Estate of Moore
Estate of Moore
Opinion
Appeal from a judgment of final distribution under a will and codicil.
Appellant and respondent (herein Lois and Virginia, respectively) are sisters, daughters of the testatrix. Her husband, the parties' father, was Lutral E. Moore. The testatrix executed her will on July 11, 1953. The will appointed *Page 947 Lutral E. Moore her executor and instructed him to perform the conventional functions, including the payment of debts, expenses and taxes.
In the paragraph designated "SIXTH" in the 1953 will, the testatrix left her entire estate to Mr. Moore. In the event of his predecease, or of the deaths of both husband and wife within 90 days of each other and from a common calamity, the estate was to go to Lois and Virginia: $15,000 in value to Lois and the balance of the estate to be divided between her and Virginia in equal shares.
Lutral E. Moore died in 1957, the testatrix surviving him. On July 30, 1958, she executed a codicil reading as follows:
"Following the payment of all debts, expenses and taxes, as aforesaid, I do hereby give, devise and bequeath all of the rest, residue and remainder of my property, whether the same be real, personal or mixed, and wheresoever situated, of which I die possessed, unto my daughter VIRGINIA M. KWASKY. It is my request that my said daughter VIRGINIA M. KWASKY shall distribute such portion or portions of my estate which I have heretofore left to either my daughter LOIS VERYL SERPA and my grand-daughter LINDA SERPA, as in her opinion shall be reasonable and necessary.
"January 30, 1958.
"[Signature and attestation.]"
The testatrix died in 1962. The 1953 will and the 1958 codicil were admitted to probate. Virginia was appointed executrix and served as such while Lois, in other litigation not involved on this appeal, made several unsuccessful attacks upon the testamentary disposition purportedly made by the will and codicil. In due course, Virginia filed a petition for final distribution in which she alleged (1) that, under the will and codicil, all of the estate should be distributed to her, and (2) that as sole distributee she waived an accounting. Lois filed written objections to the petition, controverting these and other allegations by Virginia.
At the hearing upon Virginia's petition, the probate court heard evidence concerning her request that fees for extraordinary services be ordered paid to her as executrix and to her attorneys. No evidence was introduced or offered in aid of interpretation of the will or the codicil. The court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law in which it found, among other things, that Virginia was entitled to distribution of the entire estate and that, as its sole beneficiary, she had waived an accounting. Judgment of final distribution was entered accordingly.
Lois appeals from the judgment. Although her position on appeal is not wholly clear, it presents two questions: (1) whether she is entitled, under the will and codicil, to distribution of any of the estate and (2), if she is not, whether she is entitled to distribution of one-half of the estate as a pretermitted heir.
[1] The probate court interpreted the will and codicil contrary to Lois's position in both respects. Since the court did not resort to extrinsic evidence, we are not bound by its construction of the testamentary instruments. (Estate of Meyer
(1966)
[2] The first question turns upon the language of the last sentence of paragraph II of the codicil ("It is my request . . ."). Where such language follows an absolute devise or bequest — as it does here — the question for determination is whether the devisee or legatee is the beneficiary of the gift bestowed upon him, or merely a trustee for others. (Estate of Marti (1901)
The essential consideration is whether the testatrix intended to create a trust. (Estate of Marti, supra, 132 Cal. at pp. 668-669; Prob. Code, §
In the sentence in question ("It is my request . . .") the testatrix refers to a distribution, by Virginia, of "such portion or portions of my estate as I have heretofore left to either . . . Lois . . . and . . . Linda . . ." It is not at all clear whether Lois and Linda are intended to be the recipients of part of the property "heretofore" — i.e., by the preceding sentence of the codicil — left to Virginia, or whether Virginia is to distribute property which was "heretofore left to either . . . Lois . . . and . . . Linda . . ."1 The problem is compounded, as between Lois and Linda, by the use of the alternative "either" with the conjunctive "and." In short, if there is a dispositive provision in the sentence, it is wholly ambiguous. Such ambiguity of language tends to show in itself that the testatrix did not intend to create a trust. (Rest.2d Trusts, § 25, com. b.)
The sentence follows a sentence which purportedly makes an absolute devise and bequest to Virginia. [3] Where an absolute estate has been conveyed by a will, that estate will not be limited by subsequent words unless they indicate as clear an intention therefor as was shown by the words creating the estate. (Estate of Marti, supra, 132 Cal. at p. 672.) Section
[4] Words of request, recommendation and the like will be interpreted as mandatory when they are addressed to an executor, but only as a request — i.e., in their actual precatory *Page 950
sense — if addressed to a devisee. Where the language, as in the codicil before us, speaks to a person who is both executor and devisee, it will be construed as precatory if it addresses the person as a devisee. (Estate of Collias (1951)
In the Collias case, the person addressed was both executor and devisee. The will employed substantially similar, but relatively unambiguous, language in a similar context.2 The Supreme Court reviewed the Marti, Kearns and other decisions, and held that the language was to be construed as precatory, creating no trust. The Collias decision is controlling here. The probate court correctly distributed the entire estate to Virginia absolutely.
Lois next contends that, under our interpretation of the will and codicil, the testatrix omitted to provide for her (Lois). Lois therefore claims to be entitled to distribution of one-half of the estate as a pretermitted heir, under section 90 of the Probate Code.3 [5] But section 90 does not limit a testator's power to dispose of his property by will as he sees fit; its sole purpose is "`to guard against the unintentional omission of lineal descendants from a share in the decedent's estate, e.g., "by reason of oversight, accident, mistake or unexpected change of condition." [Citations.]'" (Estate ofLipovsky (1965)
[6] A testator may be said to have intentionally omitted his child, so that section 90 does not apply if it appears on the face of the will that he had the child in mind at the time of its execution, and having the child in mind he omitted to provide for him or her. (Estate of Torregano (1960)
As we have seen, Lois does not take under the will and codicil because the sentence which names her is precatory and creates no trust in her favor. It does, however, name her. Since the testatrix gives all her estate to Virginia while thus naming Lois, it appears that the omission to provide for Lois was intentional, and that she is not entitled to take as a pretermitted heir. (Estate of Sawyer, supra.)
[7a] Lois also challenges the probate court's distribution of the estate without an accounting, which Virginia, alleging herself to be the sole distributee, had waived. Lois asserts that an accounting by an executrix "cannot be waived without the consent of all parties concerned." Where the executrix who waives is the sole distributee, this contention cannot be sustained. It is not supported by the statutes cited by Lois as authority. (Prob. Code, §§ 920, 921 and 923) Waiver of an accounting by a sole distributee, or by all persons interested, is not of statutory origin, but is permitted by case law. (Middlecoff v.Superior Court (1906)
[8] If a sole distributee waives an accounting, the remedy of a disaffected "person interested in the estate" (Prob. Code, §
[7b] After a hearing at which Lois appeared through counsel and presented her objections to distribution as prayed by Virginia, the probate court found that Virginia alone was entitled to distribution. As we have seen, the court's action was based upon its correct interpretation of the will and codicil. Under the circumstances, and whether or not Lois then retained her status as a "person interested in the *Page 952
estate," she did not and cannot show that she would have benefited in any way from an accounting. Accordingly, the court did not abuse its discretion in not requiring the accounting which Virginia had waived. (Estate of McManus, supra,
The judgment of final distribution is affirmed.
Devine, P.J., and Christian, J., concurred.
"All the rest and residue of my estate, of every kind and description, and wherever situated, I give, devise and bequeath unto my nephew ARGIRIOS COLLIAS a resident of Long Beach, California at the time this instrument is signed. It is my desire and wish that my nephew Argirios Collias will give half of my estate to my nearest relative heir in Greece instructing him or her to distribute said half of my estate in equal shares to all my close relatives in Greece."
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.