60 P. 664 | Cal. | 1900
Ejectment. May 4, 1866, Theodore Wheadon resided with his family upon the land described in the complaint, and filed a declaratory statement with the land department of the United States for its pre-emption. January 26, 1869, he filed with the county recorder a declaration of homestead upon the land, which in form complied with the laws of this state. March 14, 1871, he died, leaving as his heirs at law his widow and three children, without having received a patent for the land, and without having made any payment therefor other than the fees for filing his declaratory statement. March 30, 1871, his widow was appointed administratrix of his estate, and on April 3d filed an inventory thereof, including these premises, which were appraised at seven hundred and fifty dollars, but making no mention of any claim of homestead thereon. November 5, 1886, the superior court made a decree of distribution of his estate, by which one-half thereof was allotted to the widow and one-sixth to each of his children, of whom the defendant and appellant is one.
After his death his widow applied for the issuance of a patent on said pre-emption claim, under the provisions of section 2269 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and made payment for the land, and did whatever else was required under the statute, or by the officers of the government, and on April 1, 1874, a patent was issued by the United States to the "heirs of Theodore Wheadon, deceased." March 20, 1896, Isabell Wheadon, the widow, and George T. Wheadon, one of the children of Theodore, made a conveyance of the premises by deed of bargain and sale to plaintiff. The plaintiff thereupon brought this action to recover the possession of the land from the defendant. Judgment was rendered in his favor, and, a new trial having been denied, the defendant has appealed from this order. *152
By filing his declaratory statement Theodore Wheadon acquired the privilege of making payment for the land and receiving a patent therefor from the United States in preference to any other applicant, but no estate in the land was acquired or right thereto vested in him, unless and until the amount of the purchase money was paid. (Hutton v. Frisbie,
As the land was no part of the estate of Theodore Wheadon, it was not subject to the probate jurisdiction of the superior court, and is not affected by the decree of distribution of his estate subsequently made by that court. Neither is the title which inures to the heirs by the patent affected by the declaration of homestead filed by him. At the time it was filed and recorded he had no estate, legal or equitable, in *153 the land, but merely a privilege which terminated at his death. The title conveyed to the heirs by the patent is not the perfecting of a title which was inchoate in him at the time of his death, but the patent is a new and independent source of title which was never affected by his declaration of homestead. The right of the widow to apply for the patent was given to her, not as a survivor of the community, but as an heir of the deceased, and the application, whether made by her alone or by all of the heirs, was required to be made in favor of all of the heirs of the deceased, and by the terms of the section the patent inured to such heirs "as if their names had been specially mentioned." In Elliott v. Figg, supra, it was held the administrator was not entitled to complete an entry which had been initiated by his intestate in the absence of a showing that his intestate had left any heirs. In Rogers v. Clemmans, supra, the administrator paid for the land out of the estate of the decedent and received a patent to the "heirs" of the deceased, without mentioning their names, and afterward, under an order of the court, sold the land in payment of the debts of the estate and costs of administration. It was held that the purchaser acquired no title against that of the heirs.
For the purpose of determining who are the heirs of the deceased resort is to be had to the laws of the state under which the descent is cast. (Caldwell v. Miller, supra.) "The heirs of a person are those whom the law appoints to succeed to his estate in case he dies without disposing of it by will." (Hochstein v.Berghauser,
The order is reversed.
Garoutte, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred. *154