Visaxis v. Visaxis

273 P. 165, 95 Cal. App. 617, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6234.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 273 P. 165 (Visaxis v. Visaxis) 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
Visaxis v. Visaxis, 273 P. 165, 95 Cal. App. 617, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 552 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

WORKS, P. J.

This is an appeal from an order or judgment revoking the probate of a certain will and admitting to probate an earlier will made by the decedent. The will affected by the revocation was executed October 8, 1926. The earlier will was executed August 3, 1922. The testator died October 19, 1926.

The contestant through whose efforts the probate of the will of 1926 was revoked, the respondent here, was not an heir at law of the testator, but he was a legatee under the will of 1922. Section 1327 of the Code of Civil Pro■eedure provides: “When a will has been admitted to probate any person interested may . . . contest the same or the validity of the will.” Appellant contends that respondent is not a “person interested” within the meaning of the section, especially as the will of 1922 had not been admitted to probate before the contest of the will of 1926 was instituted. This contention is directly nullified by what the supreme court said in Estate of Langley, 140 Cal. 126 [73 Pac. 824]. In that case an earlier will had been offered for probate and the proceeding was yet pending when the contest of a later document was sustained. It was determined that under such circumstances the interest of a devisee under the earlier will was sufficient to entitle him to contest the later one. Here the 'earlier will was offered for probate in connection with the contest upon the second one, and it was admitted to probate by the judgment from which the present appeal is prosecuted. On the point here presented see, also, Ruth v. Krone, 10 Cal. App. 770 [103 Pac. 960]; Estate of Land, 166 Cal. 538 [137 Pac. 246]; In re Phillips’ Estate, 202 Cal. 500 [261 Pac. 709].

It is insisted by appellant that the trial court was without jurisdiction to proceed with a hearing of the .contest for the reason that the citation mentioned in sections 1328 and 1329 of the Code of Civil Procedure was not served upon all the legatees under the will of 1926. *621 We can see no reason why a will contest should not proceed as between the contestant and those upon whom the citation is served. It is settled that jurisdiction over a will contest attaches upon the filing of the petition (Estate of Maescher, 78 Cal. App. 189 [248 Pac. 537], and cases cited), and the supreme court has said, in language, however, apparently unnecessary to a decision of the case before it: “It is not, as we understand it, and cannot be successfully claimed that the trial court was without jurisdiction to proceed with the trial as to contestant and such defendants as had been served with citation” (Estate of Land, supra). We think the point presented is not tenable.

At the commencement of the trial appellant moved the court, under a notice of motion previously given, for an order bringing in a new party. This party was a legatee under the will of 1922, being situated exactly as was contestant in an interest in a denial of probate to the will of 1926. The motion to bring him in as a party was denied, and appellant contends that the ruling was error. Section 889 of the Code of Civil Procedure, concerning civil actions, provides that “when a complete determination of the controversy cannot be had without the presence of other parties, the court must then order them to be brought in,” and appellant argues her point upon an assumed analogy furnished by the section. The supreme court has thus construed the enactment: “This section does not give the court power to bring into the action for determination a controversy between a defendant and strangers to the action which is irrelevant to the action between the parties already before it, except for the purpose of making its determination of the controversy between the parties already before it complete, and without prejudice to the rights of others. A defendant cannot inject into the action a controversy between himself and an outsider, even though it affects the property to which the action relates, unless some party already before the court is interested in, or will be affected by, the determination of such controversy” (Alpers v. Bliss, 145 Cal. 565 [79 Pac. 171]); The ruling of the trial court was not error.

The groruid of contest of the will of 1926 was that, at the time of its execution, the testator was not of sound and disposing mind and memory. Two physicians, Dr. Hommel and Dr. Freytag, testified upon this issue. For *622 several months preceding his death the testator had been afflicted with a tumorous or cancerous growth on his tongue and was a victim of syphilis. Dr. Hommel testified that the condition of the testator’s tongue had no effect on his brain cells, and Dr. Freytag said that on the morning of October 8th, the day upon which the second will was executed, the testator was of sound mind. This testimony of both witnesses, as well as other statements of a similar nature, was. stricken out by the court, and it is insisted that the ruling was erroneous. Dr. Hommel treated the testator for the diseases above mentioned from June 16th to September 22d. Dr. Freytag, who was Dr. Hommel’s assistant, acted in a similar capacity from September 23d to October 12th. Both physicians testified that syphilis, in some of its stages, may affect the mind.

Subdivision 4 of section 1881 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as it stood when the contest was tried—for it has been amended since that time in certain particulars—provided that a physician cannot, “without the consent of his patient, be examined ... as to any information acquired in attending the patient, which was necessary to enable him to prescribe or act for the patient.” It appears to us that the testimony of the physicians which was stricken came directly within the inhibition of- the statute, for it related to and was based upon information acquired during attendance upon the testator and which was necessary to enable them to treat him.

Appellant contends, however, that the right to object to the testimony of the physicians was waived by contestant, for the reason that contestant himself had introduced evidence, before Drs. Hommel and Freytag took the stand, which in effect estopped him to object to their testimony. Early in the presentation of contestant’s case he offered one Xydias as a witness. This man testified that he had been a friend of the testator in his lifetime; that he and his wife, prior to the illness of the testator, had been going “almost twice or three times a week” to call at the house of the testator, and that during the illness they Avent there “almost every day, maybe miss a day or two between,” and that the illness began in June or July. The witness was asked: “Did you observe the treatments he was having?” The answer: “Well, I know the treatments he was having, he has some injections with, I recollect, ‘606,’ and he has some *623 radium treatments about four, sixteen hours, and some X-ray treatment. ... I was present.” Xydias then testified that he accompanied testator “on the occasions that he had these treatments,” and he proceeded: “Well, right on the beginning of his sickness he came to my house and he asked me to introduce him to my doctor, because he was a throat specialist, and at that time he had a cancer on the tongue and, of course, he didn’t know his sickness, so he told me to bring him to my doctor.

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Bluebook (online)
273 P. 165, 95 Cal. App. 617, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/visaxis-v-visaxis-calctapp-1928.