CHARLES W. KING, as Administrator with the Will Annexed of the Estate of Cornelia A. Chase, Deceased, Appellant, v. CHARLES W. PAULY and CHARLES A. CHASE, as Executors of the Will of Levi Chase, Deceased, Respondents.
L. A. No. 2409
In Bank. Supreme Court of California
March 14, 1911
159 Cal. 549
Angellotti, J., Sloss, J., Lorigan, J., Henshaw, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.
ESTATES OF DECEASED PERSONS-PROCEEDINGS UNDER
ID.-OBJECT OF STATUTORY PROCEEDING-DECISION.-It is settled by the decision of this court that the proceeding provided for by
ID.-CONDITIONAL EFFECT OF DECREE.-The decree in the proceeding under that section merely determines that, if the party petitioning has any asserted right or title accruing on the death of another person, such asserted right or title has accrued. It is often convenient and important to those interested in or examining a title to have some record evidence of the death of a life-tenant, a homestead claimant, or other person upon whose death some right or estate vests.
ID.-DECISION AS TO CONSTRUCTION AND EFFECT OF DECREE NOT OBITER DICTUM.-The decision of this court in the case of Hansen v. Union Savings Bank, 148 Cal. 157, as to the construction to be given to
ID.-DISTINCT GROUNDS OF DECISION-EACH GROUND NOT “MERE DICTUM.” -While it is not “necessary” to the decision of an appellate court that there should be more than one good ground or reason therefor, yet there may be more than one ground, and where the court bases its decision on two or more distinct grounds, each ground so specified is, as much as any of the others, one of the grounds a ruling upon which is upon a question involved in the case, and not “mere dictum.”
ID.-DECREE UPON NOTICE PROVIDED FOR NOT CONCLUSIVE-DUE PROCESS OF LAW NOT PROVIDED FOR.-It is not to be supposed that the legislature contemplated that a conclusive adjudication of rights should be made under the notice provided for in
ID.-QUESTION NOT ARGUED NOR DECIDED-MODIFICATION OF OPINION-CONCLUSIVENESS OF DECREE UPON HEIRS APPEARING.-It is held that the question whether the decree rendered under
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County. E. S. Torrance, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Davis, Kemp & Post, and Patterson Sprigg, for Appellant.
Stearns & Sweet, James E. Wadham, and Wadam & Pritchard, for Respondents.
ANGELLOTTI, J.-This is an action to quiet plaintiff‘s title to certain real property in the city of San Diego. Defendants had judgment and plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff‘s claim was that the property in question was the separate property of his intestate, Cornelia A. Chase, at the time of her death, January 23, 1896. Said Cornelia was at the time the property was acquired (November 12, 1868) the wife of Levi Chase, the executor of whose will is one of the defendants, and was named as the grantee in the deed by which the property was acquired, and the title to said property thenceforth and to the time of her death stood in her name. One of defendants’ claims was that the status of such property as community property and the consequent absolute vesting of the same as such community property in said Levi Chase, her surviving husband, at the time of her death, without administration, was conclusively determined by the decree made and given in a certain proceeding instituted by the surviving husband in the year 1903, under the provisions of
That section provides:
“If any person has died or shall hereafter die who at the time of his death was the owner of a life estate which terminates by reason of the death of such person, or if such person at the time of his death was one of the spouses owning lands as a homestead, which lands by reason of the death of such person, vest in the surviving spouse; or if such person was a married woman who at the time of her death was the owner of community property which passed upon her death to the surviving husband; any person interested in the property, or in the title thereto, in which such estates or interests were held, may file in the superior court of the county in which the property is situated, his verified petition setting forth such facts, and thereupon and after such notice by publication or otherwise, as the court may order, the court shall hear such petition and the evidence offered in support thereof, and if upon such hearing it shall appear that such life estate of such deceased person absolutely terminated by reason of his death, or such homestead or community property vested in the survivor of such marriage, the court shall make a decree to that effect, and thereupon a certified copy of such decree may be recorded in the office of the county recorder, and thereafter shall have the same effect as a final decree of distribution so recorded.”
In the proceedings instituted in the superior court of San Diego County by the surviving husband under this section the matter was entitled “In the Matter of the Title to certain Real Estate, being Community Property, and standing of record in the name of Cornelia A. Chase, deceased.” His verified petition alleged the death of his wife and other facts showing that the property was community property. It alleged the names and residences of the heirs of deceased, twelve in number and all except one being non-residents of the state. It asked for a decree adjudging that said property was community property and that the same vested absolutely in petitioner upon the death of his wife. The court on February 12, 1903, made its order reciting the filing of said petition, with a statement describing the property and showing the relief asked by petitioner, fixing March 13, 1903, at two o‘clock P. M. and the courtroom of the court as the time and place for hearing the petition “at which time and place any person interested may appear and show cause, if any they have, why the
We have no doubt that if all of the persons interested in the estate of Cornelia A. Chase had actually appeared and submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court in the proceedings brought by Levi Chase, the decree would have the effect claimed for it by defendants. As in the Matter of the Estate of De Leon, 102 Cal. 537, [36 Pac. 864], the facts stated in the petition filed in the superior court were such as to entitle the petition to be treated as an ordinary complaint in equity, and the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of an action in equity to determine the title of real property in the county and of such parties as personally appeared and submitted themselves to its jurisdiction, as well as of such parties as were regularly brought within its jurisdiction by service of process in the manner and form prescribed for such actions. (See Estate of De Leon, 102 Cal. 537, [36 Pac. 864].) But, in view of what we have heretofore said, this cannot avail here, as neither any legal representative of the deceased Cornelia A. Chase nor all of her heirs were shown to have appeared or to have been so served with process. And we are therefore bound to consider the decree relied on solely as one given in the special proceeding provided by
It was squarely decided by Department Two of this court in the case of Hansen v. Union Savings Bank, 148 Cal. 157, [82 Pac. 768], that the proceeding provided by
It is urged that what was here said as to the construction of the section and the effect of the decree was mere dictum, but clearly this is not so. It was one of two grounds upon which the court held that a decree given under this section, adjudicating the validity of a homestead right asserted by the petitioner to have existed as to the lands involved at the time of the death of her husband, did not establish the validity of the asserted right, and that a court in a subsequent action to quiet title was free to pass upon the question of the validity of the alleged homestead right, and declare it invalid, which it did. The first ground was, it is true, that proper notice had not been given of the hearing of the petition presented under
To hold here in accord with the contention of defendants as to the conclusive effect of the decree on the question of the validity of the asserted right would be, therefore, to repudiate the doctrine of Hansen v. Union Savings Bank, 148 Cal. 157, on that question, for there is no material distinction in this regard between an asserted homestead right and an asserted community property right. This, of course, the court in Bank would not hesitate to do if satisfied that the doctrine was wrong, and that property rights had not been acquired in reliance on the former decision which could be effected by the repudiation thereof. We are, however, not satisfied that the views expressed in this decision as to the proper construction of
As originally adopted in the year 1881,
The provisions as to homestead and community property were inserted by amendment in the year 1897, and it is not unreasonable to assume that they were intended solely for the same purpose as the provision in regard to life estates.
As we have said, the question as to the true meaning of
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Sloss, J., Lorigan, J., Shaw, J., Melvin, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
BEATTY, C. J., concurring.-I concur. Considered by itself
A petition for modification of the judgment was denied on April 13, 1911, and the following opinion was rendered thereon:
THE COURT.-In denying the petition for modification of the judgment it is proper to say that the question whether the decree had in the proceeding under
The petition for a modification of the opinion is denied.
