81 P. 546 | Cal. | 1905
John P. Harrington died testate, and his estate was probated in the city and county of San Francisco. No mention was made in his will of Amelia Harrington, appellant herein. Upon the hearing of the executor's petition for distribution of the estate she appeared and filed her answer to the petition, and prayed that one-half of the residue of the estate be distributed to her as the widow of the deceased. All the devisees mentioned in the will, saving one, appeared and filed opposition to the claim of the appellant as the surviving widow of the deceased. The court made its decree settling the account of the executor and distributed the estate according to the terms of the will, finding against the appellant's alleged right of succession. Amelia *126 Harrington moved for a new trial, which was denied, and she appeals from the decree and from the order denying her motion.
Twice before during the progress of the administration of the estate had Amelia Harrington appeared, in the one instance seeking a family allowance from the estate of deceased as his widow (Estate of Harrington,
1. Appellant contends that the status of husband and wife was created between herself and John P. Harrington in the state of Michigan, and that from this status neither could be relieved except by death or divorce, that no divorce having been granted they remained husband and wife until Harrington died, that the validity or invalidity of the marriage of appellant to Carley must be determined by the laws of Michigan, and if void under those laws was void everywhere, that it was void under the laws of Michigan, and that the matter of succession being a statutory right, fixed by law, cannot be made to depend upon any act or omission of the widow or other heir claiming an estate. All these grounds can amount to no more than a declaration that if, in law, appellant was in fact the widow of Harrington, no estoppel by conduct, by deed, or by judgment, can be raised against her to prevent her from asserting her claim. We are, however, cited to no authority supporting such a proposition, and in fact it may be safely said that no such authority can be found. So far as appellant is concerned, she may raise an estoppel against the assertion, in her own interest, of the claim of widowhood as readily as she may estop herself from asserting any other legal right. So that the sole question, as we have said, remains and is whether the judgment of the court in probate in the homestead proceeding raises an estoppel against her attempted litigation of the same claim of widowhood upon distribution.
Herein appellant first contends that the doctrine of res *128 judicata does not apply to mere orders made on motions in pending proceedings, and this is strictly true. But was this a mere order made on motion in a pending proceeding, or was it in its essence a final judgment? A motion is an application for an order or direction of the court not included in a judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1003.) A judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in an action or proceeding. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 577.) Section
2. It is next contended that as the decision in the homestead proceeding, finding and declaring that she was not the widow, was upon a question of fact, such decision did not become the law of the case. The rule undoubtedly is, that the decision of a court on appeal, as to a question of fact, does not become the law of the case, for the very obvious reason that upon a retrial of the issues in the same case the facts may be made differently to appear. But where an issue of fact vital to the controversy has been tried between parties litigant, and a judgment depending for its sufficiency upon *129
the finding of fact has become final, that determination of fact is forever binding in every court between the parties to that litigation and their privies. Otherwise, as has been repeatedly declared by the courts, there could be no end to litigation. "If a new action could be commenced and a case retried because of the discovery of new facts after the case had been finally disposed of, there would be no end of litigation, and a case be kept in court forever." (Quirk v. Rooney,
3. It is contended that to be such a judgment as to raise an estoppel, the judgment must have been upon the merits, and that the judgment in the homestead proceedings was not upon the merits because of the temporary disability of this appellant at that time. This temporary disability, it is asserted, lay in the fact that at the time of that hearing the court in Michigan had not entered its decree annulling the marriage. But, in truth, she was under no disability. She failed merely in the production and introduction of evidence which was as available at her at that time as it was upon the last hearing, the evidence to which we refer being the laws of the state of Michigan. Had she supported her contention that her marriage to Carley was absolutely void abinitio, by proof of the laws of Michigan, it would have been sufficient for her case, and she would of necessity have been adjudged the widow *130
of Harrington, as was the petitioner in the Estate of Newman,
4. It thus having been made to appear that the decree of the court refusing to set aside a homestead is in its essence a judgment, and that the issue, and indeed the sole matter in controversy in the proceeding, was the status of this appellant as the widow of Harrington, deceased, and it further having been made to appear that this issue was directly involved, fully litigated, and specifically decided, against the contention of the appellant, and, finally, it appearing that appellant, in the homestead proceedings, was not under any disability, and that her petition was not denied for a mere failure of proof in the nature of nonsuit, there is left for consideration but one further contention of the appellant, which is, that, notwithstanding the existence of all these facts, still the judgment in the homestead proceeding is not res judicata in proceedings upon distribution. Appellant here relies upon the decision of this court in Estateof Nolan,
In Estate of Nolan, Mary Nolan had filed a petition for letters of administration upon the estate, alleging that she was the widow of the deceased. Letters of administration were issued to her, and she acted as such administratrix. No appeal was taken from this decree. Subsequently she obtained an order granting her a family allowance as widow, *131
and no appeal was taken from such order. Thereafter, on petition for partial distribution of the estate and after a hearing by all parties and after a contest for the first time raised upon the question of her status as widow, the court found that she was not and never had been the widow of the deceased, and distributed the estate to the heirs at law. The pretended widow acquiesced in this decision and never appealed from it. Subsequently, in the settlement of her account objections were raised to the payment of some $625 as family allowance under the order which long before had become final. This court decided merely that, owing to the finality of the order of family allowance, her rights under it were fixed, and that the subsequent finding and decree of the court upon proceedings for distribution to the effect that she was not his widow could not be taken advantage of to defeat her rights under a judgment which had become conclusive in her favor. It is, however, here to be noted, that in the granting of letters of administration and in the making of the family allowance, the question of her widowhood was never controverted. It was not an issue in either proceeding. In neither of those two adjudications had there been a hearing and determination upon the merits, and doubtless for this reason Mary Nolan did not plead either decree in bar of the proceedings on distribution. This case, however, must be construed with that of Howell v. Budd,
Of the adjudications from sister states which appellant cites as being directly in point, the first is Bradley v. Johnson,
In Oldham v. McIver,
The last case is that of Bordwell v. Saginaw Circuit Judge,
The decree and order appealed from are therefore affirmed.
McFarland, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.