Morse v. Beddoe

63 Cal. App. 3d 1, 133 Cal. Rptr. 500, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1983
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 22, 1976
DocketCiv. No. 14618
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 63 Cal. App. 3d 1 (Morse v. Beddoe) 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
Morse v. Beddoe, 63 Cal. App. 3d 1, 133 Cal. Rptr. 500, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1983 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

AULT, J.

Eliot Beddoe was the income beneficiary of a testamentary trust under a will executed by his mother, Madeleine L. Moulton, on July 24, 1923. After Eliot’s death in 1973, the trustee petitioned the probate court for instructions concerning the distribution of the trust corpus. The court ordered the trust property distributed to Pamela Beddoe as the surviving “lawful issue” of Eliot, who had adopted her as an adult in 1969.

The alternate remaindermen under the will, entitled to take the property in the event Eliot died leaving no widow and no surviving “lawful issue,” are Beatrice B. Morse, Japsay Lockett Sears, Sally Cudlip, Marion Franzen, Howard Potter and Stephen Potter (respectively the daughter, the nephew, and the issue of stepsons of the testatrix). They contend Pamela was not “lawful issue” as that term was used in the will.

Few facts are in dispute. Mrs. Moulton’s will was drawn by a competent, duly licensed, California attorney. When the will was executed in 1923, there was no statutory procedure in California for the adoption of an adult. However, adult adoptions were allowed in at least 13 other states, including New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Texas. Not until the enactment of Civil Code section 227p in 1951 could the adoption of an adult be accomplished in California.

The testatrix was married three times and had two children by her first marriage: Eliot Beddoe and Beatrice B. Morse. It appears that Eliot was inept at handling money and was considered by his mother to be a wastrel. The testatrix had acquired her wealth from her second husband, Potter, who himself had two children by a former marriage: Jack Potter [5]*5and Rowland Potter. When she executed the will, she was married to Everett H. Moulton.

Under the will Beatrice received a certain share of the residue outright when she attained the age of 40, but the share allocated to Eliot was placed in trust, giving him the income for life but no power to invade the corpus and no power of appointment. To provide for disposition of the corpus and accumulated income on Eliot’s death Paragraph Third of the will set out four alternatives:

(1) If Eliot should leave no widow but leave lawful issue, the property was to be distributed to such issue, their heirs and assigns, share and share alike;
(2) If Eliot should leave both a widow and surviving lawful issue, the property Was to be distributed one-half to the widow, her heirs and assigns, and one-half to the lawful issue, share and share alike;
(3) If Eliot should leave a widow but no surviving lawful issue, the property was to be distributed to the widow, her heirs and assigns;
(4) If Eliot should die leaving no widow and no surviving “lawful issue," then the trust was to continue, giving Beatrice and Mr. Moulton each one-half of the income for life, and on their deaths, the principal was to be distributed to the two former stepsons and the brother of the testatrix.

Paragraph Fourth of the will stated: “All distributions to the lawful issue of any said children shall be per stirpes and not per capita, and the children of any deceased child or grandchild shall take the share that their parent would have received if living.”

When the testatrix died in 1929, Eliot was unmarried and without children, and there was no person then in existence who qualified as his “lawful issue." He later married and divorced five wives but had no natural children. In 1939 he married the mother of respondent Pamela, then 10 years old. During the 16 years that marriage lasted, Eliot treated Pamela as his own daughter and often asked her if she would like him to adopt her, and other relatives accepted her as one of the family. Eliot adopted Pamela in 1969 in San Diego County (Sup. Ct. No. A-11811). By then he was 78 years old and living in a convalescent home, and she was [6]*640. The following year he married his fifth wife but later obtained a divorce. He was unmarried when he died on December 5, 1973. There was evidence Eliot told his fifth wife he had adopted Pamela to keep his sister Beatrice from getting their mother’s property.

On this appeal from the order instructing the trustee to distribute the corpus of the trust to Pamela, the issue is the proper interpretation of the words “lawful issue” as used by Madeleine Moulton in her will. Appellants contend she intended to exclude adult adoptees because adult adoptions were not possible in California during her lifetime. They maintain Eliot’s adoption of Pamela after she became an adult was an attempt to rewrite the will and defeat the intent of the testatrix. They further contend the court’s findings do not support its conclusions of law and its order, and therefore a reversal is required.

Discussion

The paramount rule in the construction of wills, to which all other rules must yield, is that the intention of the testator as expressed in the will must be given effect as far as possible (Prob. Code, § 101; Estate of Russell, 69 Cal.2d 200, 205-206 [70 Cal.Rptr. 561, 444 P.2d 353]). Where a will has been drafted by one skilled in the law, it may be assumed that technical legal terms have been used in their technical legal sense (Prob. Code, § 106, formerly Civ. Code, § 1327; Estate of Bourn, 25 Cal.App.2d 590, 595 [78 P.2d 193]). Unless the will expresses a contrary intent, the court must also assume the will was intended to be compatible with existing statutes, case law and public policy (Estate of Heard, 49 Cal.2d 514, 521-522 [319 P.2d 637]).

When the testatrix in this case executed the will her attorney prepared for her in 1923, Civil Code section 1334 stated: “[A] testamentary disposition to ‘heirs,’ ‘relations,’ ‘nearest relatives,’ ‘representatives,’ ‘legal representatives,’ ‘personal representatives,’ or ‘family,’ ‘issue,’ ‘descendants,’ ‘nearest’ or ‘next of kin’ of any person, without other words of qualification, and when the terms are used as words of donation, and not of limitation, vests the property in those who would be entitled to succeed to the property of such person, according to the provisions of the Title on Succession, in this Code.” (Italics added.)1 In addition, it had been [7]*7established by California case law that the word “issue” included both adopted and natural children for purposes of inheritance (In re Newman (1888) 75 Cal. 213, 219 [16 P. 887]).

Thus at the time the will was executed, a testamentary disposition to “lawful issue,” by statutory definition of that term (Civ. Code, § 1334), vested the property in the person or persons entitled to succeed under the laws of intestacy, and California case law had established that adoptive, as well as natural claimants, were entitled to succeed (Wells Fargo Bank v. Huse, 57 Cal.App.3d 927, 935 [129 Cal.Rptr. 522]). In leaving a gift to the “lawful issue” of Eliot, the testatrix must be presumed to have been aware of and to have intended the legal consequences which flowed from the use of that term unless she expressed a contrary intent in the will. By failing to do so, she, in effect, made Civil Code section 1334 and the statute of succession a part of her will

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Estate of Moulton
63 Cal. App. 3d 1 (California Court of Appeal, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Cal. App. 3d 1, 133 Cal. Rptr. 500, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-beddoe-calctapp-1976.