Monk v. Morgan

192 P. 1042, 49 Cal. App. 154, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 1, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3400.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 192 P. 1042 (Monk v. Morgan) 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
Monk v. Morgan, 192 P. 1042, 49 Cal. App. 154, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 124 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in an action brought by them against the defendants to impress a trust in plaintiffs’ favor upon certain property which had been distributed to the defendants by a decree of distribution in the Matter of the Estate of Henrietta M. Cox, Deceased, the basis of said action being certain alleged fraudulent acts and conduct on the part of said defendants during the course of probate of said estate.

The averments of the plaintiffs’ complaint in that regard may be summarized as follows: Henrietta M. Cox died intestate on April 3, 1915, at Long Beach, California, where she had resided for a number of years, leaving an estate consisting of real and personal property and having for her sole surviving heirs her first cousins, the plaintiffs and defendants in this action. The defendants at the time of the death of said Henrietta M. Cox were living in California and at or near the place of her decease. The plaintiffs then and for many years prior thereto lived at several places in or near the city of Brooklyn, state of New York. Shortly after the death of Henrietta M. Cox the defendant, George Morgan, filed a petition for letters of administration upon the estate of said decedent and for his appointment as the administrator of said estate, and in his said petition asserted that his sister and codefendant, Louisa Arnold, and himself were the sole surviving first cousins, next of kin and heirs at law of said decedent. Having been appointed such administrator he proceeded with the administration of said estate np to and including the distribution thereof, in his petition for which he again alleged that his said sister and himself were the sole surviving next of kin and heirs at law of Henrietta M. Cox, and as such entitled to distribution to themselves of the whole of said estate. At all times *156 during the progress of the administration of said estate, whenever it was requisite so to do, the said defendant, George Morgan, testified in support of these averments of his several petitions, and during all of said times suppressed and concealed from the probate court wherein such administration of said estate was being had the fact that the plaintiffs herein were also first cousins, next of kin and heirs at law of said decedent, and as such' were entitled to have distributed to them their proportionate share of her estate. The plaintiffs allege that these various acts of fraud and concealment and perjury on the part of said defendant, George Morgan, were committed in the course of a conspiracy and agreed collusion between himself and his codefendant, having for its purpose the perpetration of a fraud upon said court and upon the plaintiffs herein, as a result of which said plaintiffs were defrauded out of their just share in said estate.

The defendants demurred to the plaintiffs’ complaint setting up the foregoing averments as to the defendants’ conspiracy, fraud, and concealment in connection with the administration of said estate, and the complaint was several times amended. In their second amended complaint the plaintiffs i for the first time inserted averments to the effect that during the course of the administration of said estate the said defendant, George Morgan, had caused to be sent to one Henrietta Morris at Southampton, Long Island, state of New York, a certain remittance in the sum of sixty dollars in the form of a draft, which did not disclose on its face from whom it came, but which appeared to be the last of a course of annual remittances of a like amount which the decedent, Henrietta M. Cox, had been accustomed to send during the month of September of each year to said Henrietta Morris, who was her second cousin; and said plaintiffs alleged that the sending of said remittance by said George Morgan was done in such a manner as to induce said Henrietta Morris to believe that said Henrietta M. Cox was still alive, and was sent with intent to induce such belief, and that the same did induce said Henrietta Morris to believe that Henrietta M. Cox was still alive, and was sent with the intent of keeping, and did keep, said Henrietta Morris in ignorance of the death of said Henrietta M. Cox, thereby preventing her from communicating or causing to be com *157 municated to the plaintiffs herein, who resided in her vicinity, any knowledge or notice of. the death of said Henrietta M. Cox and of the fact that her estate was being administered upon, until such time as a decree of distribution therein had been made and had become final.

To the averments of the plaintiffs’ pleading as finally amended the defendants made their specific denial, and the cause proceeded to trial upon the issues thus presented. Much testimony was produced on both sides in relation to the alleged fraudulent acts .of the defendants; and upon the conclusion of the trial and the submission of the cause the trial court made its findings of fact in favor of the plaintiffs substantially sustaining the averments of their second amended complaint with respect to the several acts of collusion, conspiracy, fraud, and concealment alleged to have been committed by them during the course of the probate of said estate. In respect to the averments of the plaintiffs’ second amended complaint concerning the sending of said remittance to said Henrietta Morris, the court made the following finding of fact:

“That it is true that after the death of Henrietta M. Cox, deceased, and prior to the first day of October, 1916, defendant, George Morgan, did voluntarily and without any request, order or claim of any kind being made therefor, make a remittance in the sum of sixty dollars to Henrietta-Morris at Southampton, Long Island, state of New York; that said defendants, George Morgan and Louisa Arnold, at the time said remittance was made as aforesaid, did each know that said Henrietta Morris was a surviving second cousin of said Henrietta M. Cox, deceased, and related as a second cousin to each of the plaintiffs above named and defendants, George Morgan and Louisa Arnold; that said remittance was made by said George Morgan as aforesaid in such a manner and with the intent and design to induce and which did induce said Henrietta Morris to believe that said Henrietta M. Cox was still alive, and to keep and which did keep said Henrietta Morris in ignorance of the death of Henrietta M., Cox, and thereby preventing and which did prevent said Henrietta Morris from communicating or causing to be communicated to plaintiffs above named or either of them notice of the death of said Henrietta M. Cox, deceased, until after said decree of distribution had become *158 final; and such remittance was so made and said defendant, George Morgan, did conduct himself and affirmatively act for the purpose of keeping each of said plaintiffs in ignorance of the death of said Henrietta M. Cox, deceased, and that her estate was being administered upon and distributed, as well as all proceedings taken or resorted to in connection with the administration of said estate ...”

Judgment of the trial court following said findings of fact was in favor of the plaintiffs decreeing that the defendants George Morgan and Louisa Arnold took and held the property of the estate of Henrietta M. Cox awarded to them by the decree of distribution therein charged with a trust in favor of the plaintiffs Emma Monk and Lydia Y.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P. 1042, 49 Cal. App. 154, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monk-v-morgan-calctapp-1920.