Security Trust & Savings Bank v. Superior Court

69 P.2d 921, 21 Cal. App. 2d 551, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 316
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 25, 1937
DocketCiv. 2034
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 P.2d 921 (Security Trust & Savings Bank v. Superior Court) 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
Security Trust & Savings Bank v. Superior Court, 69 P.2d 921, 21 Cal. App. 2d 551, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 316 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

—This is a proceeding in prohibition by which it is sought to restrain the respondent court from entering a decree of partial distribution in an estate.

The will of John M. Weisbrod was admitted to probate by an order entered on January 10, 1936. More than six months thereafter and on August 29, 1936, the Security Trust & Savings Bank, as guardian of an incompetent son of the deceased, filed a petition seeking the revocation- of the probate of this will and the vacation of letters testamentary on the ground that the will was invalid for a number of reasons, including a lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence. After a hearing a judgment was entered upholding the will and the contestant appealed, which appeal is now pending in the Supreme Court.

Thereafter, the executrix filed a first account with a petition for a partial distribution. The contestant and the other petitioners herein filed exceptions to the settling of said account and to the making of any distribution on the ground that the respondent court had no jurisdiction over the same, pending the appeal. After a hearing, at which it appeared that all assets of the estate had been reduced to cash, the court found that the only part of said estate which could be affected by the appeal was the incompetent’s 1/7 interest therein, and announced an intention to enter orders approving the account and granting a partial distribution, with a provision requiring that an amount about double the incompetent’s interest should be retained to await the outcome of the appeal. Thereupon, these petitioners obtained this writ which was issued by the -Supreme Court and made returnable here.

The petitioners contend that the court had no jurisdiction to proceed with these matters, while the appeal was pending, since the final success of the contest would result in setting aside the will in its entirety, in which event the estate must be distributed under the laws of succession. The question presented is whether a successful contest by an incompetent person, begun more than six months after the *553 probate of a will, has the effect of setting aside the will entirely or merely in so far as the interests of the incompetent are concerned.

The petitioners cite a number of cases to the proposition that a will cannot be annulled in part and must either stand or fall as a whole. Such a case is Estate of Freud, 73 Cal. 555 [15 Pac. 135]. In all these cases the contest was started before the will was admitted to probate or within such time thereafter as was allowed to all interested parties. While the corresponding sections of the Code of Civil Procedure formerly allowed one year for such a contest the time has now been shortened to six months. Section 380 of the Probate Code provides that any interested person may contest the validity of a will at any time within six months after it is admitted to probate. Section 382 provides that when, in such a contest, a will is found to be invalid the probate must be revoked and the powers of the executor shall cease. Section 384 reads:

“If no person contests the validity of a will or of the probate thereof within the time specified in this article, the probate of the will is conclusive; saving to infants and persons of unsound mind who were not made parties to the proceeding a like period of six months after their respective disabilities are removed.”

The right to contest a will is created by statute and a contestant has such rights, and only such rights, as the statutes give him. (Estate of Baker, 170 Cal. 578 [150 Pac. 989].) These sections of the Probate Code not only provide for a contest but clearly provide that the probate of a will is not conclusive until six months has expired after the order was entered, and then only if no person has filed a contest. If a contest filed within that time, before the probate has become conclusive, results in the will being declared invalid it clearly follows that it is invalid for all purposes. The petitioners cite as controlling here the recent case of Estate of Butzow, ante, p. 96 [68 Pac. (2d) 374], That case illustrates the point we are now making. A contest was there filed within the six months’ period provided by the statute, the order admitting the will to probate never became conclusive, any judgment that might be entered setting aside the will would apply to it in its entirety, and the statute of limita-. tions, by its own terms, had not run against any heir.

*554 A different question is now before us, namely, whether a contest filed by an incompetent person as permitted by the last half of section 384, and after a probate of a will has become conclusive under the terms of the first half of that section, will, if successful, result in setting the will aside and thus inure to the benefit of other heirs who had otherwise lost their right by permitting the statutory time to elapse. To so hold would do violence to the language of the statute and would require reading into it something which was not included therein by the legislature. The petitioners would interpret this section as providing that when no contest is filed within six months the probate of the will is conclusive except where a contest is later filed by an infant or person of unsound mind, in which event the probate is not conclusive. The exception clause of the statute does not take that form and the natural effect of the language used is to indicate an intention to protect the interests of the excepted classes alone. The very purpose of the section was to settle such property rights within a reasonable time and the important provision that the probate of a will is conclusive when no contest is filed within six months should not be nullified. We think the clear intention of the statute is that where no contest is filed within the time allowed the probate of the will becomes conclusive, with the exception that an infant or person of unsound mind may later attack the same in so far as his own rights are concerned.

We think this interpretation of these statutes not only follows from the language therein used but is supported by all of the decisions in this state which have touched upon any phase of the problem. In speaking of the section of the Code of Civil Procedure corresponding to section 380 of the Probate Code, the court said in Scott v. Superior Court, 125 Cal. App. 513 [14 Pac. (2d) 99, 100] : “Section 1327 had a double aspect. It was both a statute conferring jurisdiction and a statute of repose. In the absence of an appeal, the order admitting a will to probate is controlling, and the court is without jurisdiction to entertain a petition for revocation by persons under no disability, unless filed within the prescribed time after probate.” In Del Campo v. Camarillo, 154 Cal. 647 [98 Pac. 1049], it is said: “The only remedy for a fraud so committed is the remedy afforded by the probate statute, that is to say, a proceeding to contest the will and to revoke the probate thereof, which under section 1327 of *555 the Code of Civil Procedure may be begun within a year after such probate. This short limitation is made in order to prevent the unsettling of titles and the reopening of contests over estates of deceased persons.” In the early case of Samson v. Samson,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 P.2d 921, 21 Cal. App. 2d 551, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-trust-savings-bank-v-superior-court-calctapp-1937.