Richards v. Blaisdell

106 P. 732, 12 Cal. App. 101, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 43
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 2, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 715.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 106 P. 732 (Richards v. Blaisdell) 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
Richards v. Blaisdell, 106 P. 732, 12 Cal. App. 101, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 43 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

TAGGART, J.

This is an action on a claim reduced to judgment against an executor in the probate court in Minnesota, the testator’s domicile, and rejected by the ancillary administrator with the will annexed in this state.

Judgment was for plaintiff, and defendants and interveners appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

William K. Blaisdell died testate in the state of Minnesota, being a resident of that state at the time of his death. He left estate in Minnesota and also in California, that in the latter state consisting of real property only. Letters testamentary on his will were issued by the probate court of the state of Minnesota to the person named as executor therein. Thereafter letters of administration, with the will annexed, on his estate were granted to the defendant, Robert *103 P. Blaisdell in the state of California. Plaintiff presented his claim to the executor in Minnesota, who refused to approve or allow the same, whereupon the matter of such allowance and the exceptions of the executor to the claim were heard before the probate court having jurisdiction of the estate, and an order of allowance made by that court. This order, under the laws of the state of Minnesota, has the same force and effect as a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction.

After the rendition’ of this judgment and also after the time for presentation of claims in California had expired, the plaintiff presented to the administrator with the will annexed in California his claim in the following language: “Jan. 9, 1904. To amount of claim allowed and entered by the probate court of Hennepin county, Minnesota, by a certain judgment duly given, made and entered, as appears by the authenticated record of said judgment which is attached (and said probate court of Hennepin county, Minnesota, being a court of record and of general probate jurisdiction)—$2,448.” Annexed t'o this claim were copies of the several papers which composed what may be designated the judgment-roll in the proceeding in the Minnesota court, to wit: The original demand—a promissory note for $1,800, with interest— the objections thereto, filed by the executor, and the judgment or order allowing the claim. It was also accompanied by an affidavit showing that plaintiff was a resident of Minnesota at all times when the administration in this state had been pending, and had never been in the state of California, and had no knowledge of the proceedings being taken, or of the notice to creditors of said estate given in California. The claim was also verified, the verification reading as follows: “That said claim is due and unpaid, and there are no offsets against the same, and no credits thereon.”

The claim was rejected by the local administrator, and hence this action. Defendant and interveners plead that the claim and original demand were both barred by the statute of limitations, to wit, by sections 1493, 1499, 353 and 339 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that the testator was released from the original demand by a discharge in bankruptcy, and that the action is barred because the original indebtedness was secured by a mortgage on real estate in Minnesota, *104 which security was not exhausted, and the claim being gendered void by the provisions of sections 726 and 1497, Code of Civil Procedure. The indebtedness of the testator on the original demand was also denied; and evidence was introduced upon all the issues so raised, except that relating to the mortgage, evidence of which was refused admission.

On the issues so raised the trial court found in favor of plaintiff, setting out in full the instruments and orders attached to the claim, and found that the order of the probate court of Minnesota allowing the claim had the force and effect of a judgment, that no decree of distribution had been entered in the California administration at the time plaintiff’s claim was presented, and that the affidavit attached to the claim made a satisfactory showing to the court that plaintiff did not have notice to present his claim by reason of absence from the state of California; that the promissory note in question was not scheduled in the bankruptcy proceedings by said William K. Blaisdell, and plaintiff had no knowledge of the bankruptcy proceedings until after the order had been made discharging Blaisdell from all his provable debts.

The conclusion of law of the trial court, based upon these findings, “that the certified copy of the record of such allowance of said claim in Minnesota, duly verified, constitutes a valid claim against the estate of William K. Blaisdell, in California,” is challenged by appellants, who also raise the same question of law upon their objection to the admission of the Minnesota record in evidence.

Under the code, “The effect of a judicial record of a sister state is the same in this state as in the state where it is made, except that it can only be enforced here by an action or special proceeding, and except, also, that the authority of a guardian or committee, or of an executor or administrator, does not extend beyond the jurisdiction of the government under which he was invested with his authority.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1913.)

In its general provisions the section cited declares merely the rule at common law based upon comity. This is stated in Chitty on Contracts, eleventh American edition, volume 2, page 1177: “But the rule may now be taken to be, that if a *105 question has been decided by such a court (a foreign court having jurisdiction), in a proceeding in personam, between parties properly brought before it, this will preclude an inquiry in our courts between the same parties into the merits of the case upon the facts so found.” (Banister v. Campbell, 138 Cal. 455, 459, [71 Pac. 504, 506].)

Independent of the effect of the exception in the section, which restricts the jurisdiction of executors and administrators to the territory of the government which invested them with authority, it appears to be the settled rule that the allowance of a claim by an administrator in one jurisdiction is not only not conclusive against an administrator in another, but it is not even evidence. The laws and courts of a state can only affect persons and things within their jurisdiction. Consequently, both as to the administrator and the property confided to him, a judgment in another state is res inter alios acta. It cannot be even prima facie evidence of a debt, for if it have any effect at all it must be as a judgment, and operate by way of estoppel. And this is true whether the person appointed administrator be the same or a different person .in both jurisdictions, and is true, also, in an action against any other person having assets of the deceased in a jurisdiction other than that in which the letters were granted. (Cherry v. Speight, 28 Tex. 503, 516; McLean v. Meek, 18 How. (U. S.) 16; Johnson v. Powers, 139 U. S. 156, 159, [11 Sup. Ct. 525] ; Stacy v. Thrasher, 6 How. (U. S.) 44, 61.)

In Stacy v. Thrasher,

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Bluebook (online)
106 P. 732, 12 Cal. App. 101, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-blaisdell-calctapp-1909.