123 Cal. 285 | Cal. | 1899
This is an application for a writ of review. Roger O’Donnell, husband of petitioner, died testate. His will was admitted to probate in the city and county of San Francisco. It contained no provision nor direction for the disposition of his body. During the course of administration the widow filed a petition setting forth that the deceased had expressed a last wish that his remains should be buried beside those of his father and mother at Finn Town, Ireland, and praying for an order enabling her to fulfill this request. The court made its order authorizing and directing the executor “to pay over to Annie O’Donnell, the widow of the deceased, the sum of seven hundred dollars out of the funds of the estate, to be
By this writ there is sought to be annulled the order last above mentioned directing Martin to transport the body of the deceased to Ireland, and there supervise its interment. The validity of the original order by which the seven hundred dollars was ordered set apart to and paid over to Annie O’Donnell, the widow, for the same purpose, is not called in question. The single proposition which is seriously argued is whether the court in probate did or did not exceed its jurisdiction in attempting to deliver to one not of kin the body of deceased, and in directing a particular disposition to be made of that body by this stranger. It is also further contended that the order is in excess of jurisdiction because the moneys directed to be paid under the original order had in fact been paid; that the executor had complied with the directions of the court as to payment; had entered the payment as a credit to himself in his final account; that his final account had been allowed and final distribution of the estate decreed; and the control of the property had therefore passed from the court. (Ex parte Smith, 53 Cal. 204; Wheeler v. Bolton, 54 Cal. 302.) The last proposition, which involves a consideration of the court’s jurisdiction and control of the burial fund after entry of the decree of distribution, we do not think it necessary to consider for the reason that the court exceeded its jurisdiction in attempting to award the custody of the body of the deceased to one not of kin, to the exclusion of the next of kin; indeed, that it exceeded its jurisdiction in attempting to make any award of the custody, or to direct any disposition to be made of the body.
The body of one whose estate is in probate unquestionably forms no part of the property of that estate. It is recognized that the individual has a sufficient proprietary interest in his own body after his death to be able to make valid and binding testamentary disposition of it. The court in probate and the personal representative acquire jurisdiction from the last testament to see that its provisions in this regard, as in all others, are duly executed; but where, as in this case, the will is silent,
The order is therefore annulled.
Garoutte, J., Temple, J., Harrison, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.