160 P. 1078 | Cal. | 1916
Lead Opinion
The appellant, David J. Baird, Jr., claiming to be the legitimate and only child of the decedent and his only heir, applied for partial distribution to him of the estate. His application was denied. He appeals from the judgment.
The petition avers that the applicant, who is a minor, was the illegitimate child of said decedent and one Lydia M. Valencia, to whom decedent was never married, and that the decedent, who was unmarried, adopted said child as his own lawful issue in the manner specified in section 230 of the Civil Code. Opposition to this claim was made by the mother, brothers, and sister of the decedent, who denied all the facts relating to such adoption.
The court made findings declaring (1) that the decedent was not the father of the applicant, (2) that the decedent did not publicly acknowledge the said applicant as his own child, and (3) that the decedent did not receive the applicant into his family, nor otherwise treat the applicant as if it were his legitimate child.
In due time the appellant, in writing; regularly demanded a trial by jury. This demand the court below refused. This, it is claimed, was a fatal error. *619
The basis of the claim that the appellant was entitled, as a matter of right, to a jury trial, is found in sections
It will be observed that section
"Any issues of fact thus raised, involving: 1. The competency of the decedent to make a last will and testament; 2. The freedom of the decedent at the time of the execution of the will from duress, menace, fraud, or undue influence; 3. The due execution and attestation of the will by the decedent or subscribing witnesses; or, 4. Any other questions substantially affecting the validity of the will, must, on request of either party in writing (filed at least ten days prior to the day set for the hearing), be tried by a jury. If no jury is demanded, the court must try and determine the issues joined."
The question of the right to a jury trial in probate proceedings, in cases other than will contests, under sections 1716 *620
and 1312, has been considered by this court in several cases. Many proceedings are authorized by the title of the code relating to administration of estates. The question whether or not a jury trial is a matter of right in any of them depends upon the nature of the proceeding. In Estate of Moore,
In giving its reasons for denying the right of trial by jury upon a contested account, the court, in Estate of Moore,
Such proceeding is authorized, and the practice therein prescribed, by sections 1658 to 1662, inclusive, of the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 1658 provides that any person, after four months from the issuance of letters, may present his petition for partial distribution. Section 1659 provides for notice to all persons interested in the estate. Section 1660 provides that "any person interested in the estate, may appear at the time named and resist the application." The other sections provide the form of the order to be made and of the bond to be given by the applicant. Respecting this proceeding, and discussing its nature, the court, in Estate of Ryer,
The record shows that many other errors were committed by the court below in the course of the trial. In view of the possibility of another trial we deem it advisable to notice some of them.
The physician, who attended the mother when the applicant was born, was called as a witness for the applicant, and testified that he was requested to attend at the birth by the decedent Baird, that Baird was at the house on that night, that the birth took place at 5 o'clock in the morning, and that immediately afterward, on that day, he made out and signed a certificate of birth which was afterward filed in the proper public office. This certificate was read in evidence. It stated that David Jennings Baird, the decedent, was the father of the child, and that Lydia Marguerita Valencia was its mother. By appropriate questions the applicant's counsel sought to elicit from the witness testimony that Baird, at the time the witness made and filled out the certificate, informed him of the facts stated therein and then declared that he, Baird, was the father of the child, and that Baird read the certificate after it was prepared and signed. This testimony the court refused to allow. The ruling was clearly erroneous. No evidence as to the paternity of the child could be much more satisfactory and convincing than the statements of the reputed father declaring his paternity, made at the time of its birth, and under the circumstances stated. The court not only rejected the evidence but, in the face of many other admissions by Baird that he was the father of the child, allowed as proof of public acknowledgment of the fact by him, found that Baird was not the father, and that he did not publicly acknowledge the child as his own. The testimony sought from the physician was competent evidence *624 of the fact. No confidential relation rendered it a privileged communication. The respondent does not even attempt to justify the ruling.
Other witnesses were prevented from testifying to acknowledgments made by Baird that he was the father of the child. The reason for the rejection in many cases was that the acknowledgment was not made in public. On this ground all statements to that effect made by the decedent at the home of the child's mother to the servants were excluded. We know of no rule by which such rulings can be supported.
The only argument made by the respondent in regard to these errors is that it is immaterial whether they were erroneous or not because, as they claim, the applicant should never have prevailed in any event. This argument is based upon the theory that whatever may be the fact as to the paternity of the child and public acknowledgment thereof by the decedent, the proof showed beyond controversy, and without conflict, that the decedent did not receive the child into his family as his own, and did not treat it otherwise as if it were a legitimate child. If the errors were confined solely to the admission of evidence on the other issues proposed this claim would be more plausible. But where the error is so grave as the unauthorized substitution of the court for a jury as the tribunal to hear the evidence and determine the facts, we cannot, as a general rule, say that the scheme in force in this state for the administration of justice has not miscarried. (SeePeople v. O'Bryan,
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
Sloss, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment of reversal on the ground that the court erred in refusing the demand for a jury trial.
Hearing in Bank denied.