Estate of Sanchez
Estate of Sanchez
Opinion
OPINION
The administrator of an estate operates a business owned by the decedent. Here we hold that the administrator's fees are calculated upon the net receipts, not the gross receipts of the business.
Philip A. Larry, administrator of the estate of Maria Luisa Sanchez, deceased, appeals an order of the probate court settling the third and final account and allowing compensation for ordinary and extraordinary services. We affirm.
On October 24, 1986, the probate court appointed Philip A. Larry as administrator of the estate, to act without court supervision under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. Larry operated the liquor store and restaurant without much financial success. Given the disagreements among the heirs, Larry's caretaking task proved daunting. In settling an early accounting, the probate judge stated that Larry was "somewhat too much of a `nice guy' in dealing with decedent's family." On April 18, 1988, the court authorized Larry to discontinue operating the businesses.
Soon after, the City of Oxnard condemned the real property upon which these businesses were situated through eminent domain. The probate court approved the compensation awards offered by the Oxnard Redevelopment Agency.
In a third and final accounting, Larry and his attorneys requested fees for their ordinary services to the estate, calculated in part upon the gross income of the liquor store and restaurant. The heirs resisted this request and contended that fees for ordinary services should be calculated upon the net income of the businesses (gross receipts minus operating expenses). The probate court, relying upon Estate of Reinhertz
(1947)
Larry appeals and contends he is entitled to fees based upon the gross receipts received by the liquor store and restaurant, without any offsets for expenses.
Larry relies upon the phrase "plus receipts" of subdivision (b) to argue the Legislature intended fees for ordinary services to rest upon the gross receipts of a business. He contends that legislative amendments to the Probate Code in 1965 changed the rule of Estate of Reinhertz, supra,
Reinhertz concerned executor's and attorney statutory fees based upon the value of an estate that included two apartment buildings. Reinhertz held: "The operation of an apartment house is not in the same class as the ordinary rental of real property and partakes more of the nature of the operation of a business. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . [T]he net and not the gross income is the proper basis for calculating the statutory fees." (Estate ofReinhertz, supra,
Eighteen years after Reinhartz, in 1965, the Legislature amended Probate Code former section 901 to add this provision: "The commission to which the executor or administrator is entitled pursuant to this section shall be based upon the total amount of the inventory plus gains over appraisal value *Page 243 on sales, plus receipts, less losses on sales, without reference to encumbrances. . . ." Sections 10800, subdivision (b), and 10810, subdivision (b), replaced section 901 in 1990 and use the same "plus receipts" language.
The 1965 amendment to former section 901 did not change the rule of Reinhertz. The amendment was directed to the inclusion of mortgages and liens upon real property to the estate base for purposes of calculating the administrator's and attorney fees for ordinary services. The 1990 Law Revision Commission Comment to section 10800 (replacing former section 901) stated: "Before 1965, the usual practice was to use gross value of real property to calculate the statutory fees unless the property was sold during probate, in which case only the decedent's equity in the property was used. Under the 1965 revision to former Probate Code Section 901 . . . gross value was used, whether or not a sale had taken place." Thus, the amendment pertains to the calculation of fees where encumbered real property is sold during probate.
Estate of Stein (1968)
In sum, the 1965 amendment to section 901 did not change theReinhertz rule because that amendment concerned valuation of real property, possible encumbrances thereon, and probate sales. We interpret this legislation to carry forth the obvious legislative intent regarding statutory probate fees and mortgaged real property. (Code Civ. Proc., §
The statutory fees of an administrator or estate attorney should derive from the net, not gross, receipts from continued operation of a decedent's business. (2 Cal. Decedent Estate Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1994) § 20.23, pp. 20-21; Ross, Cal. Practice Guide: Probate (The Rutter Group 1993) § 16:313, p. 16-82.) The courts have followed Reinhertz since 1947, despite *Page 244 the 1965 amendments to section 901 Larry's arguments are best directed to the Legislature.
Larry attempts to distinguish Reinhertz because here he acted with specific authority in managing the decedent's businesses.Reinhertz, however, did not expressly consider the executor's authority to act in stating its holding.
Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed. Larry shall bear costs on appeal.
Stone (S.J.), P.J., and Yegan, J., concurred.
Sections 10800 and 10810 now govern the computation of executor's and attorney fees as a fixed percentage of the estate assets on a scale graduated according to the value of the estate.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.