In Re Estate of Sowash

217 P. 123, 62 Cal. App. 512, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 429
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 4539.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 217 P. 123 (In Re Estate of Sowash) 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
In Re Estate of Sowash, 217 P. 123, 62 Cal. App. 512, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 429 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

TYLER, P. J.

This appeal involves the construction to be given to the will of one Jacob M. Sowash, deceased. The instrument is dated February 8, 1916, and at the time of his death, which occurred December 6, 1919, Sowash was a resident of the county of Humboldt. He was possessed of certain real and personal property. He had been twice married. His second wife, Augusta M. Sowash, predeceased *514 Mm, she having died March 26, 1919. Sowash was her second husband. The property here involved constitutes community property acquired by deceased and his wife Augusta. The will mentions three groups of children, namely, the children of deceased by his first wife, the children of Augusta M. Sowash by her former husband, and the children of deceased by his wife Augusta. The proper construction to be given to the second paragraph of the instrument is the subject of this appeal. It reads as follows:

“Second. I give, devise and bequeath all the property, whether in expectancy or possession, whereof I shall die possessed, or to which I may be entitled, to my dear and beloved wife, with this my dying request to her: that she make a will before, or, at least, immediately upon my death, devising and bequeathing all the .property she shall receive from me or my estate upon the final settlement of my estate by final decree of distribution or otherwise (not necessarily in kind but in amount or value) other than so much thereof as shall have been expended by her and for her during her life time for her comfort, maintenance and support, to the following persons, to wit: the one half thereof to my wife’s children, to wit: Hazel Sowash, E'thel Maud Sowash, Hattie Long, Benjamin Doffner, and Lottie Stebbins, share and share alike; and the other half to be given to my children, to wit: Hazel Sowash, Ethel Maud Riley, George Sowash, Frank Sowash, Ida Devault, Alice May, Jacob So-wash, share and share alike. I make this request because all the property we have has been accumulated by us jointly as husband and wife, and is as much hers as mine; and it is just and right that upon our deaths the one-half of it should go to her children and the other half to my children, and we have mutually agreed that it shall be so divided; and the terms of this will and my request herein expressed have also been mutually agreed upon by myself and wife.”

Under the construction adopted by the trial court the entire property of the estate was distributed to the children of the deceased by Ms first and second marriages to the exclusion of the children of his wife Augusta by her former marriage, the court concluding that as Augusta had predeceased the testator the testamentary disposition as to her *515 had lapsed, and that, therefore, the entire estate went to the heirs at law of deceased. This is an appeal from the decree and is prosecuted by two of the children of Augusta by her former marriage.

It is their contention that it was the intention of the testator, as clearly expressed by his will, that upon the death of both himself and his wife the estate was to be divided equally between his children and his wife’s children in the proportion of one-half to his children by his first and second marriages, the other half to the children of his wife Augusta by her first marriage and to her children by her second marriage with deceased, and that this manifest intention must be carried out, and courts have no power to change it.

It is further contended that the devise in the will to Augusta A. Sowash was impressed with a precatory trust, by reason of which, had she survived the testator, she would have taken all the property devised to her, less that expended in her lifetime for her comfort and support, in trust for the persons to whom the will requests her to devise it, and that the trust was not terminated by her death.

Respondents’ answer to the first contention is that the wife, having predeceased the testator, the disposition to her failed, and the entire estate was properly distributed to the heirs of Sowash.

The code sections upon the subject in force at the time of the testator’s death provide as follows: If a devisee or legatee dies during the lifetime of the testator, the testamentary disposition to him fails, unless an intention appears to substitute some other person in his place, except as limited by section 1310 of the Civil Code. (Sec. 1343, Civ. Code.) Section 1310 declares that whenever any estate is devised or bequeathed to any child, or other relation of the testator, and the devisee or legatee dies before the testator, leaving lineal descendants, such descendants take the estate so given by the will in the same manner as the devisee or legatee would have done had he survived the testator.

There is no express intention in the will to substitute others in place of the wife in the event that she predeceased her husband, a subject hereinafter discussed; *516 and unless it can be said that the wife is a relation of the husband within the meaning of section 1310 of the Civil Code the disposition as to her failed, and the estate was properly distributed to the heirs of the husband, the testator having survived the wife.

Appellants’ first contention involves the meaning of the term “relation” as applied to the construction of wills.

The word is a very general and comprehensive term, and may include in its generic sense every relation that arises in social life. (Esty v. Clark, 101 Mass. 36 [3 Am. Rep. 320].) Lexicographers have defined it as signifying a relation in general so as to include relationship by blood or affinity. In its widest sense, therefore, the word no doubt has this meaning. But in the construction of wills, when courts have been called upon to determine whether a wife is a “relative” under statutes preventing lapse, they have by a uniform course of decisions held that the term includes only relationship by blood, and that a husband, therefore, is not a relative of his wife, nor a wife a relative of her husband. (Renton’s Estate, 10 Wash. 533 [39 Pac. 145]; Supreme Council v. Bennett, 47 N. J. Eq. 39 [19 Atl. 785]; Esty v. Clark, 101 Mass. 36 [3 Am. Rep. 320].) The reason for the rule is stated in Benton’s Estate, supra, to be that upon a devise to a child or other relative by consanguinity it would be naturally supposed that a testator would intend that his property, upon the death of the devisee before his own, should inure to the benefit of the lineal descendants of his devisee, because such descendants would in fact be his relatives for whose welfare he might be supposed to have a concern, only differing in degree from that which he would feel toward the devisee himself. But in the case of a wife, although a husband might acquire a great affection for her children by a former husband, yet this solicitude would not stop with such children, and the husband’s whole estate devised by will to his wife might upon his death descend to utter strangers to him, to the exclusion of those who might be the natural objects of his bounty. (See Estate of Pfuelb, 48 Cal. 643.)

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Bluebook (online)
217 P. 123, 62 Cal. App. 512, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-sowash-calctapp-1923.