Morgan v. Asher

193 P. 288, 49 Cal. App. 172, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 121
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 1, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3430.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 193 P. 288 (Morgan v. Asher) 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
Morgan v. Asher, 193 P. 288, 49 Cal. App. 172, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 121 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal, from a judgment rendered in the defendant’s favor after her demurrer to the fourth amended complaint of the plaintiffs had been sustained.

The defendant is the widow of one G. M. Asher, deceased, and the executrix of his last will. She is also the sole distributee of his estate under the decree of distribution made in *173 the course of the probate of the decedent’s said will and estate. The plaintiffs are relations of the said deceased in various degrees, the plaintiffs, Mrs. Martha Morgan and Mrs. T. S. Gibson, being his sisters, Mrs. Cynthia Hall and Mrs. Sarah Wilsey, his nieces, Tyrus Howard his nephew, and Mrs. Nancy Asher the wife of his brother, A. B. Asher. This action was instituted by these plaintiffs to have it adjudged that the said defendant holds certain money and other personal property, which was the separate property of her deceased husband, as the trustee of the plaintiffs, and that the same be applied to the payment of certain legacies to said plaintiffs and to certain other of his heirs and devisees under the terms of his said will.

The averments of the plaintiffs’ fourth amended complaint set forth the facts upon which the plaintiffs predicate their demand for said relief, and these facts may be briefly summarized as follows: G. M. Asher at the time of and for several years prior to his death resided in the city of Los Angeles with his wife, Lizzie Asher, and he was then the owner of certain real and personal property, all of which the plaintiffs allege to have been the separate property and estate of said G. M. Asher prior to and at the time of his death, which occurred on or about March 4, 1915. For some time previous to his death G. M. Asher was in a feeble state of health, on account of which he was unable to look after and attend' to his business as he had previously done, and that' owing to his sickness and ailments his said wife had been given the care and management of all pf his said property as his agent or employee, and that as such she had in her personal possession and control the whole of said property and particularly the said personal property and estate of said G. M. Asher, which consisted chiefly of notes and bonds of a value in excess of one hundred thousand dollars. That said G. M. Asher left a last will and testament by the terms of which he bequeathed to his said wife, Lizzie Asher, the sum of eighty thousand dollars, to be first paid out of the funds and properties in his estate, and further bequeathed the sum of about twenty thousand dollars in the form of specific legacies directly or in trust to a number of his said relatives, including the plaintiffs herein, and also those several persons who are joined as parties defendant with the de *174 fendant herein. Certain of these legatees were his brothers and sisters, and were thus his heirs under the law of succession, as well as his legatees under the will. Certain others were nephews and nieces, among the latter of which was Hannah Asher, in trust for whom the said G. M. Asher bequeathed the sum of one thousand dollars to his said wife, Lizzie Asher, to be held by the latter in such trust until said Hannah Asher reached the age of twenty-one years, the said Lizzie Asher being in the meantime nominated in said will to act as her guardian without bond. The will provided that these legacies should abate in the event that his estate was found to be worth less than eighty thousand dollars, in which event the whole of his said estate was to be devoted to the payment of the bequest of eighty thousand dollars to his said wife.

The plaintiffs further allege that upon the death of said G. M. Asher, and while said Lizzie Asher was in possession and control of- the whole of his property and estate as aforesaid, and was also possessed of full knowledge that the same and the whole thereof was the separate property and estate of her said husband, and was of a, value in excess of one hundred thousand dollars, and that these plaintiffs and also those other persons who were named in said will as legatees and who are joined with the defendant herein as defendants were and each of them was entitled to the several legacies to be paid to them and each of them according to the terms of said will, she formed the purpose of fraudulently deceiving the court within which the said last will and testament was to be offered for probate and within which the said estate of said decedent was to be probated, and that in pursuance of said fraudulent intent she concealed from said court during the entire course of the probate of said will and of said estate the fact that said decedent had or left at the time of his death any property whatever other than the said piece of real property, which was of the value of about six thousand dollars, and that in returning her inventory of said estate and also in. her account and petition for distribution therein she falsely and fraudulently represented to said court that the said piece of real estate was community property of the value aforesaid, and that her deceased husband had no property or interest in any property other than said real estate, and that she pur *175 posely and falsely and fraudulently and with intent to deceive said court and to defraud the aforesaid legatees of said decedent out of their portion of said estate, failed to set forth or disclose in any of said proceedings, and particularly in the final account and petition for distribution therein, the existence of the said personal property of said decedent, or the fact that the same was a portion of his estate, and that the said court in the course of the probate of said estate, and being deceived and misled by the said defendant’s fraudulent acts and practices, 'distributed the entire estate of said decedent to said defendant, Lizzie Asher, to the exclusion of all the aforesaid heirs and legatees of said deceased. That at and during the whole period of the probate of said estate each and all of the said plaintiffs and legatees, other than said Lizzie Asher, were nonresidents of the state of California and were absent therefrom and were residents of various other states of the United States, and that none of them had any notice or knowledge of the aforesaid false and fraudulent acts of said defendant, Lizzie Asher, and particularly of her filing of said false and fraudulent account and petition for distribution or of the contents thereof, or of the hearing thereon; and that in consequence thereof said plaintiffs were not present or represented at said hearing nor in the making or filing of said decree of distribution whereby the said defendant, Lizzie Asher, was given the whole of her deceased husband’s property and estate. The plaintiffs further allege that after said decree of distribution had become final they became advised of the true state of facts and of the fraud practiced by the said defendant, Lizzie Asher, upon said legatees of her deceased husband, and that upon coming into possession of such knowledge they instituted the present action, seeking the relief set forth in the prayer to their said fourth amended complaint or such other or further relief in equity as should be meet in the premises.

The demurrer of said defendant, Lizzie Asher, to said fourth amended complaint was sustained by the trial court, and from the judgment thereon the said plaintiffs have prosecuted this appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P. 288, 49 Cal. App. 172, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-asher-calctapp-1920.