135 P. 293 | Cal. | 1913
The record presents appeals from three orders made in the probate proceedings in the matter of the estate of William Jones, deceased. A paper had been admitted to probate as the will of said decedent, and letters testamentary thereon issued to Charles G. Jones, the respondent. A contest after probate had been instituted by Lester William Jones, and a trial before a jury had resulted in an order revoking the probate. Charles G. Jones appealed from the order of revocation and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. This court has, on August 27, 1913, the present appeals being then pending, affirmed both orders.(Estate of Jones, Sac. No. 2032; ante, p. 108, [
Upon the entry of the order revoking probate, the court below appointed G.E. Nordgren special administrator of the estate. On April 22, 1912, it made an order directing said Nordgren to pay out of the estate the sum of $1,750 to the attorneys employed in defending against the contest, and that he pay the executor the further sum of $834.15, costs incurred by the executor in the trial of the contest. On the twenty-fourth day of June, 1912, an order was made settling the first account of Charles G. Jones, as executor. This order allowed certain charges objected to by the minor who had contested the will. On the same day the final account of the executor, with objections thereto, was settled, the court allowing the *149 above charges for costs and counsel fees, after reducing the latter item by three hundred and fifty dollars, and also allowing the executor the sum of five hundred dollars for commissions. Nordgren, as special administrator, and Lester William Jones, the contestant, appeal from the order directing said special administrator to pay counsel fees and costs, and from the orders settling, respectively, the first and final accounts of the executor.
The position of the appellants is that the court erred, first, in requiring the payment, out of the estate, of attorneys' fees and costs in defending against the contest, and, second, in allowing executor's commissions to Charles G. Jones.
1. Section 1332 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that "if the probate be revoked the costs must be paid by the party who resisted the revocation, or out of the property of the decedent, as the court directs." The appellants concede that this section gives to the superior court a discretionary power to order the payment of attorneys' fees and costs incurred in the unsuccessful defense of a contest after probate. They contend, however, that, under the facts appearing in this particular case, the court abused its discretion in making the order for such payment.
It appears that Charles G. Jones was the sole legatee and devisee named in the will under which he was appointed executor. The contest was based on the grounds of the decedent's unsoundness of mind, as well as fraud and undue influence practiced by said Charles G. Jones. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the contestant on all the issues. With respect to fraud and undue influence, the questions submitted to the jury and their answers thereto, were as follows:
"Q: Was the mind of the decedent, William Jones, at the time of the execution of the said purported will, free from fraud practiced upon him by Charles G. Jones, or others acting in behalf of and in concert with Charles G. Jones? A: No. Q: Was the decedent, William Jones, at the time of the execution of the said purported will, acting under the undue influence of Charles G. Jones or of others acting in behalf of and in concert with Charles G. Jones? A: Yes."
When the lower court was called upon to exercise its discretion on the question whether the costs and attorneys' fees should be paid out of the estate, these findings stood as the *150
determination of the jury on the issues of fraud and undue influence, and upon them (together with other findings) the court had made its order revoking the probate of the will. If the payment of these costs and fees could properly be considered at all in advance of a final disposition of the contest on appeal — a question to which we shall refer again — the court was bound to act upon the case as it then appeared. It could not assume that the findings, upon which it had acted in making its order, were unsupported by the evidence or affected by error. The application for costs and fees was, in the existing status, made on behalf of a proponent who had been adjudged guilty of procuring the execution of the will by fraud and undue influence. That costs may properly be refused to one in this position has been directly held in this court. (In re McKinney,
The appellants contend, as an independent proposition, that the question of reimbursement for counsel fees and costs, could not be determined in advance of the final disposition of the contest, i.e., until the determination of the appeals from the *151
order of revocation and the order denying a new trial. Estate ofYoell,
2. The allowance of commissions to the executor is objected to on the ground that the court is not authorized to apportion commissions between successive personal representatives until the estate has been completely administered and is ready for distribution. Such was unquestionably the law prior to the amendment in 1911 of section 1616 of the Code of Civil Procedure [Stats. 1911, p. 707]. (Estate of Barton,
The order directing the special administrator to pay attorneys' fees and costs is reversed. The orders settling the first and final accounts of the executor are reversed, in so far as they make the costs and fees incurred in defending the contest a charge against the estate; in other respects they are affirmed. The reversals herein ordered shall not bar the right to apply for, and to have considered and decided, any renewed application for the payment out of the estate of the costs and attorneys' fees incurred in the defense of the contest.
Shaw, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred.