The controversy presented in this case concerns the effect of an order made nunc pro tunc purporting to amend a minute order and an order signed and filed the same day admitting two testamentary documents to probate.
W. I. Burnett died in 1929. His widow, the appellant here, and seven children, survived him. Shortly after his death, G. C. Burnett, a son, filed a petition for probate of a will dated December 24, 1915, and a codicil thereto made October 16, 1925, which were alleged to be “the last will and testament and codicil thereto of said decedent”. By the terms of this will and the codicil, which were filed with the petition, the appellant was given one-half of all her husband’s estate and G. C. Burnett was appointed “administrator”.
On August 16, 1929, another will dated May 5, 1927, was filed. This instrument recited that the testator had deeded *261 to Ms wife a one-half interest in certain designated real property and the other one-half to “my ayers”, naming the seven children, and directed that all other property be divided equally between his wife and the heirs mentioned. No petition for the probate of this later will was filed. Upon a hearing, the petition for the admission of the will of 1915 and its codicil of 1925 was granted by an order in writing signed by the judge and endorsed “Piled Sep 3, 1929”.
By subsequent proceedings, administration of the estate was carried to a decree of final distribution which disposed of Mr. Burnett’s property'in accordance with the probate judge’s construction of the will of May 5, 1927. The testator’s widow took an appeal from this decree on the ground that the will on which it was based had never been admitted to probate. During the pendency of that appeal, the seven children, without notice to their mother, presented to the probate court an affidavit of the county clerk stating that the order of September 3, 1929, admitting the 1915 will and 1925 codicil to probate was incorrect, and that in fact the order made by the court on that day denied probate of the 1915 will and admitted the 1927 will. Upon this affidavit the court, on March 4, 1935, made an order correcting the minute order of September 3, 1929, and the signed order of the same date, nunc pro tunc to admit the instruments dated October 16, 1925, and May 5, 1927, to probate as the testator’s will and codicil. The signed order as corrected still recited that all the allegations of the petition for probate of the 1915 will were true.
This
nunc pro tunc
order was considered upon the appeal from the decree of distribution, and it was held that the portion of the order purporting to admit the 1927 will to probate was void, no petition having been on file for the admission of that will.
(Estate of Burnett,
6 Cal. App. (2d) 116 [
There is no merit in the respondents’ contention that because the order in question was made after the decree of distribution it is not appealable. This appeal must be deemed to have been taken from the order admitting the will to probate as amended by the nunc pro tunc order. Such an order is appealable. (Probate Code, sec. 1240.)
*262 The respondents contend that the issue presented by the present appeal has become moot because the 1927 will is now admitted to probate by another order which has become final. They state that on November 14, 1935, the superior court granted a petition for the probate of the will dated in 1927 and made an order accordingly. However, the transcript on appeal does not show any proceedings subsequent to the order made on March 4, 1935, from which this appeal was taken. Under these circumstances the appeal will not be dismissed.
Admittedly a trial court upon its own motion or on
ex parte
application, has jurisdiction to correct mistakes in its orders and records which are not actually the result of the exercise of judgment.
(Lauchere
v.
Lambert,
The order sought to be amended by the respondents in this case measures up to all the formalities required by section 1704 of the Code of Civil Procedure (now Probate Code section 1221). A hearing on a petition for the probate of a will is a proceeding
in rem,
binding on all persons interested in the will.
(Estate of Parsons,
The appellant has moved for a diminution of the record to allow the filing of a certified copy of the signed order dated September 3, 1929, and a like copy of the order of March 4, 1935, because the transcript does not show that each of them was filed. That omission should be corrected. The motion for diminution is granted and the order appealed from is reversed.
Shenk, J., Langdon, J., Seawell, J., Waste, C. J., Curtis, J., and Houser, J., concurred.
