20 Cal. 288 | Cal. | 1862
This is an action to recover the possession of certain real estate situated in the city of San Francisco. Both parties deraign title from the same source—from one George Harlan, who died in the county of Santa Clara in July, 1850. It is admitted that Harlan was possessed of a good title to the premises at the time of his death. The plaintiff claims by a conveyance from Aspinwall, who is alleged to have been at the time administrator of Harlan’s estate, executed upon a sale ordered by the Probate Court in November, 1855 ; the defendant claims by a previous conveyance from Harlan’s heirs, executed in April, 1854.
Soon after the death of Harlan, one Henry C. Smith was appointed administrator of the estate, and immediately qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties. Whilst he was acting as administrator, real property belonging to the estate was sold by order of the Probate Court, upon his petition, to pay the debts of the estate and the expenses of the administration. Funds were thus received by him sufficient, with other funds previously in his hands, to pay all the debts and expenses, and leave a balance of nearly $2,000. Among the debts was one to Aspinwall, and upon it the latter instituted suit, and in July, 1853, recovered judgment for upwards of $8,000. Upon this judgment only the sum of $3,500 was ever received from the administrator. On the thirty-
In May, 1855, not having obtained payment of the balance of his judgment, Aspinwall apphed to be appointed administrator of what was alleged in his petition to be the unadministered part of the estate, and' in June following the appointment was made, and he gave the usual bond and qualified. In November, 1855, he obtained from the Court an order directing him to sell two parcels of land situated in the city of San Francisco. At the sale which followed, the plaintiff became the purchaser of the premises described in the complaint. The sale was duly reported and confirmed, and a conveyance by Aspinwall, as administrator, executed. It is under this conveyance that the plaintiff claims.
The questions presented for consideration relate to the vahdity of the appointment of Aspinwall as administrator, and to the jurisdiction of the Court to order the sale which was made by him. To the appointment of Aspimvall it is objected that Smith, the original administrator, was still in office—his resignation not having been accepted, nor his letters revoked. To the jurisdiction of the Court, it is objected that there were sufficient funds in the hands of Smith,
Upon the first question presented, we are concluded by the previous decision of this Court when the case was here at the July term, 1858, (10 Cal. 110). It was then held upon substantially the same evidence, that the resignation of the first administrator, Smith, was accepted by the Probate Court; that the acceptance of the resignation, before Smith had settled his accounts, was only an irregularity—or, as the Court termed it, an error “ merely voidable ”—one, in other words, which might have been corrected by appeal, or direct proceedings for its correction, but which could not be set up collaterally in impeachment of the action of the Probate Court. We confess that we are by no means satisfied with the conclusions at which the Court arrived in this respect. We do not perceive in the act of Smith, the former administrator, anything more than an offer to resign. A resignation is not a matter absolutely in the power of an administrator, to he made at any time he may choose. The statute only confers upon him a conditional right to resign. Its language is that he may resign, “provided he shall first settle his accounts and deliver up all the estate to such person as may be appointed by the Court.” Smith never complied with this condition, and it nowhere appears that the Court ever dispensed with it. The Court did, it is true, on the thirty-first of December, 1853, order him to turn over the estate to the Public Administrator of Santa Clara county; but in the following month it vacated the order, and directed him to apply the moneys in his hands to the payment of the outstanding claims. And the subsequent proceedings show a recognition by the Court of his continued existence as administrator of the estate. Admitting, as contended, that the Court, having the power to remove an administrator for failure to account, could accept of his resignation without such account being rendered, it does not appear that any such course was ever pursued. The appointment, therefore, of Aspinwall—a new administrator—the former administrator not having been removed, nor his resignation accepted, was a proceeding which the Court had no jurisdiction to take. The appointment of a new administrator can no more be
The present appeal must, therefore, be determined upon the questions presented as to the jurisdiction of the Court to order the sale made by Aspinwall.
The authority of the Probate Court to order a sale of real property of an intestate is derived entirely from the statute. It is a limited, and not a general authority. It may be exercised in certain specially designated cases; it can be exercised in no other. (People v. Corlies, 1 Sandf. 247; Corwin v. Merritt, 3 Barb. 343; Bloom v. Burdick, 1 Hill, 139; Currie v. Stewart, 27 Miss. 55; Laughman v. Thompson, 6 Smedes & Mar. 259; Wiley v. White, 3 Stew. 355; Townsend v. Cordon, 19 Cal. 189.) When, therefore, an order of sale is relied upon, the question is, was the order made in a case provided by the statute ? To determine this, we must, in the first instance, look to the petition for the sale, which is the foundation of the order; assuming, of course, that the Court acquired jurisdiction originally to grant administration upon the estate. The proceeding for the sale, though made in the general course of administration, is a distinct and independent proceeding, in the nature of an action, of which the petition is the commencement, and the order of sale is the judgment. (Estate of Spriggs, 20 Cal. 121.) We must, then, examine the petition, to ascertain whether a case is presented by its averments, within the statute, upon which the Court can act. And the petition must show on its face two things: first, the insufficiency of the personal property to pay the debts and charges against the estate; and second, the necessity of the sale of the real property, or some portion thereof, for that purpose. Both must appear before the Court can take jurisdiction of the proceeding. The truth of the averments—their sufficiency appearing—is a matter which must be determined at the hearing of the petition, and the judgment of the Court thereon, if rendered upon legal notice, cannot be questioned collaterally. It may be reviewed, and if erroneous, corrected by appeal, but not otherwise.
The statute prescribes with particularity what facts must be stated in the petition. After declaring that the personal estate
Proceeding now to the examination of the petition of Aspinwall in the light of the views we have expressed, we find it fatally defective in several essential particulars. It sets forth that no personal estate has come to his hands, and that there is none to his knowledge, Smith, the former administrator, having disposed of the whole of it; and that two parcels of land situated in the city of San Francisco belong to the estate, giving the description and value of such parcels. It does not state the amount of the personal property which had come to the hands of the former administrator,, or what disposition had been had of it, or that any effort had been
If we look outside of the petition to other records of the Court respecting the estate, we find, as we have stated, that for the payment of the debts and the expenses of administration real property had already been sold, and proceeds received more than sufficient for that purpose. Even the application of Aspinwall for letters avers that on the twenty-fifth of January, 1854, Smith was adjudged by the Corot to have sufficient funds in his hands to pay all the debts against the estate, and was ordered to pay them. We refer to the possession of funds by the former administrator, not that it can have any effect in determining the sufficiency of the averments in the petition of Aspinwall. If those averments are in themselves sufficient, the jurisdiction of the Corot attached without regard to the funds previously received. A petition may set forth inaccurately the amount of the personal property which has come to the hands of an administrator; it may even omit valuable portions thereof; yet if it purport on its face to set forth the whole of such property, and how much of it, if any, remains undisposed of, the order for the sale which may follow cannot be attacked by reason of the inaccuracies or omissions. The truth of the averments respecting the personal property, so far as they affect the validity of the order, is to be determined at the hearing of the petition. We refer to the possession of funds by the former administrator, to show the necessity of a strict compliance with the statute in the statements of the petition. The statute requires that the petition shall set forth the amount of the personal property which “ has come to the hands of the executor or administratorthat is, the amount which has been received since the administration of the estate commenced. It also requires that the petition shall set forth the amount of such property, if any, remaining undisposed of. A
The administrator, Aspinwall, was not relieved from a compliance, to the extent of his ability, with the statute, as to the statement of the personal property in his petition, from the fact that there had been a previous administrator of the estate. He is designated, it is true, in the order of appointment, “ as administrator de bonis non.” But there is no such officer known to our law. By our law there are only two classes of administrators; special and general. Special administrators are those appointed to take temporary charge of the estate until general letters are issued, or during the suspension of a general administrator, and in like cases. General administrators are those appointed to admimster generally upon the entire estate. Where the authority of a general administrator has terminated by death, the revocation of Ms letters, or otherwise, . and a new administrator is appointed, the latter takes the place of the former. He succeeds to the office, clothed with the same powers
In the petition of Aspinwall there is no attempt to comply with the statute in respect to the personal property. The averment that, no personal estate has ever come to his hands, and that there is none, the former administrator having disposed of the whole of it, leaves the Court in entire ignorance as to the condition of the estate with respect to such property, information in respect to which is essential to the jurisdiction of the Court. And in respect to the real property, the petition is still more glaringly defective. It simply states that two parcels of land, giving them description and value, situated in the city of San Francisco, belong to the estate. It says nothing of the condition of those parcels—whether they were improved or waste lands; whether they were yielding income or burdening the estate with expenses—from which the Court could determine as to the necessity of their sale. ¡Nor does it purport to give a description of all the real estate of which the intestate died seized. So far as appears, several other parcels may also have belonged to the estate, which it would have been more advantageous to the heirs to have sold than the parcels described.
It follows that the petition is fatally defective, and its averments . gave no jurisdiction to the Court. The subsequent action of the Court, therefore, in ordering a sale, and the proceedings based thereon, partake of the original defect, and are void.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for new trial.