Williаm Stevens Heigho died on December 9, 1956, leaving property in the county of Los Angeles where his estate was administered by his wife, Barbara, as executrix. On October 2, 1958, final distribution was ordered; the decree included an “omnibus clause” distributing all property whether described therein or not. Mrs. Heigho was discharged as executrix on October 31, 1958. Fourteen months later *362 (December 29, 1959) Robert J. Bierschbaeh, a partner in the law firm of Surr and Hellyer and on behalf of Forrest M. Laidley and George P. Vye, petitioned the court to reopen probate proceedings and for the issuance to him of letters of administration (with will annexed) under the claimed authority of section 1067 of the Probate Code, 1 Mrs. Heigho filed written objections, the petition was denied and Bierschbaeh has appealed.
Upon the hearing below it was stipulated thаt no additional evidence would be taken since all of the facts necessary for decision were contained in the petition, the supporting declarations of Laidley and Vye, the written opposition of the objector, and pertinent papers in the estate proceedings sought to be reopened. The chronology of certain material facts, all undisputed, is as follows:
February 5, 1957: Will admitted tо probate; Mrs. Heigho appointed executrix.
February 7,1957: First publication of notice to creditors.
May 1, 1957: Inventory and appraisement filed ($28,-452.79).
April 24, 1958: Claim of Laidley and Vye for $117,992.50 filed, being an alleged indebtedness arising in 1950 on an oral contract for commissions due on the sale of corporate stock. 2
May 5, 1958: Claim rejected by executrix, notice thereof being mailed to claimants in care of certain Chicago (Illinois) attorneys and in care of Surr & Hellyer (San Bernardino).
May 29,1958: Order for family allowance ($750 per month) to Mrs. Heigho for 12 months, retroactive to December 9, 1956.
September 8, 1958: Report of inheritance tax appraiser filed, listing all estate assets and, in addition, all assets (fully describing them) in a certain trust created by Mr. Heigho in favor of Mrs. Heigho and a son, in the total sum of $423,-902.99. Inheritance and transfer taxes due on the interests passing were also set forth.
*363 September 9,1958: First and final account and petition for distribution filed and notices given thereon; among the recitals in the account was one concerning the filing and rejection of the Laidley-Vye claim and the further recital that no suit based thereon had been instituted within the statutory period of three months (Prob. Code, § 714).
October 2, 1958: Final account approved and distribution ordered as prayed for therein, including distribution of “all other property of said estate whether described herein or not. ’ ’
October 6, 1958: Final decree entered in judgment book. 3
October 31,1958: All federal estate, state inheritanсe taxes, debts and expenses having been paid, distribution made and receipts and vouchers filed (all as alleged in her affidavit on file), executrix discharged.
December 29, 1959: Petition of Bierschbach to reopen filed.
The petition to reopen made reference to the San Bernardino action (footnote 2, supra) and an assignment to claimants Laidley and Vye of the plaintiffs’ interest therein; it therein alleged that Laidley and Vye had no notice of Mr. Heigho’s deаth until November 19, 1957, and no notice of the pendency of the estate proceeding in Los Angeles until on or about April 7, 1958, that they filed their claims and the same were rejected, that the inventory and appraisement filed in the estate showed a total value of $28,452.79, without mention therein of a trust established at Farmers and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles, by decedent prior to his death, and that the petition for family allоwance, alleging she was without adequate estate of her own, asked for a monthly payment to Mrs. Heigho of $750, retroactive to December of 1956. Reference is then made in appellant’s petition to the report of the inheritance tax appraiser, filed September 8, 1958, but dated April 24, 1958, showing the establishment of the trust and its taxability under provisions of the Revenue and Taxation Code; in that conneсtion, the supporting declarations of Laidley and Vye declare that “as a result of executrix’s failure to file the report of the inheritance tax appraiser until September 8, 1958, said Laidley and Vye were not aware of the existence of assets of the decedent in excess of the amount set forth in said inventory and appraisement, and therefore did not take the necessary actiоn to substitute executrix as defendant in the San Bernardino action.” The petition eon- *364 eluded with an allegation that Mrs. Heigho has refused to reopen the estate “in order that the personal representative of the estate may be made a party in the action pending in San Bernardino County.”
As heretofore mentioned, the statute in pertinent part provides that probate proceedings mаy be reopened “if other property of the estate is discovered, or if it becomes necessary or proper for any cause that letters should be again issued.” (Prob. Code, § 1067.) In a “Memorandum to Counsel” denying the petition, the trial court concluded that it would not be “proper” to reopen the estate under the circumstances appearing, principally, the claimants’ “dilatoriness” in prosecuting their claim—thus, the San Bernardino suit was filed in March of 1954, although the cause of action (on an oral contract) is said to have arisen in December of 1950, the decedent died in December of 1956, and there was no showing that service could not have been made in this state prior to his death, no request for special notice (Prob. Code, § 1202) was ever filed, and no attempt was made to substitute the executrix in the San Bernardino action. Other considerations controlling the determination of the court below are as follows: (1) If either the Detroit or San Bernardino action had been prosecuted to judgment during decedent’s lifetime, the executrix could have claimed deductions with respect to federal estate and state inheritance taxes; and if she had been substituted as a defendant, payment of these taxes could have been deferred until the outcome of the litigation; and (2) due to the lapse of time since the date of the alleged oral contract, it might be impossible for the objector-executrix to obtain testimony in aid of her defense of the action thereon.
Appellant urges that the petition should have been granted on one or both of the grounds specified in the statute, namely, (1) the discovery of other property, and (2) a showing of good cause for subsequent administration. We are not persuaded that either contention has merit.
It has been said that the court “should ordinarily proceed with considerable caution before declaring the necessity of reopening that which has apparently been completed and closed.”
(Estate of Den,
In
Webb
v.
Pillsbury,
Nor would the evidence, as we see it, justify a conclusion that respondent fraudulently concealed the existence of the trust—and thus breached the duty of full disclosure, as appellant claims, to every class of creditor, including Laidley and Vye. Uрon request of respondent, and pursuant to rule 10(b), Rules on Appeal, the probate file has been transmitted to this court; therein we note that on August 22,1957, there was filed with the clerk the claim of the law firm of Larwill & Wolfe in the sum of $6,010 less $1,000 theretofore paid; the claim bears the approval of the probate commissioner, dated August 22, 1957, and the approval of the executrix, dated August 7, 1957. The itemization refers to professional services rendered as well as this statement immediately following: “This is exclusive of the work done in connection with the stock of Calvert Lithographing Company, which is an asset of the William ¡3. Heigho Trust with the Farmers and Merchants Office of the Security-First National Bank, Los Angeles, California.” It is admitted that Laidley and Vye had notice of the estate proceeding on or about April 7, 1958; counselled at all times by attorneys, even a cursory examination of the probate file or some inquiry commensurate with the size of their claim would have supplied the claimants with the information now said to have been fraudulently withheld for more than 12 months when the report of the inheritance tax appraiser was filed in September of 1958. Mrs. Heigho’s application for a family allowance becomes somewhat unimportant when consideration is given to the facts just mentioned.
Intеrestingly enough, also, the two affidavits (by Laidley and Vye respectively) supporting the claim filed on April 24, 1958, make reference to the absence of each claimant from this state at the time of Heigho’s death and, therefore, it is to be assumed, the absence of notice of the pending probate proceeding “by reason of being out of the State of California at the time of such death. . . .”; such аn allegation, however, does not bring either claimant within the exception (to filing within the prescribed time) provided by section 707 of the Probate Code which refers to absence from the state
during the publication of notice to creditors
and
not at the time of decedent’s death.
(See
MacGowan
v.
Jones,
Appellant points to
Radar
v.
Rogers,
Summing up this phase of the appeаl, it is settled that the administration of the estates of deceased persons is purely statutory, and the procedure outlined in the statutes is therefore controlling.
(Perry
v.
Superior Court,
“Although the decree of distribution must describe property being distributed, a provision distributing ‘all other property belonging to said estate, whether described herein or not,’ and also ‘аll the residue of the property of said estate, ’ vests in the distributees whatever title the decedent had in property not otherwise distributed. Similarly, a decree that provides that any property not known or discovered at the time of the decree, but belonging to the estate, is distributed to a designated person is sufficient to pass title to whatever interest remained in the decedent at the time of his death in property conveyed in his lifetime for charitable purposes. An omnibus clause indicates the Court’s intention to distribute the entire residue of the estate, though the petition for distribution does not specifically describe certain property.” (Emphasis ours.)
It follows, still indulging the previous assumption, that there is presently no property whatsoever in the Heigho estate “not fully disposed of, or some act to be done relating thereto *369 which only an administrator can do.” (O’Brien v. Nelson, supra.)
Appellаnt’s second and final contention challenges the reasoning adopted by the court below in denying the petition on the ground of claimants’ “dilatoriness” which, of course, was the basis for the conclusion that it would be neither “necessary” nor “proper” to order subsequent administration as prayed for. The function of probate court, says appellant, was not to determine the merits of the San Bernardinо action, particularly the propriety of dismissing the suit for delay in service of summons and for failure to prosecute; in short, while sitting in probate the court has no general equitable jurisdiction. (Citing
Estate of Reade, 31
Cal.2d 669, 672 [
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
Notes
"The final settlement of an estate, as in this chapter provided, shall not prevent a subsequent issue of letters testamentary or of administz-ation, or of administration with the will annexed, if other property of the estate is discovered, or if it becomes necessary or proper for any cause that letters should be again issued.”
An action on this indebtedness was instituted against Mr. Heigho, prior to his death, in the Superior Court at San Bernardino; a similar action had previously been filed in the United States District Court at Detroit, Michigan. In neither action was service obtained upon the decedent.
No appeal was ever taken from said decree as authorized by section 1240 of the Probate Code, nor were any proceedings taken thereafter under section 473, Code of Civil Procedure,
"Every conveyance made and every obligation incurred by a person who is or will be thereby rendered insolvent is fraudulent as to creditors without regard to his actual intent if the conveyance is made or the obligation is incurred without a fair consideration. ’ ’ In
Goldstein
v.
Prien,
