Coppinger v. Rice
Coppinger v. Rice
Opinion of the Court
Action to recover an undivided half of a certain parcel of land situated in San Mateo County, being part of the Rancho Canada de Raymundo, which was granted to John Coppinger, plaintiff’s father, in 1840, by Juan B. Alvarado, then Governor of California, and confirmed and patented by the United States to the plaintiff and her mother in 1859.
The case shows that John Coppinger, from whom the plaintiff claims as heir, died intestate in February, 1847, leaving him surviving the plaintiff, Manuela and Maria Juana Antonia, who were his only children and heirs at law, and Maria Louisa, his widow. That the plaintiff was born in May, 1847, subsequent to her father’s death. That Maria Juana Antonia died intestate, in February, 1850, at the age of seven years, leaving her mother, Maria Louisa, her heir at law, who subsequently, in September, 1850, intermarried with John Greer. That before the commencement of this action Greer and wife conveyed their interest to one O’Callaghan, who conveyed to one M. T. O’Conner, now deceased, and that the land in question is now in the possession of the defendants as tenants of Maria O’Conner, administratrix of the said M. T. O’Conner.
The answer of the defendants further shows that in December, 1850, the Probate Court- of the County of San Francisco, upon the application of John Greer, undertook the settlément and distribution of the estate of John Coppinger, and appointed Greer administrator and also guardian of the plaintiff. That- in the due course of administration the premises were regularly sold by Greer to O’Callaghan, and subsequently, on confirmation, conveyed by the former as
To the matter in relation to the proceedings of the Probate Court and of Greer as guardian, the plaintiff* demurred on the ground that they were null and void for the want of jurisdiction in the Probate Court—John Coppinger having ' died in 1847, before the adoption of the Constitution of California, and the laws in relation to the settlement of the estates of deceased persons. The demurrer was sustained, and the ruling of the Court in that respect is made the principal topic of controversy here.
We agree with counsel for the respondent that it is too late to disturb the rule which was announced in Grimes v. Norris, 6 Cal. 624. That was the case of a testator who died in 1848, and the question was whether his will had to be probated under the laws of this State, and it was held in
The claim of the appellant, in this connection, that the probate sale, though void at the time it was made, has nevertheless been ratified and confirmed since by the Act of the 2d of April, 1866 (Statutes, p. 824,) is not tenable. That Act cannot be considered as having any application to estates which were never within the operation of our probate system. It must be interpreted by the light of that system and the judicial-interpretation which for years had been put upon it. It must therefore be understood as dealing only with the proceedings of the Probate Courts, so far as those proceedings have reference to estates within the operation of the probate laws as they then and had previously existed, and not with those which related to estates which had vested in the heirs or devisees under a former system, and over which those Courts never had any jurisdiction under the Constitution and laws by which they were created. Such being our view of the intent and object of the Act, we find it unnecessary, for the purposes of the present case, to inquire whether it is or is not repugnant to the Constitution.
We do not understand the defendants as claiming that the
So far as the defence rests upon the tax sale, it cannot be sustained. O’Conner was legally bound to pay the taxes. Such being the ease, he could not gain any advantage by allowing the land to be sold and buying it in himself, or by buying it from a stranger who bought at the sale. (Moss v. Shear, 25 Cal. 45.)
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MANUELA COPPINGER v. ARTEMUS W. RICE and WILLIAM H. FORD
- Cited By
- 16 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Probate Laws—To what Estates Applicable.—The estates of persons who died before the passage of the Probate Laws of this State, whether dying testate or intestate, and whether leaving adult or minor heirs, are not within the operation of said laws, but vested in the heirs or devisees under the Mexican law. Mexican Law of Descents.—Under the Mexican law, on the death of an intestate, the heirs succeeded immediately to the estate, and became personally responsible for the debts of the deceased j this rule applied equally whether the heirs were adults or minors, but no administration, in the common law sense, was needed or could be had at any time. Act of April 2d, 1866.—The Act passed April 2d, 1866, (Stats. 1866, p. 824,) has no application to the estates of persons dying before the adoption of our probate system. Tax Sales.—One whose duty it was to pay the taxes upon real property cannot gain an advantage, in respect to the title, by allowing the same to be sold for taxes and buying it in himself or by buying it from a stranger who bought it at the sale, (jl/oss v. Shearer, 25 Cal. 45, is cited as authority.)