Wheeler v. Bolton
Wheeler v. Bolton
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered after an order sustaining a demurrer, the plaintiff electing not to amend.
The complaint alleges that one Carmen died testate, devising all the estate to plaintiff; that at the time of his decease he was the owner of, and seized and actually possessed, and in the actual occupancy of, a tract of land, described by metes and bounds; that the will of the testator, appointed defendant Bolton and one Adams executors; that the will was probated, and both the executors qualified and entered upon the discharge
Defendant demurred, on the grounds:
1st. This Court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action.
2nd. There is a defect of parties defendant, in that Adams should have been made a party.
3rd. The complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
4th. Waived.
5th. The cause of action is barred by §§ 336 and 343, Code of Civil Procedure.
The Court sustained the demurrer on the first, second, and
The defendant cites, in support of the judgment of the Court below, the opinion of this Com. in Reynolds v. Brumagim, January Session, 1880, and contends that plaintiff had her day in the Probate Court. That case, however, does not apply to this case, so far as it is presented on demurrer, except to hold that the judgment of the Probate Court was conclusive. The case presented by the complaint herein is entirely different from the case presented by Reynolds v. Brumagim. Here we have allegations of a decree that the executor was chargeable with the possession of real estate, a distribution of the estate to the devisee, a direction that the executor deliver the estate to the devisee, and that the executor, after demand, has neglected and refused to deliver the same. The complaint does not in any essential particular rest upon the averment that, at a time more than five years before commencing the proceedings for the account, the executor had violated his duty. The complaint can be sustained even if that clause were omitted. No motion to strike out was made.
Section 1666, Code of Civil Procedure, provides for the decree of distribution, and that the persons to whom distribution has been made may demand, sue for, and recover their respective shares from the executor or administrator, or any person having the same in possession. When a decree of distribution has been made, the Probate Court has no longer jurisdiction of the property distributed, unless to compel delivery (Ex parte Smith, 53 Cal. 204) ; and the distributee thenceforth has an action to recover his estate, or, in proper cases, its value. If an executor had possession of property, his duty is not ended until he has delivered the property in accordance with the decree, and not till then can he have his discharge. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1697.) If property was in his possession, and has been distributed by decree, he cannot shield himself from obeying the decree by saying that the Probate Court alone had jurisdiction. We arc, of course, considering this case as presented on demurrer to the complaint alone.
It is no objection that Adams was not joined. The allega
The action is not barred by the Statute of Limitations. The right of action is based on the decree of distribution of April 17th, 1876, and the complaint was filed August 6th, 1878.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to'the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco, with instructions to overrule the demurrer, with leave to defendant to answer.
Morrison, C. J., and Thornton, J., concurred.
Reference
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- Estates of Deceased Persons—Distribution—Action.—When a decree of . distribution has been made, the Probate Court has no longer jurisdiction of the property distributed, (unless to compel delivery) and the distributee thenceforth has an action to recover his estate, or, in proper cases, its value. Id.—Parties.—If one of two executors is absent from the State, the other can administer; and in such case, where one only has acted, and the decree of distribution refers to him alone, the absent executor is not a necessary party to an action against the.other by a distributee to recover his share of the estate. Id.—Statute of Limitations.—Action.—In an action brought by a distributee against an executor to recover the value of land allotted to the plaintiff under a decree of distribution, the complaint alleged that by the decree it was adjudged that the defendant came into possession of the land in question as executor, and was chargeable with the same, and that he be charged with it; but further alleged, in effect, that prior to the rendition of the decree the land had been lost to the estate through the negligence of the defendant, by an adverse possession of intruders for more than five years. Held, 1st, that the complaint stated a good cause of action; and 2ndly, that it did not rest upon the last-mentioned averment, but was based on the decree of distribution, and (being in due time after the decree) that the action was not barred.