121 Cal. 125 | Cal. | 1898
By his will the deceased, among other dispositions, left to Mary Hale and Margaret Byan, his sisters, and John Hale, a brother, each a bequest in the nature of a life annuity in the sum- of $50 per month. The will was probated in May, 1893.
In June, 1896, the respondents filed petitions in the court below setting up that said annuities had not been paid; that the estate was in a condition to pay the same, and praying a distribution thereof, and asking that the amounts accrued thereon respectively be ordered paid -at once, and that thereafter the monthly payments be made as they should fall due.
The widow, as administratrix with the will annexed and' as a devisee under the will, and the daughter, as a devisee, and certain creditors of the estate, made opposition to the granting of the petitions, setting up that the estate was largely indebted, and that such distribution could not then be had without detriment to the interests of the estate and injury to the creditors. The petitions were heard together, and the court made findings
1. The objection most strongly urged against the propriety of the order is, that the evidence does not sustain the findings upon which the order rests; and we are satisfied that this objection must be sustained.
The material facts found by the court were: “That the estate of said deceased is but little indebted, and that the shares of said Mary Hale, Margaret Ryan, and John Hale, prayed for in their said petitions, may be allowed to them without loss to the creditors of said estate, and that there will remain in the hands of the administratrix undisturbed, after the payment and delivery to them of their respective shares, sufficient property of the said estate to pay in full all claims and debts against and all creditors of said estate, and also all costs and expenses of administration, and all devises and legacies under the will of said testator.”
.This finding is placed among the conclusions of law as a legal deduction from certain probative facts found by the court, but it is, nevertheless, a finding of facts, and indeed embraces the essential, ultimate facts which are indispensable under the statute to authorize and empower the court to make the order in question. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1658-63.) These sections authorize an order of partial distribution only in the event that “it appear that the estate is but little indebted, and that the share of the party applying may be allowed to him without loss to the creditors of the estate.” (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1661, 1663.) Without the existence of these facts the court cannot
Neither the probative findings of the court nor the evidence in the case sustain the finding as to the existence of these jurisdictional facts. The evidence was without conflict and shows-in substance this: The value of the entire assets of the estate remaining at the time of the hearing, exclusive of certain corporate stock in the Flores Hale Company, the value of which was not ascertained, was shown to be about $462,000, consisting almost exclusively of real estate. The allowed claims and demands existing and unpaid against the estate at that time amounted, as found by the court, to $235,000. This amount, however, covers only the principal of the allowed claims and does not include unpaid "interest on the unsecured claims, which item, ignored by the finding, amounted at the time to about $25,000, augmenting the indebtedness by that sum. The finding also ignores the existence of a rejected claim for the sum of $160,000, a suit for which was then pending against the estate and undetermined. Of the total amount of the admitted indebtedness about $117,000—consisting of one claim of $50,000 and another of $67,000—was secured by mortgage on the real property of the estate; another claim of about $3,000 was secured by personal property in the hands of the creditor, and the balance of about $107,000 was unsecured. The interest on the mortgage indebtedness the administratrix had been compelled to keep paid in order to avoid threatened foreclosure and forced sale of the property, which, as the evidence tends to show, would have entailed great sacrifice and loss to the estate. The interest on the unsecured claims, as indicated above, had not been paid, but had accumulated since their allowance, a period of about three years. The income from the property of the estate was shown to be at the time of the application about $1,500 per month. The interest on the mortgage indebtedness alone is shown to amount to considerably more than $700 per month; the necessary expense of maintaining and caring for the property of the estate, collecting rents, etc., was upward of $400 per month,
We have, then, an estate valued at $462,000, with an admitted present indebtedness, including interest, of over $250,000, an undetermined demand for $160,000 and a probable additional expense of $24,000, found to be the probable expense of closing the estate, aggregating a possible indebtedness of considerably over $400,000. This statement leaves no necessity for argument to show that the finding that the estate is but little indebted is not supported by the evidence. In estimating the indebtedness for the purposes of this order, the court could not ignore and leave out of account the undetermined demand of $160,000
Nor can it be truly said under the evidence that this order can be sustained without injury to the creditors of the estate. It does not follow that the latter will not be injured because there may remain assets sufficient to meet their demands at some possible future time. Where claims have been established creditors have a right primarily to have them first paid before the property is taken by the devisees or heirs; and, if the distribution of property to the latter is to result in postponing or deferring such payment indefinitely, the creditors are thereby injured. The statute expressly contemplates that it is only where the distribution will not injuriously interfere with the ability of the estate to meet the demands of creditors that it may be had. Here the evidence shows beyond question that to take the money necessary to pay respondents, at this time, will not only necessarily deprive the administratrix of the means to pay the accruing interest on the allowed demands and the current expenses of administration, but will in all probability greatly embarrass the estate by requiring a sacrifice of its property at forced sale. Such a result is not within the purposes of the statute. It in no way aids respondents’ position that the payment to them is ordered to be made only out of funds derived from the income of property upon which their annuities are primarily made a charge. That property is as much chargeable with the debts and other obligations of the estate as any other, if it shall be
2. There is hut one other objection which we deem it necessary at this time to notice. The court below very clearly erred in dispensing with the necessity of a bond by the respondents to answer for their proportion of the debts of the estate. The ■only circumstances under which the giving of such bond may be excused upon a partial distribution is where it appears that the time for presenting claims against the estate has expired, “and all claims that have been allowed have been paid, or are secured by mortgage upon real estate sufficient to pay them, and the court is satisfied that no injury can result to the estate." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1663.) The evidence here, as we have seen, shows that a large proportion of the demands were unsecured by mortgage or otherwise, and that such unsecured demands had not been paid. The case was, therefore, not one in which the court was authorized to dispense with the requirement of a bond.
For these reasons the order must be reversed, and it is so ordered.
Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.