Estate of EDGAR LAURENCE DOW, Deceased. MAXINE PATRICIA HUTCHINSON, Appellant, v. MAXINE B. DOW, Respondent.
S. F. No. 19406
In Bank. Supreme Court of California
June 17, 1957.
Appellant‘s petition for a rehearing was denied July 16, 1957.
48 Cal. 2d 649 | 312 P.2d 1
SPENCE, J.—Appellant, who is decedent‘s daughter and a beneficiary under his will, appeals from an order granting a family allowance to her mother, who is decedent‘s widow and also a beneficiary under his will. The daughter contends that the probate court, having entered a final decree of distribution in the estate, thereupon lost jurisdiction to enter the challenged order. However, the daughter had appealed from certain portions of that decree, and the widow contends that pending determination of that appeal, the court had power to make the order granting the family allowance. The particular circumstances presented by the record here clearly sustain the widow‘s position.
Disputes concerning various proceedings in this estate have been the subject of prior decisions (Estate of Dow, 91 Cal.App.2d 420 [205 P.2d 698]; Estate of Dow, 120 Cal.App.2d 296 [260 P.2d 970]; Dow v. Superior Court, 140 Cal.App.2d 399 [297 P.2d 30]), and the history of this prolonged litigation is set forth in the cited opinions. For the purposes of the present problem, the initial fact to be noted is the entry of a final decree of distribution on February 2, 1955. That decree settled the final account of the widow as administratrix of the estate, directed payment of the debts, expenses of administration and a legacy, ordered the filing of a supplemental account, and awarded the residue in equal shares to the widow and the daughter. It specifically decreed that “all of the balance of the real and personal property of said estate, after payment of all obligations, costs, and attorneys’ fees, as herein provided, be, and the same is hereby divided and distributed equally between” the widow and the
On the same day, February 2, 1955, the daughter appealed from the whole of the decree. Then on March 8, 1955, she modified the scope of her appeal by limiting it to the awards to the widow (the legacy, a debt, reimbursement for certain expenses and compensation as administratrix) and to awards to certain attorneys for services rendered the estate. (Dow v. Superior Court, supra, 140 Cal.App.2d 399, 404.)
On February 18, 1955, the widow filed a petition for an allowance from the estate. After a hearing the challenged order was made on April 13, 1955. It directs that $500 a month “be appropriated from said Estate” for the maintenance of the widow, commencing as of February 2, 1955, and continuing “during the progress of the settlement of the Estate, and the Appeal now pending from the Judgment and Decree of Final Distribution, or until the further Order of this Court.” It is apparently conceded that there was ample evidence to sustain the findings of fact embraced within the following findings and conclusions upon which the order was based: the total assets of the estate are approximately $391,937; the widow has no assets of her own with which to support and maintain herself pending the hearing of the daughter‘s appeal from the decree of distribution and is completely without funds for necessary medical care and hospitalization; the widow is entitled to a reasonable allowance out of the property of the estate for her maintenance and support according to her circumstances; and $500 per month is a reasonable amount to be paid therefrom for that purpose.
In view of the foregoing findings, the decision of September, 1953, in this estate which had directed the termination of the widow‘s prior monthly allowance (Estate of Dow, supra, 120 Cal.App.2d 296, 298) did not preclude the court from granting her the present allowance. As the basis for that termination, there were findings that at that time there were no matters pending which called for further administration other than payment of an asserted claim of the
Nor did the mere entry of the above-mentioned final decree of distribution deprive the court of power to make the widow an appropriate allowance. As above stated, that decree had not become final but was subject to the daughter‘s pending appeal when the presently challenged allowance was made. The property of a decedent is “chargeable with the . . . payment of . . . the allowance to the family” (
The daughter argues that the final decree of distribution disposed of all property in the estate and there was nothing left
The particular circumstances of this case must be kept in mind. There may be cases in which the final decree of distribution disposes of the property of the estate in such manner that any order for a family allowance thereafter might be wholly inconsistent with the terms of the prior decree; and there may be cases in which an appeal from the decree is taken by the widow herself in bad faith, simply for the purpose of prolonging the administration and of obtaining a further family allowance pending final settlement. But here the daughter, not the widow, has taken the appeal from the decree; and the decree, while denominated a decree of final distribution, specifically provides, as above indicated, for further proceedings, including the payment of all obligations of the estate and the sale of certain property, if necessary, to satisfy such obligations; and it expressly orders a supplemental account. Consequently, there is nothing inconsistent
Since the oral argument in this case, the decision upon the appeal from portions of the final decree of distribution has become final. (Estate of Dow, 149 Cal.App.2d 47 [308 P.2d 475].) The determination of that appeal, however, can have no effect upon the questions presented herein.
The order is affirmed.
Shenk, J., Carter, J., and Traynor, J., concurred.
GIBSON, C. J., SCHAUER, J., and McCOMB, J.—We dissent for the reasons expressed by Mr. Justice Wood (Fred B.) in the opinion which he prepared for the First District, Division 1, of the District Court of Appeal. (See Estate of Dow (Cal.App.) 305 P.2d 205.)
