77 F.2d 58 | 9th Cir. | 1935
Josephine Phelps Putnam, a daughter of William Howe Phelps, deceased, and a bene
Jurisdiction of the federal court is predicated upon the theory of extrinsic fraud in obtaining an alleged erroneous order of the state superior court by appellee as executor in settling its first account current. The inquiry then is: Do the facts presented by the bill present a case of extrinsic fraud within the' rule conferring jurisdiction of the federal court of the subject-matter involved ? The relief prayed for in the bill relates to the probate administration of the estate of William Howe Phelps, and asks that the order of the state superior court of December 22, 1930, settling the first account current of the executor be held for naught; that appellee be required to make its account current and report ab initio and de novo; that the court review the entire proceeding and the administration of appellee as executor ab initio, that it be required to account to appellant for all its acts and conduct in the management of the estate’s property; that appellee restore and pay to the estate what shall appear upon the taking of the account to be due from it to the estate, and pay into the estate the amount of the Handley note for $1,750, and cancel its mortgage note for $27,500; to restore secret payments made unto Kirsch and Griffiths and account for its profits, if any, by it made on the sums alleged to have been embezzled and make such other restitutions as upon the taking of the account and discovery of other losses, if any, shall appear; to find damages which the estate has suffered by unlawful augmentations, and that the estate recover from appellee $100,000 damages and its account be surcharged therewith and appellee be enjoined and restrained from proceeding in the probate court on its second account current and for general relief.
The bill is voluminous and generally it is averred that William H. Phelps died August 14, 1927, in Los Angeles, of which he was a resident and left surviving him, his widow Laura B. Phelps, two minor sons and two minor daughters and plaintiff born June 23, 1908, and that he left in California, subject to his testamentary disposition, estate consisting of real and personal property. In his will he bequeathed a cash legacy to his widow of $5,000 and all his personal household furniture and furnishings, diamonds, and keepsakes and the remainder of his estate to appellee in trust, for the use and benefit of his widow and children in the proportions and subject to the terms set forth in the will. On September 13, 1927, appellee was appointed executor of the estate. In its petition for letters testamentary it estimated the total value of the estate at $541,981, with an estimated monthly income of $1,764.10, and described as property belonging to the estate, real estate which in truth belonged separately to appellant’s mother and placed a value thereon of $281,500 and an estimated monthly income of $900 therefrom; that appellee’s officers thereafter discovered that property listed in its petition did include property belonging to appellant’s mother and thereupon by fraud and misrepresentation procured appellant’s mother to deed and assign to the heirs and devisees of William H. Phelps, subject to the administration of the estate, said separate real properties, and a trust deed note of the value of $2,750 belonging to appellant’s mother; that the proceedings in the administration of the estate were based upon the unlawful augmentation thereof by inclusion of property of appellant’s mother; that the mother of the appellant was incompetent to exercise independent judgment or transact any business by reason of her deaf mute condition and lack of business experience and therefore was subject to the control and influence of the appellee; that appellee, occupying a fiduciary relation toward appellant’s mother as executor and trustee under the will, falsely represented to her that in order to take according to the terms of the will, she should and must waive her rights and quitclaim her interest to the properties to the heirs and devisees of her husband; that appellee, when it made the false representations, intended to augment its ordinary and extraordinary fees as executor to which it would have been entitled to the extent that the values of the property sought to be quit-claimed and to increase the amounts which appellee could charge for its services; that to gather within the corpus of the estate properties of the appellant’s mother would, in effect, add to the security of a $27,500
Numerous conclusions of law, most of which are erroneous, are stated in the bill and we must look to those allegations of fact in determining the principal question as to whether appellee was guilty of extrinsic fraud which would warrant a court of equity in reopening the first account in spite of the final order of the superior court in settling the same. The controlling principle is that where the conduct of an executor or trustee in a probate proceeding is challenged in the absence of extrinsic fraud of a material character, the decree or order settling the account of an executor made by a probate court having jurisdiction constitutes an adjudication in rem and is binding upon the world. There is no suggestion in the bill that the state superior court did not have jurisdiction when in settling the first account and proceeding further with the administration of the estate. The bill avers that the first account current was settled by the state superior court, and that court, when in doing so, was entitled to jurisdiction for that purpose.
An analysis of the bill and reference to the prayer shows that the relief appellant is seeking relates to probate matters over which the state superior court has exclusive jurisdiction in the absence of extrinsic fraud. In the first account current which was settled by the court, and which appellant seeks to reopen, the transfer of the joint tenancy property to the estate and its acceptance thereof was reported to the court and included in the inventory of the estate which was filed in the superior court, and that inventory showed the estate to be of the appraised value of $419,369.85 and was the sum that appellee accounted for in its first account current. Large sums were paid out by appellee, as executor, from the estate for the care and maintenance of the separate properties; the superior court then had actual knowledge of the separate properties of appellant’s mother and the sums paid out for taxes and its care, and therefore no fraud was perpetrated on the court or those interested in the estate. When these properties became a part of the assets of the estate, which the executor was authorized to accept, he was required’ to conserve them. Schade v. Stewart, 205 Cal. 658, 272 P. 567. The payment of taxes and care of the joint tenancy properties by the executor was approved by the superior court sitting in probate who had power to determine that when it approved it in its order settling the first account current. Estate of
Appellant was born on June 23, 1908, and attained the age of eighteen years on June 23, 1926, and under the laws of California, then existing, she became an adult. Civ. Code, § 25. The amendment of 1927 (St. 1927, p. 1119) raised the majority of females to twenty-one years, but did not change the status of appellant, who had already reached the age of majority under the former law, as there is no clearly expressed intention in the amendment that it should be retroactive. Kendall v. Kendall, 122 Cal. App. 397, 10 P. (2d) 131; Smith v. Smith, 104 Kan. 629, 180 P. 231. However, the court on November 8, 1927, appointed appellant’s mother as her guardian.
The present action is not one separate and apart from probate administration of the estate or declaring a distributive share in the estate, but is one to determine whether the executor had properly managed the estate and properly paid out the funds in the administration thereof, and for the probate accounting of an account already settled by the superior court and not an accounting to determine the legatee’s distributive share of the estate. The probating of the estate is still pending in the superior court, and the same has not been distributed, and the facts pleaded in the bill being insufficient to constitute extrinsic fraud, appellee, the executor, should not be restrained from proceeding further in the superior court, as that court has exclusive jurisdiction to determine whether it should continue as such executor and complete the probating of the estate. Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana Bank & Trust Co., executor, 215 U. S. 33, 30 S. Ct. 10, 54 L. Ed. 80; Carstensen v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 27 F.(2d) 11 (9 C. C. A.); Freeman et al. v. Hopkins et al., 32 F.(2d) 756 (9 C. C. A.).
Affirmed.