Miller v. Pitman

182 P. 50, 180 Cal. 540, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 521
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1919
DocketL. A. No. 4893.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 182 P. 50 (Miller v. Pitman) 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
Miller v. Pitman, 182 P. 50, 180 Cal. 540, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 521 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment quieting the plaintiffs’ title to an undivided one-fourth of a certain tract of land situate in the county of Los Angeles and awarding to the plaintiffs the sum of $1,750 for the use and occu *541 pation of said lands for the period during which the trial court found the plaintiffs were entitled to the possession thereof.

The facts of the case, as revealed by the pleadings, proof, and findings, are generally these: In February, 1888, Elias W. Pitman died seised of a tract of land which included the land in suit. By his will, he left a life estate in the said land to his wife, Charlotte Pitman, whom he named as executrix, with remainders in fee to their children and to the heirs of their children’s bodies. Under the terms of this will, the plaintiff John E. Miller, the orphaned grandson of Elias W. and Charlotte Pitman, who was at the time eleven years of age, was entitled to an undivided one-sixth interest in the total remainder, his sister to one-sixth, and the defendants Albert S. Pitman and Mary Cole, nee Pitman, to one-third each. In March, 1888, the defendant Albert S. Pitman, son of Elias W. and Charlotte Pitman, was duly appointed the guardian of the plaintiff John E. Miller and of his sister, Mary Miller, and acted as such during their minority and, in fact, never was discharged. The will of Elias W. Pitman was duly admitted to probate upon the petition of Charlotte Pitman, as executrix. In due time, she petitioned the probate court for a decree of final distribution wherein she alleged, among other things: “That the said Charlotte Pitman, your petitioner, is, by reason of the provisions of the last will of said deceased, now on file in this court, entitled to the whole of the residue of said estate during her life time, and after her death to be equally divided among his said children.” In November, 1891, the probate court made and entered its decree in the estate of Elias W. Pitman finally distributing “All of the said property to Charlotte Pitman, the widow of said Elias W. Pitman, deceased.” Charlotte Pitman entered into possession of the land in suit under this decree of distribution and subsequently deeded a portion of it to the defendant Albert S. Pitman absolutely, leaving approximately two-thirds of the original acreage standing in her name. In 1900, the said Albert S. Pitman, desiring to sell the one-third so conveyed to him, requested the plaintiff Miller to join in the deed. Miller did so, as he testified, upon the representation of Pitman that if he would do so he, Pitman, would take this one-third of the land as his full share of the real property in the estate of Elias W. Pitman. In 1907, Charlotte Pitman *542 deeded the remaining two-thirds to the defendants Albert S. Pitman and Mrs. .Cole, reserving, however, unto herself a life estáte therein. Charlotte Pitman died in March, 1909. On December 18,1909, the defendant Albert S. Pitman purchased the interest of Mrs. Cole, Charles Cole, her husband, joining in the deed. Since that time, Pitman has been in possession of the land, claiming title thereto under the conveyances to him from Charlotte Pitman and the Coles. The plaintiffs’ complaint alleged, and the trial court found, that the defendants knew the terms of the will of Elias W. Pitman at all times after the probate thereof, and “willfully and fraudulently concealed said facts from the said John E. Miller,” and, in effect, that said concealment was successful down to 1914. The court found that the plaintiff Miller was absent from Los Angeles County and resided in Oregon, Washington £.nd Canada from 1907 to the spring of 1915, and, in the latter year, ascertained for the first time that his grandfather, Elias W. Pitman, had made him one of the devisees in his will. The plaintiff Moore claims title to a portion of the land in suit under a deed from the plaintiff Miller.

A first impression created by a cursory reading of the record is that the plaintiffs ’ cause of action proceeds in part upon the theory of a trust arising in favor of the plaintiff Miller as the result of a fraudulent concealment by Charlotte Pitman and the defendant Albert S. Pitman while standing in the relation of fiduciaries to the said Miller. A closer scrutiny of the record discloses that the plaintiffs’ complaint is framed, as were the findings and judgment of the trial court, upon the theory that the probate court had no jurisdiction, under the issues presented by the petitions for the probate of the will of Elias W. Pitman and for the final distribution of his estate, to distribute to Charlotte Pitman any interest therein greater than a life estate, and that, as a consequence, the decree of distribution did not divest the plaintiff John E. Miller of the interest in the estate of Elias W. Pit-man devised to him by the terms of the will and did not distribute to Charlotte Pitman the fee-simple title to the lands in suit. With this theory as a basis, the plaintiffs contended, and the trial court in effect further found, that the only interest, namely, a life estate, which Charlotte Pitman took under the decree of distribution, terminated at her death, thereby vesting the remainder over, to the extent of an undivided one- *543 fourth, in the plaintiff Miller in fee simple. Of course, if this theory were correct, it would follow, as the trial court ultimately concluded, that the defendants, as grantees of Charlotte Pitman, acquired no interest in or title to the lands in suit. In view of the evident and undoubted theory of the plaintiffs’ ease, us thus outlined, it is obvious that the facts relative to the alleged fraudulent concealment were pleaded, proven, and found solely for the purpose of tolling the statute of limitations and need not, therefore, be considered for any other purpose.

It thus appears that the paramount point presented upon the appeal involves the scope, effect, and finality of the decree of distribution which was made a,nd entered in November, 1891, and never appealed from. The fundamental finding of the trial court to the effect that Charlotte Pitman took no more than a life estate by the decree of distribution is not supported by the evidence. The only evidence responding to this phase of the case consists of the will of Elias W. Pitman, the petition for its probate, the petition for the decree of distribution and the decree itself. Neither extrinsic fraud nor mistake in the procurement of the decree ivas alleged, shown or found. The decree is valid on its face. Clearly, the probate court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the decree of distribution, and the fact that the decree erroneously construed the terms of the will did not operate to render the decree void. The time for appeal from the decree has long since expired. [1] It is well settled that a decree of distribution is not subject to collateral attack, no matter how erroneously it may appear to depart from the terms of the will devising and bequeathing the estate distributed, if all of the interested parties have had due notice of the petition. [2] The law does not require personal notice to be given of the presentation and pendency of a petition for final distribution, and, the complaint in the present ease failing to allege that the notice required by law was not given, it will be presumed that such notice was given. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1666, 1668; Daly v. Pennie, 86 Cal. 552, [21 Am. St. Rep. 61, 25 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 50, 180 Cal. 540, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-pitman-cal-1919.