Tymms v. Title Insurance & Trust Co.

247 P. 1091 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926

On November 27, 1923, the probate court entered its order of partial distribution to one Shersby, distributing to him certain real property in Los Angeles County and $8,487.82 in cash, all belonging to the estate of Ernest A. Tymms, deceased. On May 22, 1924, the father, brothers, and sisters of the deceased served and filed their motion to vacate said order of distribution. This motion was noticed for May 27, 1924, and after several continuances upon agreement of the parties was finally heard and denied by the probate court on November 25, 1924. The moving parties in *81 this motion, representing themselves as heirs at law of the deceased, have appealed from the order denying their motion to vacate said order of partial distribution. The appeal is presented upon the judgment-roll and a bill of exceptions.

The grounds of the motion to vacate as stated in the notice of motion are that the deceased died on March 4, 1923, leaving a last will and testament and a codicil thereto; that said will has not been admitted to probate, but that the codicil thereto was admitted and letters testamentary thereon were issued by the probate court of the county of Los Angeles; that in and by said codicil there was bequeathed to the respondent Shersby "all property of whatever nature belonging to the deceased, situate in the State of California, at the time of the death of said Ernest A. Tymms"; that at the time of said death the only property belonging to the deceased and situated in this state was certain real property in the county of Los Angeles and that no part of said sum of $8,487.82 was situated in this state at that time. Five affidavits were attached to the notice of motion, one executed by one of appellants' counsel who deposed that he had been informed by the executor of the estate that under date of January 31, 1923, the Perpetual Trustee Company of Australia sent to the deceased a draft dated at Sydney, Australia, January 21, 1923, and drawn on the First National Bank of Los Angeles by the Union Bank of Australia, and that on February 14, 1923, a similar draft, though for a smaller sum, was sent to the deceased; that from information obtained from other sources neither of said drafts was in California prior to the twelfth day of March, 1923. The information upon which the affiant relied regarding the receipt of the drafts is found in the other affidavits attached to the notice, three of which were executed by officials of certain steamship lines and gave the sailing dates of the mail-carrying steamers running between Sydney, Australia, and San Francisco or Vancouver, B.C., during the months of January, February, and March, 1923. The other affidavit was executed by James E. Power, the postmaster at San Francisco, and gave the date of departure and arrival of the mail-carrying steamers of these same steamship companies and stated that those companies were the only ones operating boats carrying mail between Sydney, Australia, and Vancouver, *82 B.C., and San Francisco during the period from January 23 to March 29, 1923.

At the hearing of the motion to vacate all these affidavits were offered in evidence, together with the petition for probate of codicil to will, the decree admitting said codicil to probate, letters testamentary, the first inventory of the estate filed on May 21, 1923, the second inventory filed on October 17, 1923, and the petition, notice of hearing, and order for partial distribution. No other evidence tending to prove that the money was not situated in the state of California at the death of the deceased was offered by the moving parties and no evidence was offered by the respondent. Upon this showing the motion to vacate the order of partial distribution was denied and the propriety of this action is the question which is now presented on this appeal.

[1] At the outset respondent insists that the appellants have wholly failed to bring themselves within the provisions of section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in order to entitle them to the extraordinary relief which is permitted by that section. In this connection it is argued that the order for final distribution, being an appealable order, became final and conclusive in the absence of an appeal after the time for an appeal therefrom had expired and that the only method of setting it aside was by motion based upon the grounds of mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect within the terms of section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That such is the rule there is of course no ground for argument. The section of the code expressly so provides and the language is so plain and unmistakable that no judicial interpretation is necessary. The rule has been followed on numerous occasions by the supreme court and the appellate courts and is expressly emphasized in theEstate of Nolan, 145 Cal. 559, 562 [79 P. 428], where an attempt to annul an order of family allowance to the widow was denied.

[2] Here the motion was made solely upon the ground that the personal property distributed to Shersby was not situated in the state of California at the time of the death of deceased. The petition for partial distribution alleged that this money was subject to distribution to the petitioner within the terms of the codicil of the will and the second inventory filed by the executor disclosed that the money was *83 then in the possession of the executor received by it on April 13, 1923, but it did not disclose when the money had come into the state of California. However, the probate court did, after a hearing of evidence, grant the petition and this was in effect a finding that the money was situated in this state at the time of the death of the deceased and therefore subject to distribution under the codicil of the will. The attack which appellants have made upon that order is nothing more than a claim that the probate court committed error therein. The order was valid upon its face and no question of mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect is involved. Such an attack should have been made by an appeal from the order and this not having been done the order became final and conclusive, subject only to an attack upon a showing of the grounds specified in section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure. (Estate of Leonis, 138 Cal. 194, 200 [71 P. 171].)

[3] Upon the foregoing ground alone the order appealed from must be affirmed, but it is appropriate to say, in addition thereto, that we have carefully examined the entire record on the merits of the motion. The moving parties made the showing that the money had been requested by the deceased some time prior to his death and that drafts had been drawn on January 31, 1923, a little more than one month prior to the death. The sailing dates of certain mail-carrying steamers from Sydney to San Francisco and Vancouver were also shown, but it was not shown that the draft could not have reached California over some other line and through some other port and there was no attempt to show when the money was actually received by the bank in Los Angeles which turned it over to the executor after the decedent's death. Upon the showing which was made we cannot say that the probate court committed error in finding that this money was subject to distribution under the codicil to the will.

Order appealed from affirmed.

Langdon, P.J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred. *84

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