Estate of Heydenfeldt

59 P. 839 | Cal. | 1900

The executors filed a petition for an order directing the sale of certain real property of the estate in order to redeem from sale under a decree of foreclosure certain property that had been sold for indebtedness of the testator, and in order to pay charges and expenses of administration, to pay taxes on the property of the estate, etc. Written objections to the petition were filed by Elizabeth A. Heydenfeldt, widow of the testator, and certain other heirs. After a full hearing of the matter, the court, on the 12th of January, 1898, made an order directing certain real property to be sold. From this order the widow, Elizabeth A. Heydenfeldt, appeals.

The points mainly relied on here for a reversal are based on asserted insufficiencies of the petition for the sale. No objections of that character were made in the court below; but appellant contends that the petition occupies the position of a complaint in an ordinary action, which may be assailed at any time on the ground that it "does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action." Assuming, for the purposes of this decision, that this is so, still a complaint cannot be successfully *458 attacked on that ground, unless it exhibits a total failure to state the necessary facts; the point that a statement is insufficient which is easily understood as an attempted statement of a particular fact, and is merely shadowed by some uncertainty or want of fullness or aptness of expression, can be reached only by a special demurrer or objection in the court below. And in this case, without enumerating here the various objections to it, it is sufficient to say that the petition shows a substantial compliance in all respects with section 1537 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which prescribes what a petition for the sale of property should contain; and "a substantial compliance is enough." (Stuart v. Allen, 16 Cal. 474; 76 Am. Dec. 551;Richardson v. Butler, 82 Cal. 174; 16 Am. St. Rep. 101; Burris v.Adams, 96 Cal. 666, 667; Burris v. Kennedy, 108 Cal. 331.)

The will of the testator directs that his debts be paid from proceeds of sales of his unproductive property; and appellant contends that the court was estopped by a finding in a former proceeding from finding in this present proceeding that the executors have no such proceeds in their hands. The former proceeding was a petition of Zeila O. Hellings, a daughter of the testator, for a direction to the executors to pay and discharge certain mortgage indebtedness of the testator, in which she averred that the executors had sufficient funds in their hands to discharge said indebtedness. The executors filed a written opposition to the granting of said petition, and so did the present appellant. In that proceeding the court found, among other things, "that the amount realized as proceeds of sale of the unproductive property of said estate, inclusive of the unproductive property of the estate still unsold, largely exceeds the amount of said mortgage indebtedness, the same amounting, in fact, to the sum of over seventy thousand ($70,000) dollars." That finding was made on May 27, 1896, and it did not estop the court from finding that there were no funds in the hands of the executors at the time the order now appealed from was made, for various reasons. In the first place, it was not a finding that the executors, even at that time, had, as a product of the sale of unproductive property, the sum of seventy thousand dollars, but only that the proceeds of sale, together with unproductive property then still unsold, amounted to that sum, and it appears that *459 much of the property has since then been used for other purposes. In the second place, the finding was not necessary to the judgment in that proceeding, and therefore is not an estoppel as against anyone. (See Lillis v. Emigrant Gap Ditch Co., 95 Cal. 553.) In the third place, the present appellant, and the executors who are respondents here, were not on opposite sides in the former proceeding, but were in that proceeding on the same side, and therefore the appellant cannot here invoke the principle of estoppel. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1910.)

The court found, upon sufficient evidence, that all the property ordered to be sold is unproductive property, except a tract of land in Tulare county of the value of seven thousand six hundred and eighty dollars; and appellant contends that the order is erroneous, because the product of the sale of the Tulare land, as said land is not unproductive, cannot be applied to the payment of the debt of the testator here sought to be discharged. But the sale was not ordered for the payment of the debt alone. It includes also large expenses of administration, taxes, etc. If the order should have provided that the proceeds of the sale of the Tulare land should be applied to the expenses of administration alone, and that only the proceeds of the unproductive property should be applied to the debt, the only result would be a modification of the order here directing that the proceeds of the sales of the property be thus segregated. It is not to be presumed, however, that the court below will not make a proper distribution of the proceeds of the sales; and as it is fairly contended that the appellant and other persons interested in the estate have heretofore received unproductive property, and the proceeds thereof, which should have been applied to the payment of the said mortgage indebtedness, we do not feel called upon to embarrass the court below by any specific directions in the premises.

The order appealed from is affirmed.

Temple, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.

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