264 P. 242 | Cal. | 1928
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *337 Upon the petition of appellant for a hearing by this court of this cause after decision by the district court of appeal, third appellate district, Plummer, J., writing the opinion, an order of transfer was duly made and the cause is now before us for decision. We have given further consideration to the opinion and decision rendered by said district court of appeal, and have become satisfied that its decision correctly interprets and applies the law by which cases of this character must be ruled. We, therefore, adopt practically the entire opinion as prepared by the said district court of appeal as our opinion, adding thereto brief observations which seem pertinent in view of the arguments contained in the petition for a hearing filed in this court. The opinion follows:
"This matter is before us upon an appeal from an order of the superior court made and entered in the matter of a proceeding had and taken in said estate, as authorized and provided for in section
"It appears from the record that on or about the first day of August, 1918, Charles M. Clary made, executed and delivered to Abraham E. Clary his promissory note for the sum of $3,000, due one day after date; thereafter, and while this note was uncollected, the said Abraham E. Clary died testate in the county of Yolo and Charles M. Clary and E.F. Clary, pursuant to the last will and testament of said Abraham E. Clary, were appointed and on the 6th day of December, 1920, qualified as the executors of the estate of Abraham E. Clary, deceased; thereafter, and on or about the 4th day of April, 1921, the said Charles M. Clary died intestate in the county of Monterey, state of California. Certain payments were made upon said promissory note by the said Charles M. Clary and upon the accounting taken and had in the superior court of Yolo county, the sum of $2,965.91 was found to be the remainder due upon said note, against which sum, the distributive share of $1,257.50 otherwise coming to the estate of Charles M. Clary, deceased, from Abraham E. Clary, deceased, was ordered retained as an offset and payment pro tanto of the moneys due from the estate of Charles M. Clary, deceased, to Abraham E. Clary, deceased.
[1] "This matter was before this court upon a previous appeal, wherein it was sought to adjudicate questions relative to the indebtedness of the estate of Charles M. Clary to Abraham E. Clary, upon distribution in the estate of Abraham E. Clary, deceased. (Estate of Clary,
"Upon the going down of the remittitur, after the prior hearing of this cause, the surviving executor of the estate of Abraham E. Clary, deceased, instituted proceedings under and in accordance with the provisions of section
[2] "The proceedings had in the first instance leading to the first appeal and the proceedings had in the appeal now before us were and are both based upon section 1447 of the Code of Civil Procedure, under the terms of *340 which all moneys due from the executor to a testator at the time the executor qualifies as such become assets of the estate of the testator in the hands of the executor, and hence renders the executor liable for the same as if so much money was in his hands. The note in this case was due at the time of the qualification of Charles M. Clary as executor of the estate of Abraham E. Clary, deceased, but against this note the statute of limitations had not yet run. This period would not have expired until some eighteen months after the death of Charles M. Clary, deceased. The exact dates are immaterial. No accounting was ever made or rendered by Charles M. Clary, as executor of the estate of Abraham E. Clary, deceased, of the amount due upon said note or of what the codes specify shall be considered as so much cash in his hands, nor was any accounting ever made or had thereof by the personal representative of Charles M. Clary, deceased, until the institution of the proceedings herein. The surviving executor of the estate of Abraham E. Clary filed an account of his administration of said estate called a `final account' and, also, a report therewith. In the account, termed a `final account,' the surviving executor, E.F. Clary, made no mention of the promissory note herein referred to, but did attempt, as we have herein stated, to make collection of the same upon distribution as therein prayed for.
[3] "Upon this appeal it is urged that the whole matter presented herein was and is res adjudicata, also, that the proceeding is barred by the statute of limitations. A number of cases are cited upholding the finality of a final account, from which no appeal has been prosecuted, or which has been adjudicated upon appeal, in addition to urging that the questions involved herein have once been passed upon by this court, which we have just stated to be without merit. That an account becomes final as to all matters adjudicated, the authorities abundantly establish, but it is also true that it is not final as to nonadjudicated items. The text writer in 24 C.J., page 1029, section 2484, thus states the rule: `A final settlement is conclusive as to all matters, the proper subject of account, included in such a settlement or necessarily involved therein; but it is not conclusive as to matters not included or necessarily involved therein, *341
or as to matters not within the jurisdiction of the court. The settlement is not conclusive as to assets not accounted for in such statement or received thereafter, but as to such assets the personal representative may be required to make a further settlement.' In the Matter of Estate of Ross,
[4] "When Charles M. Clary, on the 6th day of December, qualified as an executor of the last will and testament of Abraham E. Clary, deceased, he became a voluntary trustee of the property and assets of the estate of Abraham E. Clary, deceased, holding the same for the benefit of the devisees and legatees, under the terms of the last will and testament of Abraham E. Clary, deceased. Thus, as pointed out in 16 California Jurisprudence, page 420 et seq., sections 30 to 37, the rule is that the statute of limitations does not run where the parties occupy a fiduciary relationship toward each other, so long as such relationship is not repudiated. Thus, a guardian may not acquire title by adverse possession against his ward, nor an agent against his principal, nor an executor against the heirs. As to the latter, the rule is stated in this language: `Pending the administration of an estate, the possession of an administrator is not adverse to that of an heir; he cannot acquire an adverse title by possession for the statutory period.' In MacMullan v. Kelly,
"In behalf of their plea appellants cite the case of Minifie
v. Rowley,
"Likewise, the facts in the case of Estate of Schaeffer,
[5] "Appellants further object that no claim was ever filed by the surviving executor of the estate of Abraham E. *345
Clary, deceased, against the estate of Charles M. Clary, deceased, citing the case of In re Smith,
[6] "Under the various provisions of article II of chapter X of the Code of Civil Procedure it is the duty of an executor and coexecutor to account for all moneys coming into their hands and for all moneys and properties with which they are chargeable, and this duty was incumbent upon Charles M. Clary, deceased, irrespective of a like obligation which rested upon his coexecutor, E.F. Clary.
"The proceeding before us is one for an accounting and is not one involving collection of assets upon distribution, as was the case upon the prior appeal in the Estate of Clary,
There can be no doubt that some of appellant's contentions are given more than a mere show of color by certain earlier decisions of this court, especially those rendered prior to the enactment of section
[8] The Estate of Walker,
The order and decree appealed from are affirmed.
Richards, J., Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Preston, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.