88 Cal. 302 | Cal. | 1891
Mary C. Rode was named in the will of Joseph Bauquier, deceased, as executrix without bonds, and filed in the superior court of Sacramento County her petition for the probate of said will, and for the issuance to her of letters testamentary. Objections to her appointment as executrix were filed by her brothers, who were also legatees named in the will, upon the alleged ground that she in the lifetime of said Joseph Bauquier, “for the purpose of pecuniary gain, and to obtain an unjust and larger portion of the estate of said Joseph Bauquier, deceased, than she was legally or morally entitled to, and to defraud said Peter, Frank, and Joseph Bauquier of their just proportion of said estate, did, by means of intimidation, falsehood, fraud, deceit, misrepresentation, and undue influence, compel, influence, and induce her said father, the said Joseph Bauquier, deceased, to assign, set over and deliver ” to her $12,543.88 in money and certain described real and personal property, and that the said petitioner claims adversely to the estate to be the owner of said property so fraudulently obtained. This is followed by the general allegation “ that said Mary Rode is incompetent to act as executrix of the said last will and testament for want of integrity, as shown by the facts herein set forth, and that she is generally incompetent, by reason of the facts herein set forth, to act as such executrix.”
An answer was filed to these objections, and after a trial upon the issue arising, the court made the following
The court thereupon denied her application to be appointed executrix. The petitioner moved for anew trial, which was denied, and from this latter order this appeal is taken.
1. Under section 1350 of the Code of Civil Procedure, no person is competent to serve as an executrix who is wanting in integrity. The word “integrity," as here used, means soundness of moral principle and character, as shown by a person’s dealing with others, in the making and performance of contracts, in fidelity and honesty in the discharge of trusts. In short, it is used as a synonym for probity, honesty, and uprightness in business relations with others. The evidence in the record before us is not such as would justify a finding that the petitioner is lacking in integrity as thus defined, and we are not certain, from the peculiar language of the finding quoted, that the learned judge of the court below intended to say anything more than that the adverse interests of the petitioner would prevent her from fairly, justly, and properly protecting the estate, and that this is a want of integrity within the meaning of the statute, We do not think, however, that the mere fact that the appellant claims property as her own, which the other legatees insist belongs to the estate, would of itself, and without some reference to the honesty of her claim, show a want of integrity.
2. The remaining inquiry is, whether the court was justified in denying the appellant’s application upon the ground that she “ is antagonistic and hostile, and asserts claims adverse to the said estate of Joseph Bauquier, deceased, and to the heirs at law, and persons interested
The answer to this will be found in the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure relating to the appointment of executors, and declaring who shall be incompetent to act in that capacity. These sections are as follows: —
“ Sec. 1349. The court admitting a will to probate, after the same is proved and allowed, must issue letters thereon to the persons named therein as executors who are competent to discharge the trust, who must appear and qualify, unless objection is made, as provided in section 1351.
“ Sec. 1350. No person is competent to serve as executor who, at the time the will is admitted to probate, is, — 1. Under the age of majority; 2. Convicted of infamous crime; 3. Adjudged by the court incompetent to execute the duties of the trust by reason of drunkenness, improvidence, or want of understanding or integrity.”
“ Sec. 1351. Any person interested in a will may file objections, in writing, to granting letters testamentary to the persons named as executors, or any of them; and the objections must be heard and determined by the court.” The meaning of these sections is, that at the time of admitting the will to probate, the court must appoint as executor the person who is therein named as such, if he has petitioned therefor and is not incompetent, unless written objections to such appointment have been filed, in which case the objections must be heard and determined, and the objections made must be such as to show that the applicant is incompetent upon some one of the grounds specified in section 1350 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Under our law, a man has the right to make such disposition of his property as he chooses, subject only to such limitations as are expressly declared by law, and
The court of appeals of Kentucky take the same view of this question. “ It is sufficient for us to say that the law has declared who may and who may not be executors; and if Berry be a man whom the law allows to be appointed as such, it follows that upon his motion to give
That the courts have no right to say that a person is ■incompetent to be appointed as an executor unless he falls within one of the class of persons expressly declared to be incompetent by statute, is further shown by the decisions in regard to administrators, where the law designates the order of priority in which different persons shall be entitled to appointment, and also declares who are incompetent to act. It is held in such cases that the order of priority named in the statute must be followed, and that no person can be declared incompetent unless he is one of a class so declared by the statute. A leading case on that point is Goope v. Lowerre, 1 Barb. Ch. 45. In that case the chancellor said: “The revised statutes provide that administration, in cases of intestacy, shall be granted to the relatives of the deceased who would be entitled to his personal estate, if they or any of them will accept the same, in the order specified in the statute. And I think the surrogate has
This case has been approved and followed in our state in the Estate of Pacheco, 23 Cal. 480. In that case it was said: "On the trial it was admitted that one of the-applicants, Rosa Pacheco de Sibrian, cannot read, write, or speak the English language; that she cannot read or write the Spanish; that she is 69 years old, a Californian by birth, and a daughter of the intestate. It is not claimed that the other applicant, Penniman, is subject to any of the disqualifications mentioned in section 55, nor is the other applicant properly included therein. The fact of her great age, and that she cannot read or write, and that she cannot speak English, do not show any want of understanding within the statute. It is true, they may render it difficult for her to perform some of her duties properly, yet they do not render it impossible. In the case of Coope v. Lowerre, 1 Barb. Ch. 45, it was held by the court of chancery of New York, in construing a similar statute, that the surrogate had no discretion to exclude a person declared by the statute to be entitled to a preference, except for some of the causes specified in the statute. And it was held that no degree of legal or moral guilt or delinquency was sufficient to exclude a person from the administration, as the next of kin, in the cases of preference given by the statute, unless such person had been actually convicted of an infamous crime. In that case the administration was granted to a person proved to be dishonest, and against whom a large judgment had been recovered in a case of crim. con.....We therefore hold that under the admissions and evidence in this case, the daughter, Rosa Pacheco de Sibrian, was entitled to letters of administration.”
The principle underlying that decision, and the cases which have followed it, is, that the courts have no right to add to the disqualifications prescribed by the legislature for such cases. In some of the states the courts are by law given a wide discretion in determining who are qualified to act in the capacity of executors and administrators. The decision in the ease of Stearns v. Fiske, 18 Pick. 24, cited and relied on by respondent, was based upon a statute which authorized the court to deny the application of a person “evidently unsuitable” to discharge the duties of the trust, and it was held that this language vested a wide discretion in the probate judge.
We feel entirely satisfied that the words “ want of integrity,” found in section 1350 of the Code of Civil Procedure, do not apply to a case where there is a simple conflict of interest in regard to the estate between the executor named in a will and the other legatees. We are also satisfied that if the legislature had designed to make such a conflict of interest a cause for refusing to appoint an executor so named, such intention would have been manifested by language more apt for that purpose than is to be found in that section of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The executor may always be removed after appointment unless he discharges the duty of his trust faithfully and as directed by law.
3. The order denying the appellant’s motion for a new trial in this proceeding is an appealable one.
Order reversed.
Harrison, J., McFarland, J., Paterson, J., Sharpstein, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing having been filed, the following opinion was rendered thereon on the 3d of April, 1891:—
A rehearing is asked in this case, upon the ground that the court in deciding that the order denying a new trial is an appealable order disregarded its former decisions upon the same point.
In Estate of Wiard, 83 Cal. 619, the court used the following language: “ Subdivision 3 of section 963, Code of Civil Procedure, enumerates all the cases in which an appeal may be taken to this court from the superior court in probate proceedings, and an order refusing to vacate a decree of distribution and settlement of final account is not one of them. ” In this case, after the entry of a decree of distribution, the contestant gave notice of her intention to move the court “to vacate and set aside the decree of distribution, and for a new trial in the matter of said petition for distribution.” The motion, when brought on for hearing, was denied, and an appeal was taken from that order, but the record brought here did not contain any statement of the case or bill of exceptions to enable this court to pass upon that portion of
Prior to 1880, section 969 of the Code of Civil Procedure provided that “an appeal may be taken to the supreme court from a judgment or order of the probate court: .... 8. Granting or overruling a motion for a new trial.”
. In 1880 the leglislature, in order to adapt the provisions of the code to the constitution, which had given to the superior court the jurisdiction previously exercised by the district and probate courts, repealed section 969, and added subdivision 3 to section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in which is contained the provisions of
It would be impracticable to enumerate the cases in which a motion for a new trial is appropriate in probate proceedings, but it may be stated generally that whenever the action of the court which is invoked is dependent upon the existence of certain extrinsic facts which are presented to it for determination in the form of pleadings, and are to be decided by it in conformity with the preponderance of the evidence offered thereon, an issue of fact arises which, after its decision, may be re-examined by the court upon a motion for a new trial. Under this rule, a motion for a new trial was permissible in the present case. The respondents filed a written opposition to the appointment of the appellant as executrix, setting forth therein certain facts, which they alleged rendered her incompetent to receive the appointment. To this she filed a written answer, denying the facts which were alleged as rendering her incompetent, and
Rehearing denied.