Sanders v. Crabtree

112 P.2d 923, 44 Cal. App. 2d 602, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1036
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 1941
DocketCiv. 11311
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 P.2d 923 (Sanders v. Crabtree) 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
Sanders v. Crabtree, 112 P.2d 923, 44 Cal. App. 2d 602, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1036 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

*604 KNIGHT, J.

Ernest and Perry Sanders, as executors of the last will of their grandfather, William H. Sanders, deceased, brought this suit in equity against Margaret E. Sanders, widow of the deceased, and her children by a former marriage, to have property claimed by Margaret E. Sanders as surviving joint tenant, declared the property of the estate and subject to administration. A complaint in intervention was filed by William P. Sanders, son of the deceased and father of the plaintiffs, asking for the same relief. The findings of the trial court were in favor of defendants on all issues; judgment was entered accordingly, and plaintiffs and the intervenor appeal. After the briefs were filed, Margaret G. Sanders, as administratrix of the estate of W. P. Sanders, deceased, was substituted in the place and stead of William P. Sanders, plaintiff in intervention; and Effie Bruton Crabtree, Esma Bruton Johnson, and Margaret K. Hill, as executrices of the estate of Margaret E. Sanders, deceased, were substituted in the place and stead of Margaret E. Sanders, as party defendant; but for convenience the parties will be referred to throughout as if there had been no substitution.

William H. Sanders, the deceased, and the defendant Margaret E. Sanders, were married in New Mexico in April, 1906. They were 51 and 49 years of age respectively at the time of their marriage, and each had been married before. William H. Sanders had one son by a former marriage, William P. Sanders, the plaintiff in intervention; and Margaret E. Sanders (Margaret E. Bruton before her marriage to Sanders) had four children, the three surviving being the other named defendants. Both William H. Sanders and Mrs. Bruton owned property in their own right; and prior to their marriage they entered into a marriage settlement agreement or antenuptial contract, by the terms of which each agreed that his or her separate property should remain separate; that neither should have any claim or right to the property of the other, before or after death; that each should have the right to dispose of his or her separate property by deed, will, or otherwise, and that in the event of death intestate the property of each should descend to his or her direct heirs. The contract further provided that after Sanders’ death his widow was to have a life interest in property which Sanders intended purchasing in California as their residence; and that he would by will made after marriage fix an amount suffi *605 cient to maintain his widow. This contract was dated April 17, 1906; and two weeks later and after their marriage Sanders made a will, giving his widow a life estate in “all of the property which I may hereafter acquire in the State of California”, and providing that she should be paid $50 a month until her death or remarriage. Cash legacies were left to two grandsons (the plaintiffs herein), and all the balance of the property was left to the son, William P. Sanders. The contract and will were delivered to the son; and soon thereafter, that same year, the elder Sanders moved to Santa Monica. The son remained in New Mexico, continuing to take care of his father’s and his own interests there. About 1910 the son came to California, where he continued to act for his father, keeping books, collecting rents, assisting in making loans, and generally aiding his father in his business, up to 1920, when their friendly business and personal relations were broken as a result of a dispute over a Madera County ranch, and were never resumed up to the time of William II. Sanders’ death. After his death (he committed suicide on June 8, 1934) it was found that during the ten years previous Sanders had created and caused to be created joint tenancies in himself and his wife, covering numerous pieces of property, stock, and bank accounts, valued at $174,172.45. These joint tenancies as to the property he had caused to be created in his own and Mrs. Sanders’ names by having the grantors make the deeds, many of them through escrows. He had also created joint tenancies with his grandchildren, children of W. P. Sanders, of the value of $46,828.50; and he left a will dated February 15, 1930, disposing of the balance of his estate, valued at $12,160. In the will he left his widow a life estate in certain property in Santa Monica (including the residence) ; upon her death said property to be divided between his son and his four grandchildren, one-fifth each. The balance of his property he also willed to his son and his four grandchildren, one-fifth each; and the will provided that any person contesting or attacking it in any way forfeited any bequests thereunder and was bequeathed $1. By the last provision of the will all former wills were revoked, and Ernest and Perry Sanders, grandsons, were appointed executors without bond.

Immediately after the death of William II. Sanders, W. P. Sanders and his son Ernest consulted attorney Fogel. W. P. *606 Sanders produced the antenuptial agreement and the will of 1906, and according to Sanders, Fogel told him the ante-nuptial agreement had no force and effect; that the joint tenancies were final and could not be set aside, and that the property was worth approximately $100,000. He also told Sanders he would help obtain a settlement between the parties, but he could not represent Sanders. A list of the properties was compiled, and efforts at settlement were made by the parties submitting propositions, one to the other, through attorney Fogel; and on June 28, 1934, W. P. Sanders, as party of the first part, the grandchildren, as parties of the second part, and Margaret B. Sanders, the widow, as party of the third part, executed an agreement of settlement and a release of their claims against each other. Sanders and his children were represented at this time by attorney Crawford. Thereafter all the properties covered by the agreement of settlement were delivered and paid over by the respective parties; and on June 29, 1934, the executors filed their petition to probate the will, which was admitted to probate on July 27, 1934. On June 18, 1935, a year after the settlement agreement was executed and more than four months after the order admitting the will to probate had become final, Sanders and his children served on Mrs. Sanders notice of rescission of the settlement and release agreement; and this action followed—the complaint being filed September 3, 1935.

Appellants first contend that the antenuptial contract and will of 1906 and their delivery to W. P. Sanders, with the promise that the property should be his on the death of his father, constituted a binding contract made for the benefit of W. P. Sanders, the son, which could not be rescinded without the consent of the son, and that it was never rescinded; that therefore the widow holds the property as trustee for the son as beneficiary under that agreement. We are unable to sustain the contention made by appellants in this behalf.

The agreement provided that as the parties were about to be married they desired to make said contract with regard to the “holding, using and disposition of the property which is now owned by each of them in their individual right as the sole and separate property thereof, together with all of the increase which may accrue thereon during their marriage”; that all of the property of William H. Sanders which was then his separate property “shall, after the said marriage, *607

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 P.2d 923, 44 Cal. App. 2d 602, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-crabtree-calctapp-1941.