239 P. 406 | Cal. | 1925
A.G. Trickett, died testate March 11, 1925, a resident of Whittier, California, and his holographic will was admitted to probate in the superior court of the county of Los Angeles. This is an appeal from a decree of distribution. The decedent was survived by his widow, Annie G. Trickett; his four children, Mary P. Sidwell, Charles W. *22 Trickett, Francis A. Nutt, and Maggie R. Shahan; his three grandchildren, Jessie Neva O'Dell, DeRoy Eugene Colt, and Demi Morgan Colt, the issue of two predeceased daughters of the decedent. The will purported to devise and to bequeath a life estate to testator's widow in certain real property and in certain outstanding obligations due to the testator, with remainder over to his four children. These bequests were supplemented by a general residuary clause which reads as follows: "and all other property I may have hold at that time [the time of his death] is to be divided amongst the four children mentioned if living at that time if any of them should dye then to be divided between the rest living not their heirs or any other relatives or friends of mine."
The will does not in terms mention or provide for the three grandchildren above mentioned. They are the appellants, and the point is made in their behalf that they, being among the heirs at law of the testator and he having failed to provide for them in his will or to indicate that such omission was intentional, are entitled under the provisions of section 1307 of the Civil Code to share in his estate as if he had died intestate. That code section provides: "When any testator omits to provide in his will for any of his children, or for the issue of any deceased child, unless it appears that such omission was intentional, such child, or the issue of such child, has the same share in the estate of the testator as if he had died intestate, and succeeds thereto as provided in the preceding section." The quoted code section places a child and the issue of a deceased child in the same category, so that if no provision be made for them in the will of a decedent they are entitled to share in his estate the same as though no will had been made, unless it appears that such omission was intentional. The intention of the testator to omit such children must be determined from the terms of the will itself, and parol evidence may not be resorted to for the purpose of showing the intention of the testator (Estate of Stevens,
The rule of construction announced in those cases covers and controls the situation presented in the case at bar. From an examination in its entirety of the will in question, it appears to us that the intention of the testator was to permit only his wife and those of his children living at his death to share in his estate. The intent is sufficiently indicated, we think, by the words of the will itself. The declaration in the will was to the effect that the residue of the estate should go only to his living children, and that if any one of them should predecease him, then the share given to such child was to go to the others living at the time of his death and "not their heirs or any other relatives or friends of mine." It is palpable, it seems to us, that the testator intended only his living children to share in his estate and to exclude therefrom all other persons. Not only did the testator make the fact of his children being alive at the time of his death an express condition precedent to *25
his bequest to his living children, but he added, also, the proviso directing to whom such estate should go in the event of the death of any of his children. He expressly excluded the issue of those living children named in the will who might predecease him, and placed the issue of said living children, in the event of the death of their parent, in the same situation, with relation to the deceased, as now stand the appellants. The clause excluding from participation in the testator's estate "any other relatives," considered and construed in the light of the meaning ordinarily and in law attributed to the words employed therein, is especially significant, for, coupled with the preceding clauses of the will, it indicates the testator's intention to exclude from his bounty all persons embraced within its terms. The testator presumably knew the law and therefore must be deemed to have used the word "relatives" in its legal sense. The word "relative" is ordinarily defined to mean "one that is connected by blood, affinity, relation" (Webster's Dictionary). And, in law, "the word `relatives' or `relations,' when used in a devise or bequest, should be construed, unless a contrary intention appears, as meaning those next of kin who, in cases of intestacy, would take under the statutes of distribution, . . ." (40 Cyc. 1458; Thompson v. Thornton,
The general scheme of the will and the intent of the testator as manifested by the language of the will compel the conclusion that the testator failed to provide for appellants not because he was oblivious of their existence but, *26 rather, because he did not desire them to share in his estate.
Appellants, in support of their contention, cite and rely on the case of Hargadine v. Pulte, 27 Mo. 423. The will under consideration in that case was not in all respects similar to the will in the instant case. There the testator gave his entire estate to his wife and attempted to exclude "all and every person or persons." There was not apparent on the face of the will the sedulous discrimination between the living children and the grandchildren and the clear intent that testator wished only his living children to share in his bounty as appears in the will here under consideration. The ruling of the court in the case last cited is not reasoned in extenso and is practically rested upon the case of Bradley v. Bradley, 24 Mo. 311. In the latter case the principal provision of the will was as follows: "that my wife, Ann Bradley, be my sole heir to all my estate. . . ." No mention or reference was made to the children of the deceased nor was there anything on the face of the will indicating an intent on the part of the testator to exclude purposely his children. The Bradley case obviously is not pertinent to the point presented here. Hargadine v. Pulte,supra, was not cited, as counsel for appellants contend, by this court with approval in the Estate of Stevens, supra. The case of Bradley v. Bradley, supra, was there cited merely as affirmatory of the proposition that parole evidence is inadmissible to show the intent of the testator to exclude his children. In re Parrott's Estate,
In short, the testamentary documents under consideration in the California cases cited by appellants and just considered and discussed failed to indicate in terms, or by necessary implication, that the testator intentionally made no provision for his heirs at law. The construction of the will and the distribution of the estate as decreed by the trial court in the instant case are in harmony with the requirements of the law and with the manifest intent of the testator.
The decree is affirmed.
Seawell, J., Waste, J., Lawlor, J., and Richards, J., concurred. *28