84 P. 767 | Cal. | 1906
This is an application for a writ of prohibition to restrain the superior court of Fresno County from taking any further proceedings in the matter of the settlement of the estate of Jane Davis, deceased. The petitioners are the public administrator of Tulare County and Mary G. Stone, the niece and next of kin of said deceased.
It is claimed that the superior court of Fresno County is without jurisdiction in the matter of said estate, *100 notwithstanding which fact it is asserting jurisdiction, having entertained an application for letters of administration therein, made an order appointing R.D. Chittenden, public administrator of Fresno County, administrator of said estate, issued letters of administration to him, and refused to vacate said letters. There is no controversy as to the material facts. Jane Davis died in the state of New York on September 19, 1904, being at the time of her death a resident of said state of New York. She left estate in various counties of the state of California. On the same day, but after her death, petitioner Dungan, as public administrator of Tulare County, filed with the clerk of the superior court of Tulare County his written petition and application for letters of administration of said estate, in the form and manner prescribed by law, and said clerk thereupon, on the same day, set such petition for hearing by the court and posted the required notices. The petition contained the allegations essential to the jurisdiction of said superior court, including allegations to the effect that the decedent died out of the state, not being a resident of the state, and that a portion of the estate left by her was situate in the county of Tulare. The hearing of said application was continued from time to time, until, on December 24, 1904, after a hearing, an order was made by said superior court, appointing Dungan administrator of said estate, and letters of administration were thereupon issued to him. An appeal has been taken from said order, which is still pending undetermined. The alleged jurisdiction of the Fresno County superior court is based upon proceedings initiated therein by R.D. Chittenden, public administrator, who did not file his petition for letters of administration until September 23, 1904. His petition alleged that the deceased left estate in Fresno County. His application was heard by the court on October 3, 1904, and an order was thereupon made appointing him administrator, and letters of administration issued accordingly.
It is conceded that jurisdiction of proceedings for the settlement of the estate of a deceased person cannot coexist in two superior courts of the state at the same time. "There cannot be two valid administrations at the same time in this state."(Estate of Griffith,
The only point made as to the construction of this plain and unambiguous statutory provision is as to the meaning of the words "in which application is first made." When is such an application "made" within the meaning of this provision? In view of our statutory provisions upon the subject (Code Civ. Proc., secs.
The question is simply one of construction of a statute. It is true that the constitution confers jurisdiction in "all matters of probate" upon the superior court, but this does not mean that all superior courts in the state shall have concurrent jurisdiction in every particular probate matter. The legislature undoubtedly has the right to prescribe by general laws the rules which shall obtain, in determining which of the many superior courts shall exercise the constitutionally conferred jurisdiction in any particular estate. It follows from the above that Tulare County is the county in which application was first made for letters of administration, and that thereby, if any part of the estate of decedent was situate therein, the superior court of that county obtained exclusive jurisdiction of the settlement of said estate.
It is contended that as a matter of fact no part of the estate of decedent was situate in Tulare County. Such contention is not available to respondent here. The petition filed in that county alleged the existence of estate therein, and the question as to the truth of that allegation was one which the Tulare court had exclusive jurisdiction to determine, subject only to review on appeal. While the existence of estate in such county was essential to jurisdiction, it was one of those jurisdictional facts which the Tulare court had to determine from evidence produced before it, and its decision *103
upon that point would be entitled to the same presumption of verity as its decision upon any other point, and could not be collaterally attacked. (In re Eichhoff's Estate,
In the answer and oral argument it was contended that prohibition will not lie, for the reason that there is a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal. It appears that Dungan made an application for the revocation of the Fresno letters, and has in fact appealed from the order denying his *104
application. Regardless of the question as to whether Dungan could maintain such proceedings for revocation (see Estate ofGriffith,
Let a writ of prohibition issue directing the superior court of Fresno County to desist and refrain from further proceedings in the matter of the settlement of the estate of Jane Davis, deceased, pending the final determination of the proceeding in the matter of said estate instituted in the superior court of Tulare County on September 19, 1904.
Beatty, C.J., Lorigan, J., Henshaw, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.
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