1 P.2d 1013 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
This is an appeal from an order granting a family allowance to the widow of deceased. The appeal is taken by the residuary legatee under deceased's will, who is a daughter of the latter by a former marriage. No children were born of the second marriage. The appeal is based upon an antenuptial contract executed in the state of Iowa by the deceased and respondent, the material portions of which read as follows:
". . . [I]t is hereby agreed that each of said parties to this Ante-Nuptial Contract hereby agrees to waive, and does hereby waive, all and every right whatsoever which he or she might have or acquire by law by such marriage in any and all property of every kind and character, real, personal or mixed, now owned or which may hereafter be acquired by the other party; it being understood and agreed that all of the property and property rights which each of these parties now has, or which each may hereafter acquire, shall pass to her or his heirs at law, devisees or legatees in precisely the same manner and with the same effect as though no marriage were ever consummated.
"It is further agreed that each party hereto shall have control and management of, and the right to sell, convey or transfer any and all of their separate properties during marriage without the signature or joining in by the other, as freely as if no marriage had taken place."
[1] The cases cited by appellant are distinguished from the situation here by reason of the fact that in those cases the parties separated and entered into agreements which specifically provided that the support of the wife should be waived. It is to be observed that in the instant case the contract contains no such provision, but only provides that the property shall pass to the heirs of the parties as though no marriage had been contracted. Here also the parties lived together until the death of the husband, he supporting her up to that time, and under his will granting her a life estate in the home in which they had lived.
Estate of Woodburn,
"Upon the merits of this appeal we are of the opinion that the antenuptial settlement entered into between" deceased "and the lady who was to become his wife and widow and who is the respondent herein, while the parties thereto expressly waived and relinquished each on his and her own part all right, title and interest in the property then owned or thereafter to be acquired by the other party, and all right of inheritance therein to which either party might be entitled as the husband or wife of the other, cannot be held to have accomplished a waiver of those rights to which the widow or minor children if any, of a decedent are entitled under the provisions of article 1, chapter V, part III, title XI of the Code of Civil Procedure. The provisions of said chapter and article expressly relate to the support of the family of a decedent, and to which the widow and minor children of said decedent become entitled upon his death and the probate of his estate, without regard to any interest which they or any of them may have had in the property of said decedent during his lifetime, and without reference to their heirship or right of inheritance therein. The rights to which this widow became entitled under the foregoing provisions of the code *446 were in no sense either the rights of inheritance or rights depending upon any previous interest in the property of the decedent owned by him during his lifetime and which she may have surrendered by virtue of the terms of their antenuptial agreement." In principle there is no distinction between the cases, for it is noted that the right to an allowance is not based upon a right of inheritance.
It must be borne in mind that if there exist a doubt concerning the interpretation of the contract it should be resolved in favor of the respondent, for as it is said in Estate of Whitney,
For other authorities in harmony with these views reference may be had to In re Chisholm's Estate,
Order affirmed.
Works, P.J., and Craig, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on August 7, 1931.