Wrenn v. Dormody

215 P. 909, 61 Cal. App. 602, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 621
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 2563.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 P. 909 (Wrenn v. Dormody) 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
Wrenn v. Dormody, 215 P. 909, 61 Cal. App. 602, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 621 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal by the executor of the estate of John Quincy Wrenn, deceased, from a judgment selecting, designating and setting apart a probate homestead for two certain minor children of the decedent.

The proceeding is founded on section 1465 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which, among other things, provides for the setting apart, under certain indicated circumstances, of a homestead for the use of the minor children, out of the common property, or if there be no common property, then out of the real estate belonging to the deceased.

The facts are: The deceased, who was a retired physician, was a resident of Placerville, California, for many years prior to his death on January 14, 1921. He was twice married. By his first wife, Elizabeth K. Wrenn, he had two children, Florence and Joseph T. Wrenn, of whom the latter *603 alone was living at the time of the filing of the petition herein on the thirteenth day of August, 1921, the daughter, Florence, having died prior to said time.

On the seventeenth day of February, 1892, and during the life of his first wife and while they were living together as husband and wife, the deceased filed in the recorder’s office of the county of El Dorado a declaration of homestead on lot No. 4, in block Nio. 43 of the city of Placerville. The deceased and his family were, at that time, residing on said premises. Subsequently to the filing of said homestead, the wife of the deceased, Elizabeth K. Wrenn, died, and thereafter the deceased again married, his second wife being Sarah E. Wrenn. The deceased and his second wife continued to live on the property upon which the declaration of homestead was filed by the former in February, 1892, and occupied said premises until the month of October, 192.0, when they removed to a house which deceased purchased in said month situated at 61 Coloma Street in said city of Placerville, several doors above the old family home, and there he and his family took up their residence and continued to reside until January 14, 1921, when, as above stated, he passed out of this life. The issue of the second marriage consisted of two children, to wit, William B. D: Wrenn and Martha Agnes Wrenn, and these children, with their mother, after the death of Dr. Wrenn, continued to reside on the premises at 61 Coloma Street until the death of Sarah E. Wrenn on May 18, 1921, which was approximately four months' after the death of Dr. Wrenn.

Dr. Wrenn left a will, dated March 4, 1920, in which, after making several bequests to relatives and friends, ho devised the old family residence at 49 Coloma Street in said city to Sarah E. Wrenn, his wife. The balance of his estate was divided equally between his heirs at law, Sarah E. Wrenn, Joseph T. Wrenn, a son of the deceased by his first wife, and the two children of the last marriage, William B. D. and Martha Agnes Wrenn. As stated, Sarah E. Wrenn died on the eighteenth day of May, 1921. She left a will leaving all her estate, both real and personal, to her two children, William B. D. and Martha Agnes Wrenn, and naming Nellie E. Dormody as the guardian of their persons and estates and also as the executrix of her will.

*604 On the thirteenth day of August, 1921, the said Nellie E. Dormody, as the guardian of the persons and estates of the said William B. D. and Martha Agnes Wrenn, filed a petition with the clerk of the superior court of El Dorado County, praying that the family residence at 61 Coloma Street be set aside as a homestead for said two children. These children were minors at the time of the filing of said petition.

The petition of the said Nellie E. Dormody alleged, among other things, that no homestead had ever been selected, designated, and set aside by John Quincy Wrenn during his lifetime and further alleged that said John Quincy Wrenn and his family had resided at 61.C'oloma Street continuously until his death. It also alleged, although this allegation is not material to the determination of the question submitted here, that Sarah E. Wrenn in her will “requested that the said family home be kept intact and that said minors be kept and maintained therein.” The petition was in due time answered by Joseph T. Wrenn, as executor of the will of John Quincy Wrenn, deceased, after a demurrer to said petition had been overruled by the court. By said answer the allegation of the petition that the deceased, John Quincy Wrenn, did not in his lifetime select, designate, and set aside and cause to be recorded a homestead was denied, and in this connection the answer set up the declaration of homestead filed by said John Quincy Wrenn with the county recorder of El Dorado County, and alleged that the said “declaration of homestead has never been cancelled, abandoned, or disposed of as the homestead of John Quincy Wrenn.” The answer further denied the allegation of the petition that the premises at 61 Coloma Street had been used continuously by the deceased and his family up to the time of his death, and alleges that he and “his family had merely moved into the house at 61 Coloma Street temporarily or until certain repairs could be made upon the homestead at 49 Coloma Street.”

Testimony was received in support of and in opposition to the allegations of the petition and the court made its findings of fact in accordance with the facts as set forth in the said petition. Among other things, the court found that the property described as lot No. 6 in block 43 (known as 61 Coloma Street) of said city of Plaoerville was the *605 community property of' said John Quincy Wrenn and his wife, Sarah B. Wrenn; that said lot contains the dwelling-house in which said John Quincy Wrenn and his family resided up to the time of his death and in which his family continued to reside thereafter; that the same is suitable for a homestead for said minors; that the said real property does not exceed in value the sum of $5,000, but is of the value of $3,500.

The single question presented here for decision is whether, as counsel for the appellant contends is true, the trial court transcended its lawful power in setting aside the property at No. 61 Coloma Street as a probate homestead for the use and benefit of the two above-named minor children of the deceased by his second wife. The contention of the appellant is that two homesteads cannot be declared and acquired by a party, and that, therefore, a party having already acquired a homestead, any attempt by him or her to acquire a second homestead while the former is still in force or has not been destroyed by abandonment, as provided by section 1243 of the Civil Code, is absolutely void. The proposition thus stated is sound if the premise from which it proceeds supports1 it. (See Waggle v. Worthy, 74 Cal. 268 [5 Am. St. Rep. 445, 15 Pac. 831]; Estate of Clavo, 6 Cal. App. 774, 776 [93 Pac. 295].) There is, however, no question of abandonment in this case, the proposition simply being whether the homestead declared and recorded by the deceased, Dr. Wrenn, in the year 1892, inured as a homestead to the use and benefit of his second wife or the second community. Section 1474 of the Code of Civil Procedure itself seems to determine the proposition adversely to the contention of the appellant. Said section provides:

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Bluebook (online)
215 P. 909, 61 Cal. App. 602, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrenn-v-dormody-calctapp-1923.