Schmelz v. Schmelz

259 Cal. App. 2d 440, 66 Cal. Rptr. 480, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1988
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 1968
DocketCiv. 31631
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 259 Cal. App. 2d 440 (Schmelz v. Schmelz) 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
Schmelz v. Schmelz, 259 Cal. App. 2d 440, 66 Cal. Rptr. 480, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1988 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

STEPHENS, J.

This appeal is from an order setting apart a homestead to the surviving widow.

The decedent died September 30, 1962, leaving surviving his widow. Included in the property owned by the decedent were two pieces of real property. One was a multiple dwelling, consisting of four rental units in Huntington Park, California, which was held in joint tenancy with the surviving spouse, the income from which was $1,600 per year. The other real property owned by decedent was located in South Gate, California. This was the separate property of the decedent and consisted of eight units on one lot (two houses in the front and a six-unit apartment building in the rear). Decedent and his spouse lived in an apartment on the South Gate property. It is the whole of this property which the surviving spouse successfully sought to have impressed with a probate homestead, no homestead having been selected, designated and recorded during the lifetime of decedent.

Complying with the dictate of section 661 1 of the Probate *443 Code, the court granted the petition for homestead and, determining that the property was incapable of physical partition, impressed the whole property with the homestead burden. 2

Since there was neither community real property nor real property owned in common by decedent and the surviving spouse, the only property available for imposition of the homestead burden was the separate property of decedent.

While a cursory reading of Estate of Kachigian, 20 Cal.2d 787 [128 P.2d 865] may lead one to the conclusion that a homestead might be imposed upon joint tenancy property, this is an inaccurate conclusion when dealing with a probate homestead as distinguished from one created during the lifetime of the joint tenant. In the latter ease, as in the ease of any appropriate separate property, a homestead may be impressed thereon by one co-tenant. (Watson v. Peyton, 10 Cal.2d 156 [73 P.2d 906].) In the case of probate homesteads, however, the court may impose such burden only upon appropriate property within the estate of decedent. *444 (Cal. Estate Administration (Cont. Ed. Bar 1960) pp. 7, 41, cit. Estate of Klumpke, 167 Cal. 415 [139 P. 1062].) Joint tenancy property is, of course, not included within a decedent’s estate, and no burden thereon may be imposed by the probate court. Kachigian, involving a homestead declared upon property held by decedent as a tenant in common, recognized this obvious distinction and properly included such separate property interest within that property susceptible to a probate homestead.

Since there was but the one piece of separate property in the instant estate, and it was of the general type amenable to a homestead (residential), there remained four issues to be determined by the court below upon the petition. The first issue concerned the extent of the property to be set aside for homestead. While this, generally, is a matter of the trial court’s discretion, the appellants urge that here there was an abuse of discretion. In the light of the concessions hereinbefore set forth in footnote 2, we do not agree. The setting aside of property consisting of multiple apartments on a single piece of real property, contained in a single structure, has been approved in Estate of Levy, 141 Cal. 646 [75 P. 301, 99 Am.St.Rep. 92], Estate of Magorty, 169 Cal. 163 [146 P. 430], and Estate of Nelson, 224 Cal.App.2d 138 [36 Cal.Rptr. 352],

We find no appellate case in which the issue determined was that a probate homestead was properly impressed upon a piece of property where there are multiple dwellings, each or any of which is complete as a proper residence for homestead purposes. To the contrary, the case of Maloney v. Hefer, 75 Cal. 422 [17 P. 539, 7 Am.St.Rep. 180] held that where there were two houses on the one lot and each was divisible and separate from the other, only that portion actually the residence of the homesteader was subject to the dedication of the homestead. Lubbock v. McMann, 82 Cal. 226 [22 P. 1145, 16 Am.St.Rep. 108] is authority that impressment of a homestead on such a property would be an abuse of discretion. There, the court declared (at p. 229) : “If, at the time of filing the declaration for record, the two houses now standing upon this lot had been standing as they now do, and occupied as they now are, only the one occupied as the dwelling of the plaintiff, with that portion of the lot used in connection therewith, would have been impressed with the homestead character; as to the other house and the land used in connection with it, the attempt to dedicate it as a homestead would *445 have been inoperative. (Tiernan v. His Creditors, 62 Cal. 286; Maloney v. Hefer, 75 Cal. [422] 424 [17 P. 539, 7 Am.St.Rep. 180]; In re Allen, 78 Cal. [293] 294 [20 P. 679].) ” The case of In re Ligget, 117 Cal. 352 [49 P. 211, 59 Am.St.Rep 190] is to the same effect. In Estate of Levy, supra, 141 Cal. 646, the court approved the setting aside of a single building containing three apartments. The court there (p. 651) states: “Appellants rely also on a line of cases where it is held that where two or more buildings suitable for dwelling-house purposes, belonging to the claimant, are situated upon the same parcel of land, and the claimant resides in one, he can legally select but one as a homestead. (In re Ligget, 117 Cal. 352 [49 P. 211, 59 Am.St.Rep. 190] ; Tiernan v. His Creditors, 62 Cal. 286; Maloney v. Hefer, 75 Cal. 422 [17 P. 539, 7 Am.St.Rep. 180]; Lubbock v. McMann, 82 Cal. 226 [22 P. 1145, 16 Am.St. Rep. 108] ; In re Allen, 78 Cal. 293 [20 P. 679].) The distinction between these cases and the case of a single building is obvious. Under the express terms of the statute the homestead ‘ consists of the dwelling-house in which the claimant resides and the land on which the same is situated. ’ While this definition may include not only the land on which the dwelling-house stands, and of which it has become a part, but also such other land as may be necessary to its convenient use and occupation, it does not, when fairly construed with a view to the objects of the homestead law, include such other land as has resting thereon, as a part thereof, a building or buildings devoted to other purposes than those of a family home.” Estate of Nelson, supra, 224 Cal.App.2d 138 at p. 145 is urged as determinative of the same issue before us. In that case, the property was of a single structure nature, and not multiple buildings; a close reading of Nelson, supra (and Estate of Levy, supra, upon which it relies) establishes that it is not authority for the problem before this court. In Estate of Moskowitz,

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Bluebook (online)
259 Cal. App. 2d 440, 66 Cal. Rptr. 480, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmelz-v-schmelz-calctapp-1968.