Matter of Baker

96 P. 12, 153 Cal. 537, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 495
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1908
DocketS.P. No. 4793.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 96 P. 12 (Matter of Baker) 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
Matter of Baker, 96 P. 12, 153 Cal. 537, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 495 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an appeal from an order refusing to revoke letters of guardianship and set aside an order fixing the amount of guardian’s bond. It involves the validity of the appointment and qualification of a testamentary guardian.

The ward is the son of the appellant and her former husband, Westwood J. Baker. The parents were divorced on April 1, 1898, and thereafter lived apart, the father residing in Fresno County and' the mother in San Francisco. The father died on July 4, 1905, leaving a considerable estate, which he disposed of by will. The will, which was admitted to probate on August 14, 1905, in the superior court of Fresno County, contained this provision: “I hereby appoint L. 0. Stephens of the city of Fresno, guardian of the person and estate of my said son Joseph Westwood Baker.” The estate of the child consisted entirely of property held in trust by the said Stephens, part of it derived from the father, which part was to remain in trust until the child became twenty-five years of age, and the remainder by devise from one Sarah W. Garrett to remain in trust until he was of age. All of it was situated in Fresno County and a considerable portion of it was real estate. The fact that the will purported to appoint Stephens the guardian of her son coming to the knowledge of the appellant, she employed an attorney in Fresno to represent her in the matter and instructed him that she desired to retain the custody and guardianship -of the person of her *539 son. Thereupon it was agreed between her attorney and the attorney for Stephens that Stephens should waive the guardianship of the person and yield to her the custody and control of the child, but that he should be the guardian of the estate. Stephens then filed his application in the superior court of Fresno County, reciting the testamentary appointment aforesaid, and declining the guardianship of the person of the child, alleging that the minor was a resident of Fresno County, and asking the court to fix the amount of his bond as guardian and trustee of said estate, and to direct the clerk to issue letters of guardianship to him. The court made an order that this application be heard on September 11, 1905. This application and order were served on the appellant’s attorney and by him delivered to her. She then signed and filed a writing as follows: “I hereby consent and agree that L. 0. Stephens may be the trustee and guardian of the estate of said minor, but not of his person.” Upon the hearing the court made an order fixing the amount of bond of Stephens as guardian and trustee and directing the issuance of letters of guardianship of the estate to him. Stephens filed the required bond, took the oath, and received the letters accordingly. Afterwards, on March 8, 1906, the mother filed in the said court a petition to revoke the order and the letters so issued and to dismiss the guardianship proceedings. The appeal is from the order denying this petition.

The provision of the statute, applicable herein, relating to testamentary guardians are as follows:—

“A guardian of the person or estate, or of both, of a child born, or likely to be born, may be appointed by will or by deed, to take effect upon the death .of the parent appointing: 1. If the child be legitimate, by the father, with the written consent of the mother; or by either parent, if the other be dead or incapable of consent; 2. If the child be illegitimate, by the mother.” (Civ. Code, sec. 241.)
“The superior court of each county, when it appears necessary or convenient, may appoint guardians for the persons and estates, or either of them, of minors who have no guardian legally appointed by will or deed, and who are inhabitants or residents of the county, or who reside without the state and have estate within the county.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1747.)
*540 “Every testamentary guardian must qualify and has the same powers and must perform the same duties with regard to the person and estate of his ward as guardians appointed by the court, except so far as his powers and duties are legally modified, enlarged, or changed by the will by which such guardian was appointed, and except that such guardian need not give bond unless directed to do so by the court from which the letters of guardianship issue.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1758.)

The appellant contends that the testamentary appointment of Stephens was ineffectual because she did not consent thereto during the lifetime of the father, and that the proceedings in the superior court of Fresno County are void, for the reason, as alleged, that the minor was not at that time or afterwards, a resident or inhabitant of Fresno County, but lived and resided in San Francisco,. and that therefore the superior court of Fresno. County was without jurisdiction.

A deed may be made, to take effect immediately upon its-execution, or, within certain limitations, at any time after-wards, even after the death of the grantor. A will can have-no effect .whatever until the testator is dead. Hence it is-probable that the phrase “to take effect upon the death of the parent appointing,” added as a qualification to the introductory paragraph of section 241 of the Civil Code, was intended to refer only to appointments made by deed. We do-not, however, regard this clause as important. By the first subdivision of the section, the mother’s consent in writing is-, required in all cases, if she is living. - This implies that her consent is to be given at some time after the appointment has become otherwise effectual, that is, after the death of the father, since, until that time, it could not be known that she would survive, and it cannot be doubted that an appointment by the father either by will or by deed, to which the mother had not in her lifetime consented, would be effectual without such consent, if he survived her. Her consent is essential only in case she survives. The father’s appointment is ineffective before his death, is, in fact, no appointment at all until his death. It is, therefore, only upon his death that her consent becomes of any importance. Furthermore, the will not only does not speak, as it is said, until the death of the testator, but is wholly inoperative before it is probated,. *541 •and the appointment of a guardian by will cannot be said to have been made until the validity of the will making it has been thus established. Hence, if she survives, but dies before probate, without executing any consent to the appointment, or making an appointment herself, the father’s testamentary appointment would obviously be valid, although not confirmed by the consent of the mother. In view of these contingencies, it is the most reasonable construction of the statute to hold that her consent to a testamentary appointment may be effectually given after the father’s death as well as before. There can be no hardship in this result. The appointment, if she survive, is of no effect if she dissent, and by the same ■subdivision which gives her this power of veto, she being the survivor, may withhold her consent and may appoint whom she chooses, or may herself apply to the court for ap•pointment under section 1747, Code of Civil Procedure. She is then in control of the entire matter.

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Bluebook (online)
96 P. 12, 153 Cal. 537, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-baker-cal-1908.