Wickersham v. Wickersham

70 P. 1076, 138 Cal. 355, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 484
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1902
DocketS.F. Nos. 3037, 3157.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 70 P. 1076 (Wickersham v. Wickersham) 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
Wickersham v. Wickersham, 70 P. 1076, 138 Cal. 355, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 484 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Two appeals are before us 'in this ease, presented mainly on the same record. The one is an appeal from a decree of final distribution by Mrs. Cora Wickersham, widow and executrix of Frank Wickersham, deceased, and I. G. Wickersham, their son, a minor, who appears by his mother as guardian; the other, an appeal by the executors from an order granting the motion of the contestants for a new trial. The former appellants will be designated in this opinion as the contestants.

The deceased, I. G. Wickersham, died testate June 20, 1899, leaving an estate of the value of about $647,000, all of which was the community property of deceased and his wife, Lydia. By the terms of the will, after devising certain real and personal property to the widow and small sums to others, the residue is thus disposed of: “The remainder of my estate, real and personal, I give, grant, and devise as follows: To be divided equally between my wife and children, with the following exceptions: To my son Frank five dollars, as I have already advanced to him about one hundred thohsand dollars, which is to be in full of all interest in my estate,” etc.,—the *359 other exceptions relating to deductions to be made from the shares of his son Fred and his daughter, Mrs. May Bergevin; and, it is added, the remaining child, Lizzie, is not charged with any advancement.

The will was presented for probate by Frederick and Lizzie Wickersham, two of the executors therein named, the other, Mrs. Lydia Wickersham, having filed her written renouncement. A written contest was thereupon filed by Frank Wickersham, the excluded heir, but was afterwards withdrawn, in pursuance of the written agreement set out in the findings of date August 17, 1899, between himself, as party of the first part, and his mother and the other residuary legatees, as parties of the second part. Thereafter, September 5, 1899, the will was admitted to probate.

On the same day,.it is alleged in the petition of the executors for final distribution, Mrs. Lydia Wickersham, widow of deceased, “duly filed, ... in the matter of the estate, . . . her written waiver of her right to take her share of the community property of the said estate under and by virtue of the laws of California, and she also, on said date, duly filed her written election to take under and by virtue of the provisions of the said last will and testament of the said . . . deceased.” Mrs. Wickersham, it is further alleged, died February 10, 1900, and the settlement of her estate is still pending.

From the written opposition of the contestants to the petition of the executors, the facts appear, among others, that there was an alleged will of Mrs. Lydia Wickersham, by the terms of which, after some small legacies (and among others one of fifty dollars to her son Frank), the residue of her estate was left to Frederick and Lizzie Wickersham, the executors here, and their sister, Mrs. May Bergevin; that the will had been admitted to probate, but was afterwards contested by Cora Wickersham (one of the contestants here), as executrix of Frank Wickersham, on the grounds of the ineompetency of the testatrix, and that the will was procured by fraud, undue influence, etc., and that the contest was still pending.

The contract of Frank Wickersham with the residuary legatees of his father’s will, of date August 17, 1899, which purports to convey to the grantees his interest in his father’s estate, and his expectant interest in the estate of his mother, *360 then living, and the waiver or election of Mrs. Lydia Wicker-sham, alleged in the executor’s petition, are also attacked on the ground of fraud and undue influence.

No questions arise as to the sufficiency of the contestants’ allegations to support their grounds of contest of the will or of the other documents in question, and it will therefore be unnecessary to enter into detail with regard to them.

Written objections were interposed by the executors to the contestants being heard, on the general ground that they were not parties in interest in the estate of I. G. Wickersham, and more especially on the ground of the alleged conveyance of Frank’s interest in the estate of his father and expectant interest in that of his mother.

In view of the case as taken by the court below, the controlling question was as to the right of the contestants to be heard in the proceedings; and this again was regarded as turning upon the effect of the contract last mentioned. Accordingly, the only issues tried in the case were those relating to the validity and effect of this contract, or conveyance, and upon these the court found that the contract was duly executed, without fraud, duress, or undue influence on the part of the grantees, and in consideration of the sum of $28,000, therein named; that the consideration was adequate, and the contract fair in all its parts; and that the consideration had not been repaid or tendered to the grantees. From these facts the court found, as conclusion of law, that the contestants “are estopped from contesting any matters in the estate of I. G. Wickersham, deceased,” and the decree already referred to was entered. Afterwards, on the motion of the contestants, a new trial was granted, on the grounds, first, that, upon the authority of the decision in More v. More, 133 Cal. 489, the court had come to be of the opinion that the failure of Frank Wickersham, or of the contestants, to return the consideration received under the contract was an immaterial circumstance, and, secondly, and principally, on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to justify the finding that the contract was not procured by fraud.

It was within the discretion of the trial court to grant a new trial on the ground that the finding that the contract in question was not obtained from Frank Wickersham by fraud *361 .and undue influence used by the grantees, other than his another, is not sustained by the evidence. Upon this point "the evidence was, to say the least, conflicting. We cannot :say, therefore, that the court went beyond its discretion in ■granting the contestants a new trial, and the order must -therefore be affirmed.

Some further observations will, however, be necessary with .a view to the future progress of the case. These relate, severally, to the will of Lydia Wickersham, to the contract of Frank Wickersham, and to the renouncement, or waiver, by the former of her interest in the community property.

With regard to the will of Lydia Wickersham, it does not appear that the right of the contestants to appear and participate in the determination of the rights of distribution are .affected thereby. The contestants are, the one as heir, and the other the executrix of an heir, of the deceased. As such, they are authorized to appear and participate in the proceedings for distribution (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1663, 1664), and they will be equally entitled to do so if they are legatees. The fact that they may have a right to a greater or less portion of the estate of Lydia Wickersham by virtue of the will than they would have by law does not affect their right to insist that that estate shall, upon the distribution of the estate of I. G. Wickersham, receive all of the latter’s estate that they may claim it is entitled to, and this is the only position they should in those proceedings be allowed to assume or maintain.

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Bluebook (online)
70 P. 1076, 138 Cal. 355, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickersham-v-wickersham-cal-1902.