, 52 Cal. 302 ; Estate of Burrows, 136 Cal. 113, [68 Pac. 488].) The record before us contains testimony, which is uncontradicted, that “there is not in the state of Illinois, by statute or as common law, any such thing as community property, whereby the husband and wife both have a community interest in property accumulated during the marriage relation.” It follows that the property accumulated during the marriage, whatever might have been its character if the parties had acquired it while domiciled in California, was not community property in Illinois. Consequently neither it, nor any property for which it was exchanged, became community property in this state.

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Bluebook (online)
129 P. 278, 164 Cal. 368, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-niccolls-cal-1912.