McPike v. Superior Court of S.F.
30 P.2d 17, 220 Cal. 254, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 528
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1934
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14941.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases
This text of 30 P.2d 17 (McPike v. Superior Court of S.F.) 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
McPike v. Superior Court of S.F., 30 P.2d 17, 220 Cal. 254, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 528 (Cal. 1934).
Opinion
A hearing was granted in this case after decision by the District Court of Appeal, First Appellate District, Division Two. Upon further consideration, we are satisfied that the opinion of Mr. Justice pro tem. Dooling properly disposes of the issue, and we therefore adopt said opinion as the opinion of this court. It reads as follows:
“The petitioner seeks by certiorari to have annulled an order of the Superior Court sitting as a probate court. *256 Prom the return it appears that the petitioner is the duly appointed and qualified administrator of the estate of Margaret A. Jennings, deceased. On June 27, 1932, petitioner as such administrator, filed in the respondent court a petition for permission to compromise certain litigation pending against the estate of his decedent. In such petition he alleged that an action had been commenced against him, as administrator, by one Annie Gillespie, claiming title to all the property of the estate, consisting of a sum of money slightly in excess of $4,000, which at the time of decedent’s death had been on deposit in a certain bank, and seeking judgment against him, as administrator, adjudging that’ she was such owner and declaring that petitioner, as administrator, held such sum in trust for her; that such action was at issue and ready for trial; and ‘that a few days before the date of trial of said action, counsel for defendant and counsel for plaintiff held a consultation and agreed that a reasonable and proper settlement of said action could and should be made by defendant, therein as administrator of the said estate, paying to plaintiff the sum of one thousand ($1,000.00) dollars’. The petition asked that the court authorize petitioner as such administrator to settle said action for such sum. The court fixed a date for the hearing of the petition to compromise, and ordered a citation to issue to Kate Sidles, the sole heir of the decedent. The citation was regularly issued and served and notice of the hearing given by posting, and the court after hearing the petition made its order on July 25, 1932, by which petitioner herein was ‘authorized to pay to said Annie Gillespie the sum of one thousand ($1,000.00) dollars in full settlement of all claims and demands of Annie Gillespie against the said estate and said administrator ’ upon the receipt of a dismissal of her said action with prejudice and a signed satisfaction.
“Thereafter, Cleveland R. Wright, an attorney at law, filed in the matter of such estate an affidavit reciting that he is the attorney for Annie Gillespie in the action against petitioner, as administrator of the estate of Margaret A. Jennings, deceased; the nature and purpose of said action; the fact that when said action was ready for trial he and counsel for petitioner had agreed to compromise it for the sum of one thousand dollars; the proceedings had in the *257 probate court terminating in the making of the order authorizing such compromise; repeated demands for the payment of such sum of $1,000, coupled with the tender of a dismissal with prejudice and a satisfaction as required by said order; and the failure and refusal of petitioner, herein, to pay the $1,000 or carry out the compromise. Affiant asked for the issuance of an order to show cause to petitioner herein, and for an order of the court directing him, as administrator, to pay to Annie Gillespie such sum of $1,000. A citation issued and petitioner herein appeared by demurrer attacking the jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter. The order herein attacked followed, by which petitioner herein is ‘ordered and directed to pay to Annie Gillespie within five (5) days from date hereof the sum of one thousand ($1,000.00) dollars pursuant to his said agreement of compromise and the order of this court made on July 25, 1932, approving the same’.
“Upon this proceeding we are not concerned with the propriety or impropriety of petitioner’s conduct with regard to the compromise, nor with the correctness or incorrectness of the action of the trial court in making the order complained of, further than to determine the single question whether the respondent court had jurisdiction to make such order. (4 Cal. Jur., p. 1106.)
“The probate court has the power to authorize the compromise of an adverse claim of a third party to the property of an estate. (Probate Code, see. 578, formerly Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1588, as construed in Merrill v. Bachelder, 123 Cal. 674, 676 [56 Pac. 618].) The precise language of that code section is: ‘A compromise may also be authorized by the court or judge when it appears to be just and for the best interest of the estate.’
“Nowhere in express terms is the probate court given the power, sought to be exercised by the order here under attack, of compelling the administrator to carry out and perform the provisions of a compromise so authorized. It is settled that ordinarily a probate court has no jurisdiction over the adverse claims of third persons to property in the estate (11 Cal. Jur., p. 262, sec. 42) and this for the reason ‘that either the person initiating the attack or the person resisting the attack is lacking in privity to the probate proceedings’. (Bauer v. Bauer, 201 *258 Cal. 267, 271 [256 Pac. 820].) It is equally well settled that while the superior court, sitting in probate, is a court of general jurisdiction, ‘the proceedings being statutory in their nature, the court has no other powers than those given by statute and such incidental powers as pertain to it and enable the court to exercise the jurisdiction conferred upon it, and can only determine those questions or matters arising in the estate which it is authorized to do. Thus, in the exercise of the powers conferred upon it, its jurisdiction is limited and special, or limited and statutory.’ (11 Cal. Jur., pp. 248-9, sec. 34.)
“It is respondent’s theory that the power to make the order under attack is incidental to and to be implied from, and necessary to carry out and make effective, the power of the court to authorize the administrator to make a compromise. It is the petitioner’s contention that the jurisdiction of the court goes no further than the express language of the statute.
“The language of the statute is permissive, and not mandatory: ‘A compromise may also be authorized by the court.’ In this connection it is worthy of note that in other proceedings where it was the purpose of the legislature to make the action of the administrator mandatory and subject to the order of the court in dealings with strangers to the estate appropriate language is used to indicate that intention. Thus in the matter of the payment of approved claims the court is given the express power to order their payment (Probate Code, sec. 952); in the matter of carrying out a decedent’s contracts to convey property the court is given a like express power (Probate Code, secs. 850-853); in the case of the mortgaging of property of the estate it is mandatory upon the administrator to execute the mortgage or deed of trust (Probate Code, sec. 833) which the court ‘shall make an order authorizing and directing’ him to do (Probate Code, sec.
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Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 17, 220 Cal. 254, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcpike-v-superior-court-of-sf-cal-1934.