In Re the Estate of Loucks

117 P. 673, 160 Cal. 551, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 546
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 23, 1911
DocketS.F. No. 5625.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 117 P. 673 (In Re the Estate of Loucks) 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 Loucks, 117 P. 673, 160 Cal. 551, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 546 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

The brothers and sisters of Wallace E. Loucks, deceased, prosecute an appeal from a decree of distribution whereby the entire estate of said Wallace E. Loucks was given to the estate of his deceased child Thelma G. Loucks for the benefit of her heirs at law, her maternal grandparents. There is also an appeal from the order denying the motion of said brothers and sisters of Wallace E. Loucks for a new trial.

Wallace E. Loucks, his wife Elsie May Loucks, and their infant daughter Thelma G. Loucks were killed in a collision between a railway train and the automobile in which they were passengers. The instantaneous death of Mrs. Loucks is unquestioned. The principal controversy, therefore, is upon the question whether or not Wallace E. Loucks survived his daughter, who was his only child. If he did outlive her, these appeals should be successful; if Thelma G. Loucks survived her father, the decree and order from which appeals are taken, should be affirmed. The question of fact was tried by the court, a jury having been waived by all interested parties, and the court found that Wallace E. Loucks died leaving his daughter Thelma as his only heir at law..

The appellants contend-that from the evidence received in the trial of the issues of fact it was impossible to determine with any satisfactory degree of accuracy whether the father or the child died first, and that, therefore, the presumption of our statute (Code Civ. Proe., see. 1963, subd. 40) should prevail in, their favor. That subdivision is as follows: “When two persons perish in the same calamity, such as a wreck, a battle, or a conflagration, and it is not shown who died first, and there are no particular circumstances from which it can be inferred, survivorship is presumed from the probabilities resulting from the strength, age, and sex, according to the following rules . . . Fifth. If one be under fifteen, or over sixty, and the other between those ages, the latter is presumed to have survived.”

Appellants also assert that the burden of proving the survival of the child beyond the life of her father was upon respondents, and that the evidence is so unsatisfactory as to *554 compel the conclusion that they failed to meet the obligation of this rule. Appellants advance the argument that the respondents having failed to establish by a preponderance of evidence the death of Mr. Loucks prior to that of his daughter, even if no resort be had to our statute of presumptions, the decision should have been made in accordance with the rule of the common law whereby the courts refused to determine who of two persons so related, killed by the same calamity, survived the other, but distributed the estates as if the deaths occurred at the same instant. (Joseph v. Seward, 91 Ala. 597, [8 South. 682]; Taylor v. Diploch, 2 Phillim. Eccl. Rep. 261; Mason v. Mason, 1 Meriv. 308; Underwood v. King, 19 Beav. 459, and on review 4 De G. M. & G. 633; Wing v. Angrave, 8 H. L. Cas. 183; Coye v. Leach,, 8 Met. 371, [41 Am. Dec. 518]; Newell v. Nichols, 12 Hun, 604, 75 N. T. 78, [31 Am. Rep. 424].) That this requirement of proof of survival by a preponderance of evidence was the rule at common law is not seriously doubted by respondents, although they deny its application under our probate system. We think that the fact of survivorship must be established by a preponderance of evidence, not because the heirs of one decedent or of another begin a contest, but because it is the duty of the court to determine the matter of heirship and survival. This duty would still exist whether any one instituted any proceeding or not. Nor do we doubt that if preponderating evidence were wanting to satisfy the court regarding this matter, the statute of presumptions would then be applicable to the solution of the problem to be determined; but the provisions of subdivision 40 of section 1963 of the Code of Civil Procedure are only applicable when it is not shown “who died first and there are no particular circumstances from which it can be inferred.” This is only another way of saying that the above presumption is to be applied only where the relative times of the death of persons perishing by the same disaster cannot be shown by direct or circumstantial evidence or both. (Grand Lodge A. O. U. W. v. Miller, 8 Cal. App. 28, [96 Pac. 22].) In the case at bar there was a conflict of evidence and the court, after hearing all of the testimony, found the essential, fact to be that the child Thelma survived her father. We do not see that this differs from the ordinary case wherein conflicting testimony has been given, and unless we find, upon a study of the record, that in *555 no rational view of the evidence was the court below justified in the conclusion reached, we must sustain the findings of that court.

The accident occurred a short distance from the town of Reedley in Fresno County, and the hour, according to the testimony of the train conductor, was 10:45 A. M. After striking the automobile the train proceeded but a short distance and then backed to the scene of the accident. Mr. Loucks was still in the automobile. His head had been so crushed that the bones of one side of the skull were comminuted, and there was a hole in the side of his head. The baby lay on the ground. There was only a red spot on the top of her head and, according to the testimony of at least one witness, there appeared to be no fracture of her skull. Different witnesses testified to the signs of life in Mr. Loucks and the baby when the train backed to the scene of the disaster. Of the child, one witness, Mr. Chambers, said: “I saw the baby wriggling on the ground. It seemed to be very active, wriggling back and forth. I went up pretty» close to it. It was breathing, but not whining, crying or anything—no noise. Someone came along with a buggy and we decided to load it in the buggy. They thought probably they would save the life, thought it would be quicker to take it in the buggy than to delay for the train.” The same witness said with reference to Mr. Loucks: “Mr. Loucks was sitting on the floor of the automobile with his hands over the dash board. His body was wedged in. On the side of his head he had an injury. It was a kind of blood clot or something like that, a lot of blood coming out, kind of pouring out. I didn’t notice any brains or anything of that kind, but it just bled a big clot of blood on the side of his head. He coughed up something, I don’t know what it was. ... Q. Well, what did you see with reference to any movements, muscular or otherwise, about him? A. Well, he gasped, simply—that is my idea of it, simply gasped and that was all there was about it; I concluded at that time that he was dead. I didn't know that he was.

“Q. Anything afterwards at any time to make you change your mind? A. No. . . . This final gasp seemed to me like a contraction of the muscles more than anything else. Just simply that ended it. After he was put in the baggage car I saw him there. I saw nothing further that indicated *556 life. As near as I can determine it the time from the time of the accident to the time the train started back to Eeedley was about 15 minutes.”

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Bluebook (online)
117 P. 673, 160 Cal. 551, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-loucks-cal-1911.