81 P. 679 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1905
By the last will and testament of the above-named decedents she bequeathed to the respondent the *32 sum of five hundred dollars. After the expiration of more than one year from the issuance of letters testamentary the respondent presented to the superior court her petition for a distribution to her of the said legacy. In her petition she alleged that the court had made a decree establishing due notice to the creditors of said estate, and that the time for the presentation of claims had expired, and that all claims that had been presented to and allowed by the executors had been fully paid; that a claim against the said estate for $915 had been presented by her and rejected by the executors, and that an action thereon was still pending and undetermined; that the estate was indebted to no one but herself, and to her only upon her said claim. She also alleged that it appeared from the inventory of the estate filed by the executors that its value exceeded fifteen thousand dollars, and that they had filed an account showing that after reserving a sum sufficient to pay her said claim, in case she should recover thereon, there would remain in their hands a balance of upwards of three thousand dollars for distribution to the persons entitled thereto, and that the legacy to her could be paid without any loss to the creditors of the estate. The executors filed an answer to her petition; and upon the hearing thereon the court found that all of its allegations were true, and entered an order directing the executors to make the payment asked for by the respondent, and dispensed with the execution of any bond on her behalf. From this order the executors have appealed; and in support of their appeal contend that it sufficiently appeared at the hearing that they did not have in their hands sufficient money with which to pay to the respondent the amount of her legacy; and that the court erred in not requiring her to execute the bond named in section 1663 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
In their answer to the respondent's petition the executors set forth as a defense thereto that the decedent had made other bequests of equal rank with that of the respondent, which, with the interest thereon, amounted to about two thousand dollars; that the estate in their hands was subject to a collateral inheritance tax upon the several bequests, amounting to $729.38; and that the testatrix had directed them to erect suitable tombstones over the graves of herself and her deceased husband, which they estimated would cost *33 two hundred dollars. At the hearing it was shown, from the last account filed by the executors, that they then had in their hands $3,044.86 in money, and also real estate valued at over seven thousand dollars; and that out of said money all of the legacies except that of the respondent had been paid since the filing of said account. It was not shown that the executors had disposed of any other portion of the estate. It thus appeared that they had in their hands a sum of money much in excess of the respondent's legacy, and the court did not therefore err in directing its payment.
In determining the amount of money in the hands of the executors available for the payment of the respondent's legacy, the court was not required to take into consideration the amount of the collateral inheritance tax. Such tax is not one of the expenses of administration or a charge upon the general estate of the decedent, but is in the nature of an impost tax or tax upon the right of succession (Estate of Wilmerding,
The court followed this rule in the present case, and in fixing the amount to be paid respondent deducted from the legacy given to her the amount of the tax thereon, and it is to be assumed that before paying or delivering to the other beneficiaries under the will any property given to them by the testatrix the executors either deducted therefrom or collected from the said beneficiaries the amount of the tax upon their respective gifts.
Nether did the court err in dispensing with a bond on the part of the respondent. The fact that a claim presented by her against the estate had been rejected by the executors, and *34
that a suit thereon was pending, did not preclude the court from making an order for the payment of her legacy any more than would a suit upon a rejected claim of any other person. Section 1663 of the Code of Civil Procedure authorizes the court to grant the petition of any legatee for the payment of his legacy if it appear at the hearing that the estate "is but little indebted," and that the payment can be made "without loss to the creditors of the estate," and to dispense with a bond from the petitioner if "the time for presenting claims has expired, and all claims that have been allowed have been paid, . . . and the court is satisfied that no injury can result to the estate." Whether an estate is "but little indebted" or the payment can be made "without loss to the creditors" are questions of fact to be determined by the court upon a comparison of the value of the estate with the amount of the debts (Estate of Crocker,
Upon the same principles the court was not required to take into consideration the amount that may be required for erecting tombstones authorized by the will. If the moneys in the hands of the executors, after making the other payments, shall be insufficient therefor, they can resort to the realty. The respondent is not required to await such expenditure before being entitled to receive her legacy.
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Cooper, J., and Hall, J., concurred. *35