52 Cal. 638 | Cal. | 1878
I. The Probate Court not being an inferior tribunal, the District Judge has no jurisdiction in the premises.. (Code Civil Procedure, secs. 98 and 1035 : Pond v. Pond, 10 Cal. 495.)
II. “ Mandamus lies to compel an inferior tribunal to perform a duty enjoined by law, if it refuses to do so.” (Lewis v. Barclay, 35 Cal. 213.) There is no law requiring the Probate Judge to set for hearing the account of a deceased executor. This point was settled in the case of Bush v. Lindsay, 44 Cal. 124.
HI. K Julius Wetzler had a claim against Eosanna Keenan’s estate he should have presented it to the administrator of that estate. If it had been rejected by him, he had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by suit in the proper Court. (Secs. 1493 to 1501, Code Civil Procedure.)
IV. The presentation of the account to the Probate Court, by Julius Wetzler, was an act of administration on the estate of Eosanna Keenan, deceased. If he can do one act of administration on that estate, as the executor of John C. Keenan, deceased, he can do all. “ No executor of an executor shall be authorized, as such, to administer on the estate of the first testator.” “ No person has any power as an executor until he qualifies.” (Sec. 1353, Civil Procedure; sec. 1373, Civil Code.)
Y. Before the Probate Court can legally set a day for the hearing of an account, it must first be satisfied that it has jurisdiction over the person who presents the account and the subject-matter ; therefore the action of the Court in refusing to fix a day for the settling of the account was a judicial act which
The petitioner alleges the order of the Probate Court to be erroneous, and asks the District Court to compel the Probate Judge to make a different order, thereby giving the District Court appellate powers, instead of appealing directly to this Court; for the order of the Probate Court, denying petitioner’s application, amounted to a rejection of his account, if it could be properly called an account.
George Cadwalader, for Bespondent.
I. The District Court has jurisdiction of a mandamus proceeding to compel the Judge of a Probate Court to perform a duty which pertains to his office. The constitutional organization of the District Court is such that it has the plenary jurisdiction of a common-law Court. It is not in any sense a Court of limited or inferior jurisdiction. As was well said by this Court in a case before it in which the question of jurisdiction was presented: “ The general power of supervision over inferior tribunals which pertains to the Court of King’s Bench in England, pertains to the District Court in this State.” (Milliken v. Huber, 21 Cal. 169.)
The Court of King’s Bench of England is the Court intrusted with the issuance of the writs of mandamus—the writ being used, as is sought in this case, for the purpose of setting in motion the machinery of inferior tribunals, and enforcing the due exercise of their judicial and ministerial powers. (3 Blackstone’s Com. 110 ; Selwyn’s Nisi Prius, 1077.)
The Probate Court is certainly of no higher character than the other Court held by the same Judge—the County Court.
But in a case where the District Court issued a mandamus to the County Court the jurisdiction was sustained. ( Carriaga v. Dryden, 29 Cal. 308.)
II. The account filed was not a claim which the law requires to be presented to the administrator for allowance. All the items of the account accrued after the death of Bosanna H.
The claims referred to in secs. 1490 to 1513, inclusive, Code of Civil Procedure, are such as accrued against the intestate in his lifetime, or resulted directly from contracts made or acts performed, or wrongfully omitted to be performed, during his lifetime. Gurnee v. Maloney, 38 Cal. 87.)
In DecFs Estate v. Gerlce, 6 Cal. 669, this Court says that the rule of presentation of accounts to the administrator “ applies only to such claims as were debts against the deceased, and not to the expenses incurred or disbursements made by the administrator in his management of the estate, which latter claims are conclusive only after having been allowed by the Probate Court upon settlement of the account after notice to the parties interested.”
The fact that John C. Keenan died before having his accounts as executor settled and allowed cannot by any possibility affect the case. If he had rightly expended moneys in the care, management, and settlement of the estate, or if his compensation as executor remained unpaid at the time .of his death, these claims against the estate would, after his death, be as valid as before, and would descend to his personal representative to be by him presented, the validity of each item proved, and the allowance of the account obtained from the Probate Court having jurisdiction of the estate.
III. The Probate Court has jurisdiction to set the account for hearing, and after notice given, to audit and allow so much of it as is proved to be just. The Court has jurisdiction “ to order the payment of debts due from estates.” (Sec. 97, sub. 9, Code Civ. Pro.) “ To make such orders as may be necessary to the exercise of the powers conferred upon it.” (Sub. 10, same section.) To appoint a day for the settlement of accounts presented. (Sec. 1633.) There is* no express power given by statute to settle the accounts of a deceased executor or administrator.
In this case we claim three things :
*643 First—That the debt due from the estate to the deceased executor was not paid by his death.
Second—That it is an asset in the hands of his executor or administrator.
Third—That it is not such a claim as is to be presented to the administrator de bonis non of the first estate for allowance; nor could the claim, if not allowed, be collected by suit in the District Court.
If the first executor or administrator of an estate has published notice to creditors, and the statutory time after publication has expired, no claims can be presented to or allowed by the administrator de bonis non, for all claims of the character of those required to be thus presented are either already presented and allowed, or barred by reason of non-presentation. These are claims accruing before the death of the decedent. (Sec. 1490 to 1513, Code Civil Procedure.)
But the claims here presented are of a different character. They accrued—all of them—after the death of the decedent, and most of them after the statutory time for proof of claims against the decedent had gone by.
They are claims against the estate, not against the deceased. They have no standing until allowed by the Probate Court after notice to all parties interested. (Deck’s Estate v. Gerke, 6 Cal. 435; Hope v. Jones, 24 Cal. 93; Gurnee v. Maloney, 38 Cal. 88.)
The Probate Court had no jurisdiction to receive, or in any way to act upon, the account presented by the petitioner as executor of John C. Keenan, deceased. (Bush v. Lindsey, 44 Cal. 121.)
It is not necessary to decide whether the Probate Court is an “inferior tribunal ” to which mandate may issue out of the District Court.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the action and proceeding.