Appeal from an order settling the final account of an executrix, a final decree of distribution, and an order denying a renewal of a family allowance.
Bessie Patmore died testate on February 26, 1953, a resident of California. She left surviving her husband Frank T. Patmore, appellant, and her sister Hattie H. MacKechnie, respondent and executrix of her will. Her estate was her separate property and consists of real and personal property in California, Kansas, and Oklahoma. The will bequeathed a few items of personal property and $10,000 cash to appellant; bequeathed certain stocks to respondent in trust to pay the income to appellant for life or until remarriage, with remainder to respondent; and bequeathed and devised the residue to respondent. The will was admitted to probate and domiciliary administration was begun in California. It was also admitted to probate and ancillary administration was begun in Kansas. We are not concerned with the estate in Oklahoma. During the course of administration in California the executrix received $21,659.72 from the ancillary administration in Kansas consisting of oil royalties, lease rentals, *419 proceeds from the sale of crops and a right of way, and paid taxes on Kansas land.
Respondent filed her second and final account and petitioned for final distribution of the California estate. Appellant filed objections to the account and to the petition for final distribution and a petition for renewal of a family allowance. He averred that he had theretofore filed in the probate court of Barton County, Kansas, in which the ancillary administration was bеing had, an election to take as the surviving husband under the laws of that state and not under the will; £1 [t] hat without prejudice to his rights to take under the Will in California, in the event that for any reason he should not be entitled to distribution under the laws of Kansas, objector hereby declines to accept distribution under the Will at this time, and upon distribution to him of one half the real property in Kansas your objector will file with this Court an election not tо accept benefits under said Will”; that the final account, in purporting to show estate receipts, is defective in that it was impossible to determine therefrom which of the receipts arose from rents or royalties from real property located in Kansas and that the petition failed to request permission to pay half of the receipts from Kansas real estate to appellant. The сourt overruled the objections, denied renewal of the family allowance, settled the account, and ordered distribution in accord with the will.
The assignment of error is that the decree of distribution is erroneous in failing to recognize the Kansas election; that it is premature in decreeing distribution prior to closing of the administration in Kansas; that its effect is to decide the title to land in Kansas which is governed by the law of Kansas; and that it is erroneous in approving the commingling of Kansas assets which are realty with California assets and ordering distribution of such Kansas assets to respondent.
A fundamental principle of law universally recognized is that realty is exclusively subject to the
lex loci rei
sitae■— to the law of the state within which it is situated.
(CampbellKawannanakoa
v.
Campbell,
Acceptance by the surviving spouse of the provisions of the will, or an election to take under the will in the state of the decedent’s domicile, is binding elsewhere in the absence of a statute to the cоntrary; and such spouse may not elsewhere claim rights against the will. One who accepts a beneficial interest under a will thereby adopts the whole will and renounces every right or claim that is inconsistent with the will.
(Estate of Moore,
“As a matter of fact, if she could by filing hеr election to take under the will in Kansas, take it here, and by not so filing in Massachusetts take under it in Massachusetts the same reasoning would allow her to take under the will in one state and under the law in another. Such inconsistent position may not be taken. See 11 Am.Jur. p. 349, where the rule is stated as follows: ‘ The acceptance by the party entitled to make the election of the provisions of a will or an election to take under the will in the state of the decedent’s domicil is binding everywhere.’ ” (See to the same effect In re Randolph’s Estate,175 Kan. 685 [266 P.2d 315 ].)
In California a husband has no interest in the separate property of the wife, and a widower is not put to an election by a bequest or devise to him of the separate property of the wife unless the will is so drawn as to make an election necessary. There is nothing in the will here which puts apрellant to an election. As to separate property, he stands on the same footing as any other beneficiary.
(Estate of Arms,
Renunciation of a foreign will in a foreign jurisdiction is given effect by comity in the state where the renouncing party has his domicile. (69 C.J. 1092, § 2332.) In
Whalley
v.
Lawrence’s Estate,
Application of what we have said to the case at bar compels the conclusion that it was error to render the decree distributing to appellant and to respondent in trust the property bequeathed to appellant and for his benefit. There is no dispute abоut the fact that appellant elected to take against the will in Kansas. If that election is effective he is not entitled to take under the will in California. Whether his election is effective may not be determined by the Kansas court until final settlement of the estate there. At the hearing on the petition for distribution the parties appeared to agree that the Kansas estate was then ready for final settlеment. No delay should ensue by reason of holding the California distribution open until the effectiveness of the election has been determined by the Kansas court. There was much confusion below with respect to appellant’s rights in California. The trial judge and counsel for respondent were of the view that appellant was compelled to elect to take either under or against the will under California lаw. As we have seen, he has no such duty; but having elected to take against the will in Kansas, his election, if effective there, will be given effect in California. Counsel for respondent stated at the oral argument that if appellant takes what has been distrib *423 uted to him in California he forfeits all rights in Kansas. The obvious purpose of respondent is to force appellant to forfeit those rights, and that may be the effect оf the decree of distribution if it is permitted to stand. It would be unconscionable and a miscarriage of justice for the courts of this state to be parties to an attempt to deprive appellant of rights given him by the law of Kansas.
Appellant is entitled to know that his election is effective and that he will receive half the Kansas real estate before refusing to take under the will in California—not how much he will takе in Kansas because he has made his election, but whether his election is valid. He may not renounce his election in Kansas, but it may be contested. Elections to take against the will have on occasion been held by the Kansas courts to be ineffective. (See
Cox
v.
McBroom,
There is another reason why the California administration should not be closed. It is the general rule that surplus personal assets in an ancillary administration, i. e., personal assets not required for the payment of claims and expenses of administration lawfully filed and allowed in the аncillary administration, should be remitted to the domicile for final settlement and distribution of the estate.
(McCully
v.
Cooper,
Appellant’s claim that the order settling the account is erroneоus in approving the commingling of Kansas assets which have retained their character as realty with California assets, and that the decree is erroneous in distributing such Kansas assets to respondent, is well taken on the record. The general rule is that disposition of the proceeds of real estate which retain the character of that kind of property is governed by the
lex loci rei sitae.
(34 C.J.S. 1255, § 1005.) Whether an interest in a tangible thing is classified as real or personal property is determined by the law of the state where the thing is. (Rest., Conflict of Laws, § 208.)
In re Randolph’s Estate,
The Randolph case is of direct application to the case at bar. As noted, the executrix has received oil royalties from the Kansas administration derived from Kansas realty which are presumably realty. Notwithstanding appellant’s objection to the final account on the ground it was impossible to determine therefrom which of the receipts were from royalties from realty in Kansas and to the petition for distribution on the ground it did not ask that half the receipts from such royalties be distributed to appellаnt, the court did not compel the executrix to so account and apparently distributed all of such royalties to respondent. When appellant elected to take against the will in Kansas he became entitled to a half interest in such royalties unless the Kansas court determines that his election is ineffective. Such royalties do not lose their character as realty by transmission from the ancillary tо the domiciliary administration. They should be accounted for in detail and half thereof held and distributed to appellant on determination of the effectiveness of his election in Kansas, after deduction therefrom of their proportionate share of properly deductible expenses.
(Estate of Hills,
The will bequeathed to appellant a television set, a gas range, a Frigidaire, a bedroom set, a rug, 2 beds, a lamp, a chest, a set of dishes, all appraised at $425; an accordion appraised at $600, an accordion appraised at $50, a record player appraised at $25, and a toaster appraised at $3.00. Very shortly after the will was admitted to probate and respondent had been appointed executrix, appellant asked her if he might take the accordions, the record player, and the toaster and have the use of them, since he was getting them under the will. She said, “OK” and he took them. The inventory and appraisement, filed many months after appellant received these items, lists them as assets of the estate. In his objections to the petition for distribution, appellant stated he was holding the items for the executrix. At the hearing he offered to return them to the executrix at any time she named and disclaimed any interest in them. Respondent claims the taking of the accordions, record player, and toaster constituted an election to take under the will.
To constitute an election
in pais
to take under a will, the acts done must be plain and unequivocal and with full knowledge of the legal rights of the surviving spouse under both the law and the will and of the condition of the estate; it must be a deliberate and intelligent choice. The acts done must clearly evidence an intent to elect, and the party must have so dealt with the property left him by the will that it would be inequitable to permit him to avoid those acts and disclaim his intent.
(Cook
v.
Cook,
There was no evidence that appellant elected to take under the will. There was no showing that he knew that by taking the few items of personal property he thereby elected to take under the will. There was no evidence he had any knowledge of the condition of the estate in either California or Kansas. There was no proof that he knew he could elect to take against the will in Kansas and that if he did so he could not take under it in California. In short, there was no proof that he had any knowledge of his legal rights in either Kansas or California. He did not deal with the property so thаt it would be inequitable to permit him to avoid his acts and disclaim his intent. On the contrary, it would be inequitable to compel him to retain the few items of nominal value and forego his rights under the law of Kansas.
Appellant did not offer or produce any evidence on his petition for renewal of the family allowance and he has not made any point with respect to it in his brief. He is deemed to have abandoned his aрpeal from the order denying a renewal.
The order denying a renewal of the family allowance is affirmed. The order settling the second and final account and the decree of distribution are reversed. Respondent shall bear appellant’s costs on appeal.
Shinn, P. J., and Wood (Parker), J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 5, 1956.
Notes
Also see
Tacoma Sav. & Loan Assn.
v.
Nadham,
Also see
In re Hoover’s Estate,
See
Owens
v.
Andrews,
