53 Cal. 243 | Cal. | 1878
First—It was competent to the Public Administrator as such to petition for and by the order of the Probate Court to receive letters of administration upon this estate.
Second—Croly, who also petitioned for letters, but whose petition was refused; as being merely a “person legally compe
Third—Nor did the fact that Croly had been recommended to the Probate Court by the next of kin as being a suitable person to administer upon the estate, (under the Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 1379, as amended in 1878) give him any preference over the Public Administrator in claiming the administration of the estate, and this for two reasons:
1. The distributees and next of kin in this case are married women, and incapable, therefore, themselves of administering upon the estate, and their expressed preferences for the appointment of Croly, as set forth in their petition filed in the Probate Court, were of no legal consequence whatever.
2. But had it been otherwise in this respect, and had the next of kin been laboring under no such disability, their petition requesting the appointment of Croly was addressed to the mere discretion of the Probate Judge; it did not operate to supersede the claim of the Public Administrator, otherwise established under the statute, to receive letters of administration, and it not appearing that the Probate Court in refusing to appoint Croly has abused the discretion confided to it in terms by the statute, the order will not be disturbed, but must be affirmed here.
Order affirmed. Remittitur forthwith.