In Re the Estate of De Laveaga

133 P. 307, 165 Cal. 607, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 465
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 6092.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 133 P. 307 (In Re the Estate of De Laveaga) 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 the Estate of De Laveaga, 133 P. 307, 165 Cal. 607, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 465 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

The deceased died in Madrid, Spain, on February 4, 1909. At the time of her death she was fifty-two years of age, and was a resident of the city and county of San Francisco. She left an estate valued approximately at from one million five hundred thousand dollars to two million dollars, consisting of real and personal property and located for the most part in San Francisco. She had never been married, and left surviving her as her only heirs at law her sister, Maria Josefa Cebrian, wife of J. C. Cebrian and the proponent of the will here in question, and her brother, Miguel A. de Laveaga, the contestant here.

On June 12, 1909, Mrs. Cebrian filed in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, a paper written in the Spanish language, purporting to be the holographic will of deceased. A translation of this paper is as follows:

“In the name of God, Amen.
“I, Maria C. de Laveaga, declare that this is my testament.
“I leave to my brother Miguel or to his children Eighty Thousand Dollars.
“I leave to my sister Pepa Five Thousand Dollars for alms, and One Thousand Dollars for masses, and Fifteen Thousand Dollars for Clemente’s children.
“I leave to my nieces Mimi and Pepita Cebrian my wearing apparel, furniture and jewelry.
“I leave all the rest of what I possess to my sister Pepa or to her children, if she does not survive me.
“I nominate executor and executrix my brother Miguel and my sister Pepa, without bonds.
“And I sign it in San Francisco, California, the 15th day of February, 1893.
“Maria C. de Laveaga.”

It is conceded that by “Pepa” was meant Mrs. Cebrian, the same being a name by which she was known and referred to *614 in the family. With the purported will, Mrs. Cehrian filed her petition for the admission to probate of said paper as the last will of deceased and the issuance to her of letters testamentary, her coexecutor Miguel A. de Laveaga having failed •to consent to act as executor.

On July 12, 1909, said Miguel filed his grounds of opposition to the probate of this paper, the grounds specified being: 1. That at the time of the execution of the will by deceased, if the same was ever executed by her, she was not of sound mind and was not competent to make a last will; 2. That the execution of the same, if executed at all, was procured by undue influence; and 3. That the execution of the same, if executed at all, was procured by duress and fraud. Answers were filed by Mrs. Cebrian and two of her children, designated in the alleged will as “my nieces Mimi and Pepita Cebrian.” The issues thus made were tried by the court, without a jury, the trial commencing on October 28, 1909, and continuing, with some interruptions, to February 20, 1911.

On June 29, 1911, the trial court filed its decision in writing. The findings of fact upon the issues of incompetency and undue influence were that deceased at the time of the writing and signing of said instrument was not of sound mind and was not competent to make said purported will, or any will; and that although said instrument was written and signed by the hand of said decedent, she did not compose said instrument or any part thereof, and did not understand the meaning or the purpose of said instrument, or any part thereof, and that the writing and signing was procured as follows: While said decedent was of unsound mind, and not competent to make a will, decedent was caused by a designing person, or persons, who directed, dictated, and dominated the manual performance of the act, to write and sign said instrument from a form presented by said person or persons, and that decedent in writing and signing the instrument, did not understand, and was, by reason of her unsoundness of mind and mental incompetency, unable to understand' and incapable of understanding her mechanical act in writing and signing said instrument, or the meaning or effect of her mechanical act in writing and signing said instrument.

Upon these findings an order was made on June 29, 1911, adjudging that said paper is not the will of deceased and is *615 not entitled to probate, and refusing to admit it to probate.

We have before us an appeal from such order by Mrs. Cebrian and; her two children who appeared in the court below.

The record and briefs presented on this appeal are voluminous. The appellants brought up, under section 953 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure, in lieu of a bill of exceptions, a phonographic report of the trial, consisting of twenty-nine volumes containing an aggregate of 16,496 typewritten pages. Appellants’ opening “brief” consists of four volumes of printed matter, containing 2,239 pages, and an appendix of 469 pages, and their reply brief contains 700 pages. The respondent has filed a brief consisting of four volumes, with an aggregate of 1,666 printed pages. We mention these facts as to the briefs in no spirit of complaint, for we do not see either that learned counsel for appellants could have properly presented their complaints as to findings and the many rulings of the trial court, with the evidence necessary to explain the same, in much, if any, more compact and concise way, or that learned counsel for respondent could have put their claims in reply to appellants’ contention in fewer words.

The claim is earnestly made by appellants that the findings of the learned trial judge are without sufficient support in the evidence, and much of their briefs is devoted to argument in support of this claim, with an analysis of the testimony opposed thereto. Especially is this claim made as to the finding of undue influence. A careful consideration of the evidence has satisfied us that there is no good basis for any such claim, either as to the finding of incompetency or that of undue influence. We shall not attempt in this opinion to do more than to state in a very general way some of the facts relative to the evidence upon which we base this conclusion.

The deceased was bom at Mazatlan, Mexico, in December, 1856, and was the youngest of six children. The family moved to San Francisco in 1867, and thenceforth resided there. In 1874 her father died testate, leaving a large estate. In 1882 her mother died. Thenceforth to the year 1888 deceased, who had lived with her mother and her sister Ignacia to the time of her mother’s death, her sister Maria Josefa having married Mr. Cebrian in 1875, lived with Ignacia. In 1884 Ignacia and Maria, with four women as companions and servants, went to Europe, where they remained together until Ignacia’s death, *616 which occurred in Borne on February 16, 1888. At that time the Cebrian family were in Paris, and Mr. Cebrian at once went to Borne, and deceased returned with him to Paris, and became a member of the Cebrian household. She continued a member of that household to the time of her death, a period of twenty-one years, being with them at that time on a visit to a married daughter of the Cebrians in Madrid.

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Bluebook (online)
133 P. 307, 165 Cal. 607, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-de-laveaga-cal-1913.