Sears v. Rule

163 P.2d 443, 27 Cal. 2d 131, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 225
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1945
DocketL. A. 18818
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 163 P.2d 443 (Sears v. Rule) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sears v. Rule, 163 P.2d 443, 27 Cal. 2d 131, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 225 (Cal. 1945).

Opinion

GIBSON, C. J.

Charles F. Weber died in 1934, leaving all his property to his wife, Sarah E. Weber. Mrs. Weber *134 died in January, 1936. Plaintiffs and cross-defendants (hereinafter called plaintiffs) are the remaining heirs of Charles Weber. They brought this action to impress a trust upon property distributed from the estate of Mrs. Weber to defendant Charles T. Rule, her brother, as sole beneficiary under her will. The complaint alleged that the decree of distribution in the estate of Mrs. Weber had been procured through the extrinsic fraud of Charles Rule, that in fact the decedent died intestate, and that plaintiffs weye entitled to the property as her statutory heirs under Probate Code section 229. Other persons, including James H. Rule (who died after this action was filed) and John E. Rule, the two brothers of defendant Charles Rule, were named as defendants solely because of their having directly or indirectly received some of the property from Charles Rule.

A demurrer was sustained to the first amended complaint, and the ensuing judgment of dismissal was reversed upon a prior appeal. (Sears v. Rule, 45 Cal.App.2d 374 [114 P.2d 57].) Thereafter, but before trial, a cross-complaint was filed by Mrs. Minnie Cotton, a niece of Mrs. Weber, seeking relief similar to that demanded by plaintiffs. After a trial without a jury a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs and cross-complainant Mrs. Cotton. Defendant Charles Rule appealed from the judgment.

The trial court found that Mr. and Mrs. Weber were married in 1904, came to California in 1920, and thereafter agreed that all their property, regardless of nominal title, should constitute community property, and that at the death of Mr. Weber all their property (with one exception, a parcel of real property transferred to Mrs. Weber as a gift) was community property. After Mr. Weber’s death his heirs, including plaintiffs, executed instruments purporting to release and quitclaim to Mrs. Weber any interests they had or might acquire in Mr. Weber’s estate. (A demurrer to a separate defense based upon these instruments was sustained.) The court also found that after Mrs. Weber’s death all the property in her estate, with the exception above noted, was likewise community property of herself and her deceased husband.

Mrs. Weber’s will provided, in article four: “I give, devise and bequeath to my brother, Charles T. Rule, of Los Angeles, California, all my household furniture, furnishings, silverware, jewelry, trinkets, clothing and personal effects; also my automobile.” Article five reads: “All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, of whatever kind and character, and *135 wheresoever situated at the time of my decease, I give devise and bequeath as follows, to-wit: (a) To my brother, Charles T. Rule, of Los Angeles, California, the whole thereof; and in the event he should fail to survive distribution to him, then to my heirs in accordance with the laws of succession of the State of California, (b) The reason of making my brother, Charles T. Rule, aforesaid, the sole beneficiary of my estate, is that I am confident, and place my trust in him to the extent, that he will distribute my estate in accordance with my wishes he and I have often discussed. ’ ’

Article six provided that if “any devisee, legatee or beneficiary hereunder” should contest the will, such person should receive one dollar and no more; and article seven named defendant executor and “Guardian of the estate of any minor or incompetent person to whom distribution is made hereunder. ...” Defendant was the only “beneficiary” mentioned by name.

Defendant qualified as executor and proceeded to administer the estate. During the course of administration he appropriated certain property of the estate without listing it in the inventory or otherwise accounting for it to the probate court. He also paid certain sums and transferred certain property to John E. Rule, James H. Rule, and Mrs. Cotton. Portions of the cash payments thus made were listed in defendant’s final accounting as “directed to be provided for in last Will of deceased by Executor.” In his petition for distribution defendant represented tb the probate court that he was entitled to the entire estate of Sarah Weber, as sole beneficiary under her will, and on March 15, 1937, the probate court made its decree distributing the whole of the estate to him absolutely. However, he has never been discharged as executor.

The trial court found that Sarah Weber did not intend to leave any of her property, except the household furniture and other items mentioned in article four of the will, to defendant absolutely, but that she intended to leave the residue to him “in trust only, for the beneficiaries previously agreed upon and understood between herself and Charles T. Rule.” The court concluded that the attempted trust failed because the will “did not name the object or purpose ... or identify the beneficiaries thereof” and that the probate court should have distributed the property according to the laws *136 of intestate succession, but that it made the decree it did as a result of defendant’s fraud.

The court concluded that a trust should be impressed upon all the property of the estate of Sarah Weber remaining in defendant’s possession, and upon all property acquired with the proceeds of any such property distributed to or appropriated by defendant. It decreed that John E. Rule was the owner of two specified parcels of real property, that as to the remaining property plaintiffs were owners of undivided interests amounting to one-half thereof and cross-complainant the owner of an undivided one-eighth thereof, that defendant and his wife should execute and deliver to plaintiffs and cross-complainant deeds and transfers of the undivided interests, and that title thereto was quieted in plaintiffs and cross-complainant. The judgment included money awards to plaintiffs and cross-complainant based upon findings with respect to the property and money distributed to defendant by the probate court, moneys received by him but not accounted for to the probate court, moneys from dividends, interest, rents, and other income, and the reasonable value of premises occupied by defendant and his son and daughter, with interest thereon. The sums allowed by the original judgment totalled $137,525.53, but on motion for new trial the awards were reduced to the aggregate sum of $93,206.26. The trial court impressed a lien upon defendant’s remaining three-eighths interest in the property to secure the money judgment. Defendant took this appeal.

I. Sufficiency of evidence to establish a trust for the benefit of the heirs of Mrs. Weber.

The chief contention of defendant is that the trial court erred in its interpretation of the will. Most of the matters relating to this issue, however, were considered by the District Court of Appeal on the prior appeal in Sears v. Ruloe, 45 Cal.App.2d 374 [114 P.2d 57], and, as plaintiffs urge, the sufficiency of the evidence must be considered in the light of that decision which constitutes the law of the case. (Gore v. Bingaman,

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Bluebook (online)
163 P.2d 443, 27 Cal. 2d 131, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-v-rule-cal-1945.