Kristovich v. Johnson

240 Cal. App. 2d 742, 50 Cal. Rptr. 147, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1405
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1966
DocketCiv. 29702
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 240 Cal. App. 2d 742 (Kristovich v. Johnson) 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
Kristovich v. Johnson, 240 Cal. App. 2d 742, 50 Cal. Rptr. 147, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1405 (Cal. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

Upon the filing of appellant’s first and final account as administrator of the estate of William Johnson, *743 respondent’s exceptions thereto were sustained by the court which ordered the administrator to reimburse respondent for funeral expenses paid by the latter although no claim had ever been presented as provided by section 707, Probate Code. The present appeal is from the adverse portion of the order which otherwise approved the accounting.

The parties have proceeded in part by way of an agreed statement (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 6); accompanying the agreed statement is a clerk’s transcript. Therefrom we take the following facts. Decedent died on March 27, 1958; on April 9 respondent, decedent’s brother, paid the sum of $433.48 to a funeral director in full settlement of his services. At the time of decedent’s death, his closest known relatives (in addition to respondent) were his mother (who subsequently died on May 5,1960) and a married sister, Mrs. Lenora Johnson Geier. The sister unsuccessfully petitioned for letters of administration; appellant was appointed administrator on July 19, 1961.

Decedent had been married and divorced; as of November 14, 1962, however, the whereabouts of a daughter, the issue of that marriage, was unknown. Accordingly, on that date, respondent petitioned the court for a decree determining the interests in his brother’s estate; therein it was alleged that the daughter, Bobbette by name, had not been heard of since 1942, that she must be presumed dead without issue, and that the estate of his mother (since deceased) was entitled to all of William’s estate and was distributable to him in due course as his mother’s sole distributee. On December 7, 1962, the date of the hearing, the daughter appeared and was determined by the court to be her father’s sole heir and distributee.

Appellant relies on certain provisions of section 707, Probate Code, declaring that “all claims for funeral expenses . . . must be filed or presented within the time limited in the notice [to creditors] or as extended by the provisions of Sections 702 and 709 of this code; and any claim not so filed or presented is barred forever, unless it is made to appear by the affidavit of the claimant . . . that the claimant had not received notice by reason of being out of state, in which event it may be filed or presented at any time before a decree of distribution is rendered.’’ Concededly respondent did not bring himself within the statutory exception that he failed to receive notice because he was absent from California; nor is there any *744 showing that respondent could properly invoke the court-made exception than an administrator is estopped to urge non-presentation of the claim where he lulled the creditor into a belief that no formal claim was necessary. (Katz v. A. J. Ruhlman & Co., 69 Cal.App.2d 541, 545 [159 P.2d 426].) Citing Estate of Smith, 122 Cal.App.2d 216 [264 P.2d 638], and Estate of Erwin, 177 Cal.App.2d 203 [255 P.2d 97], appellant argues that section 707 is unequivocal in its language; that since he occupies a fiduciary relationship to the sole heir to protect her interests, it is “the plain duty of both the administrat[or] and the probate judge to protect the estate against the collection of a debt which the statutory law expressly declares to be ‘barred forever.’ ” (Estate of Erwin, supra, p. 205.) In People v. Osgood, 104 Cal.App. 133 [285 P. 753], another of appellant’s authorities, it is further held that the bar of section 707 cannot be waived and that “If, nevertheless, a court allows the claim, its action is reversible error. ” (P. 137.)

The above notwithstanding, the court applied the rule or doctrine of equitable subrogation to the facts at bar. Said to be controlling precedent for such action is Estate of Kemmerrer, 114 Cal.App.2d 810 [251 P.2d 345, 35 A.L.R.2d 1393], wherein the decedent’s mother paid for the funeral expenses and his mistress for the expenses incident to decedent’s last illness. Each of the above payments was voluntarily made. Decedent’s widow appealed from the order allowing reimbursement and disallowing her claim that the estate be set aside to her under sections 640 and 645, Probate Code, both governing estates under $2,500. She contended that since the decedent’s creditors above mentioned had received their money and therefore had no claim against his estate, such expenses are to be deemed “paid” within the meaning of section 645 and she, as the surviving widow, was entitled to receive the estate free of any claims by those who had assumed to arrange for care of decedent during his last illness and for his subsequent burial. The court perceived no difficulty in applying the doctrine of equitable subrogation to the factual situation there presented. Quoted with approval in support of such conclusion is this discussion of the rule in American Jurisprudence: “ ‘ The doctrine of [equitable] subrogation is not a fixed and inflexible rule of law or of equity. It is not static, but is sufficiently elastic to take within its remedy cases of first instance which fairly fall within it. Equity first applied the doctrine strictly and sparingly. It was later liberalized, and its development *745 has been the natural consequence of a call for the application of justice and equity to particular situations. Since the doctrine was first ingrafted on equity jurisprudence, it has been steadily expanding and growing in importance and extent, and is no longer, as formerly, limited to sureties and quasi sureties, but is now broad and expansive and has a very liberal application. As now applied, it is broad enough to include every instance in which one person, not acting as a mere volunteer or intruder, pays a debt for which another is primarily liable, and which in equity and good conscience should have been discharged by the latter. Its use to enforce restitution in order to prevent unjust enrichment has elsewhere been pointed out.’ ” (P. 814.)

In the present proceeding, according to the agreed statement, respondent in paying the funeral expenses “did not act officiously, ’ ’ that is, he was neither a volunteer nor an inter-meddler. More specifically, the court concluded that “The decedent’s estate is primarily liable for the funeral expenses of the decedent. One who pays the funeral expenses of the decedent and who, in doing so, is not acting officiously, under the doctrine of subrogation, is equitably entitled to reimbursement from the estate of the decedent. The court may require the estate to reimburse him even though he filed no claim within the period prescribed in the notice to creditors, where he paid said funeral expenses at a time when he assumed he would inherit the estate and where his payment thereof increased the amount of the estate inherited by the daughter.” (Conclusions of Law, Par. 1.) Portions of the above conclusion of law are based on some of the reasoning found in Kemmerrer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 Cal. App. 2d 742, 50 Cal. Rptr. 147, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kristovich-v-johnson-calctapp-1966.