Somavia v. Betts

326 P.2d 129, 50 Cal. 2d 480, 1958 Cal. LEXIS 169
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1958
DocketS. F. No. 19579
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 326 P.2d 129 (Somavia v. Betts) 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
Somavia v. Betts, 326 P.2d 129, 50 Cal. 2d 480, 1958 Cal. LEXIS 169 (Cal. 1958).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

The remainderman of a testamentary trust appeals from a judgment which, insofar as is here material, directs the trustee to pay $26,240 from the trust assets to the executrix of the estate of the life tenant, together with accumulated and unpaid interest thereon in the sum of $31,-066.43. A cross-appeal was taken by the respondent executrix, but has been abandoned.

The sum of $26,240 (the principal here) represents income earned during the probate administration of the trustor’s estate and distributed to the trustee (without segregation from the corpus) on October 20, 1932; it was not paid over to the life tenant by the trustee but was administered as part of the trust corpus, the income from all of which was regularly accounted for, but not segregated as to source, and paid to the life tenant. The sum of $31,066.43 represents interest which the trial court determined1 had accumulated, under the provisions of section 162 of the Probate Code, for detention of the principal sum ($26,240) during the nearly 23 years of trust administration.

Appellant-remainderman concedes that the life tenant of a testamentary trust is entitled to the income earned by trust corpus during the period of probate administration but contends that respondent-executrix is now precluded from asserting her claim to such income by the doctrine of res judicata and the statute of limitations. Appellant-remainder-man also questions the trial court’s allowance of interest, pointing to the fact that the life tenant received all the income from the trust, including income from the very fund upon which the court below has now allowed her estate some 23 years’ interest.

For reasons hereinafter stated we have concluded that respondent’s claim is not precluded and that the judgment should be affirmed to the extent that it orders payment of the principal sum but that insofar as the judgment awards $31,066.43 interest as compensatory damages for the wrong[484]*484£ul withholding of principal, it should be reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to recompute the damages due, allowing the trustee credit for all monies earned by the principal sum and accounted for and paid over to the life tenant.

Joseph Vincent de Laveaga died testate on October 2, 1931. His will devised and bequeathed one third of the residue of his estate in trust, with directions that the income be paid to his second wife, Gertrude C. de Laveaga, for life or until her remarriage, remainder to his daughter by his first marriage, Juanita Valerie de Laveaga Somavia, the appellant herein.

On October 7, 1932, the executor filed his first and final account and petition for distribution of the decedent’s estate. The account included an itemized statement of receipts and disbursements and a summary showing that the total receipts exceeded total disbursements by $145,024.12. On October 20, 1932, the account was settled, approved and allowed as rendered, and as provided in the will an undivided one third of the residue of the estate was ordered distributed to the trustee to be held under the terms of the trust. The cash distributed to the trustee included a one third share of the income earned during the period of probate administration but no segregation or designation was made as to the portion representing the original estate assets and the portion representing the income earned by such assets. The parties to this proceeding have stipulated that $26,240 of the sum distributed to the trustee represented predistribution (probate) income, but this fact did not appear in the petition for distribution or in the decree. The life tenant received the required notice of the filing of the executor’s account and petition for distribution. She made no objection, nor did she appeal from the decree approving the account and distributing the estate.

On December 13, 1933, the trustee filed its first account and report and petition for settlement. The account included receipts and disbursements from November 10, 1932, to October 20, 1933. All of the assets received under the terms of the decree of distribution were designated as “principal” but there was no segregation of the predistribution (probate) income or allocation of it as such. The account showed that the trustee had invested almost the entire amount of cash received under the decree of distribution in stocks and bonds which were listed as “assets” of the trust. The [485]*485account also showed that no portion of the predistribution income had been paid to the life tenant.

Notice of the filing of the account was given to the life tenant but she advanced no objection nor did she appeal from the order settling the account. The same is true concerning 10 other accounts filed by the trustee and approved by the court prior to the death of the life tenant on January 23, 1953. None of the accounts segregated predistribution income and each continued to treat as corpus all assets received under the probate decree of distribution.

On July 15, 1953, the trustee filed its final account and petition for decree declaring the trust terminated. The executrix of the estate of the life tenant filed objections to the account and for the first time claimed that the amount of probate income distributed to the trustee should be paid to the estate of the life tenant. The trustee and remainderman filed answers to the objections and a hearing was held. The lower court concluded that the estate of the life tenant is entitled to payment of (1) the predistribution income (stipulated to be $26,240), plus (2) interest thereon computed according to the provisions of section 162 of the Probate Code. Judgment was thereupon entered awarding the life tenant’s estate the principal sum of $26,240 plus interest thereon in the sum of $31,066.43 computed at the statutory rate and without allowing credit for the net earnings on the principal which, as above indicated, had been regularly accounted for and paid over to the life tenant during the term of the trust. The remainderman appeals.

It is settled law that in the ease of a testamentary trust, unless the will provides otherwise, the life tenant’s right to income dates from the death of the testator rather than the date of distribution. (Estate of Platt (1942), 21 Cal.2d 343, 346-348 [1] [131 P.2d 825].) Appellant does not quarrel with that rule but contends that respondent is now precluded from claiming its benefit. Appellant urges that the question of the life tenant’s right to predistribution income is res judicata since, it is argued, that question was presented to the court at the time of distribution and the decree of distribution effectively and finally determined that all of the property distributed to the trust was distributed as corpus. The argument, which conceivably could have prevailed in the trial court, cannot on the state of the record support a reversal here.

[486]*486Income earned by trust property during the period of probate administration inures to the benefit of the trust and is payable by the executor to the trustee upon distribution. (Estate of Marré (1941), 18 Cal.2d 184, 190 [5] [114 P.2d 586]; Estate of Dare (1925), 196 Cal. 29, 35-36 [1] [235 P. 725]; Estate of Hardy (1944), 62 Cal.App.2d 958, 961-962 [4] [145 P.2d 910].) This is so regardless of who may be entitled to receive that income from the trustee.

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Related

Estate of De Laveaga
326 P.2d 129 (California Supreme Court, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
326 P.2d 129, 50 Cal. 2d 480, 1958 Cal. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/somavia-v-betts-cal-1958.