In re Estate of Lux

McFarland, J.

This is an appeal by tlie next of kin—called generally the German heirs—of Charles Lux, deceased, from an order of the court sitting in probate, made March 22, 1894, allowing Miranda W. Lux, widow of the deceased, for her maintenance $2,500 per month from the thirtieth day of August, 1888, during the progress of the settlement of the estate; and we are asked to reverse the order, upon the grounds that the allowance was for too large an amount, and that she was not entitled to any allowance at all.

We will not discuss at length the question whether the court below abused its discretion by making an allowance for too much. The estate was found by the court and admitted by counsel to be of the value of $10,000,000; and it was free from debt or encumbrance. It was nearly all community property, accumulated by the joint efforts of the spouses, one-half of which would go after settlement to the widow; so that, practically, she herself would pay one-half of the allowance. The evidence shows that the amount allowed was in keeping with the scale of expenditures existing before the death of the husband. The proposition that under these circumstances, and as against collateral kin and strangers, the court below so abused its discretion in allowing the sum named, that this court for that reason should set aside the order, has no foundation whatever in the law or the evidence.

Appellants contend that the court below did not take into consideration certain things which it should have considered. The things which it is contended were not considered are these: The deceased owned one piece of separate property consisting of land known as the Buri-Buri rancho; and by his will he gave to his wife, the respondent, during her lifetime, the rents, profit, and income of said rancho, and provided that “all income and interest derived therefrom shall be her sole and sepa*75rate property”; the remainder after her death to go to certain named collateral heirs. Now, it appeared from the evidence,that in July, 1890, there was a partial distribution of the said Buri-Buri rancho, by which her said life estate therein was distributed to respondent, and the remainder to certain other persons; and, at that time, or immediately afterward, she sold her life estate for $110,000, the other persons, heirs or devisees, getting for their share, $370,000. She had also received some rents from said rancho before the sale. All (substantially) of the community property of the deceased and respondent consisted in a one-half interest in the firm of Miller & Lux, who owned immensely large properties in lands, cattle, etc; and by a written contract between the deceased and Miller it was covenanted that, upon the death of either partner, the survivor should continue to carry on the business for the joint use of himself and the estate, heirs, and legatees of the deceased for seven years, if necessary, after the death of the deceased partner; and, in his will, the deceased requested his wife to» allow her share of the common property "to remain under the care and control of the surviving partner, Miller. The respondent complied with this expressed wish of her deceased husband, and allowed all her share of the community property to remain in the business of said firm under the management of Miller; and the said money which she received from the sale of said rancho. she immediately loaned to Miller, to be used in the firm business, although afterward she invested some of it in other property, and she received, although for what length of time does not appear, income from this money in the amount of $458 per month.

The will also gave her $500 per month “ out of my estate” during her life, and his trustees were directed to set apart so much of my estate as may be necessary to yield that sum for that purpose”; but no part of the estate was ever set apart for that purpose, and no part of said $500 per month was ever received by respondent.

There was also a provision in the said written con*76tract between Lux and Miller that so much of the “rents, issues, and profits, and proceeds of sales which may be necessary for the support of the family of the deceased” should be paid to such family;, but such rents, profits, etc., were put by Miller into the business, and none paid to respondent.

And these items above mentioned — particularly mone}'- received from the Buri-Buri rancho and the said $500—are the main matters which, it is contended, the court did not consider.

It does not clearly appear that the court did not consider these items. Findings were made by the court.; but it can hardly be said that they affirmatively show that in arriving at the conclusion that $2,500 per month was a proper allowance, the court did not consider the said items. However, there is in the transcript an “opinion” of the judge of the court below, in which, referring to a former appeal, he said: “Upon the former hearing this court took into consideration, in arriving at its conclusion, certain matters which, upon said appeal, the supreme court held should, not have been considered in fixing the family allowance, and, in the reversal of the order, indicated and pointed out the course this court should pursue in fixing the family allowance. At the first hearing, the value- of the estate was fixed at $4,000,000, while now it is placed at $10,000,000. In view of the evidence presented, and under the decision of the supreme court, an allowance,” etc. And it is contended that from this opinion it appears that the probate court erroneously construed the opinion of this court on the former appeal as holding that the said items should not be considered. But, in the first place, if this “ opinion” of the court below can be considered at all, it does not carry on its face the meaning sought to be given it. It expressly refers to, and, apparently, rests largely on, the fact that at the first hearing the estate was supposed to be worth $4,000,000, while now it is shown to be worth $10,000,000. And, in the second place, if the court below construed the *77decision of this court on the first appeal as contended, then it construed it correctly; for this court in that decision held that in fixing a proper allowance neither the Buri-Buri rancho nor said $500 mentioned in the will should be considered. The history oí that appeal is, briefly, as follows: Charles Lux died in March, 1887. On May 4, 1887, npon the application of the widow (respondent there) the court made an order granting her $2,500 per month from the death of the deceased “until the return of the inventory, or until further order of the court.” There was a difference of opinion as to when the “feturnof the inventory” legally took place, and, under the construction which the executors put upon said order, they continued to pay the respondent $2,500 per month until November 15,1891. It was held afterward, however, that the inventory was legally returned on August 30, 1888. On March 17, 1892, the respondent filed a petition for an order to be made nunc pro tunc as of the date of the return of the inventory (which she then took to be May 16, 1890) allowing her $2,500 per month during the progress of the settlement of the estate; to which petition appellants herein filed written objections. Upon the hearing of the issues thus raised, the court, on May 13, 1892, made an order allowing her $1,000 per month from August 30, 1888, until November 15, 1891. From such order respondent herein took an appeal, and that is the appeal hereinbefore referred to. It is reported in volume 100 of California Reports, commencing at page 593, under title of In re Lux. The order was reversed with certain directions to the court below. It was held that the order of allowance should have embraced the entire period of the settlement of the estate; but the respondents there (appellants here) contended that, as the widow had re-j ceived money from the Buri-Buri rancho amounting to $137,000, including rent and the sum for which her life estate therein had been sold, and had been given the $500 per month by the will, therefore she had sufficient means to support herself, and was not entitled to any *78further allowance, and it was in response to this contention that this court made rulings which are the law of the case. The evidence -and facts were the same on that hearing as on the second hearing, out of which this present appeal arose, except as to the fact of the partial distribution of the Buri-Buri rancho (which will be noticed hereafter), and the further fact that, at the second hearing the estate was shown to be vastly more valuable than at the first hearing. The financial situation and ability of the respondent was exactly the same at both hearings. Then, as now, the money which she had received from the said rancho, and the said provision*of the will, were before the court. And, under these circumstances, this court, on the former appeal, said: “The court below found that the property set apart to the widow is insufficient for her support, and also made additional findings to the effect that the deceased in his will bequeathed to her a legacy of $500 per month during her life, and a life estate in certain property, from the rents and sale of her interest in which she had received $137,000, and that the deceased also provided in his will, as well as by agreement with his partner, Miller, that said Miller should pay to her monthly such sum as might be needed for her súpport. It is claimed by respondents that these findings show that the widow has sufficient property of her own to support herself, and that under such circumstances she was not entitled to any allowance whatever from the estate, and, therefore, she cannot be heard to complain because the order appealed from does not continue the allowance during the administration of the estate; and in support of this proposition it is argued that the object of the statute is ‘to meet the actual wants and necessities of the widow and her family/ and that when, as in this case, the widow is childless and has abundant private means of her own, there are no wants or necessities to relieve, and the law does not contemplate that any allowance shall be made for her support. But however the rule maybe in other states, and there are decisions which seem to support *79this contention of respondents, we do not think section 1466 of the Code of Civil Procedure can be so construed. Its language is express and mandatory, and, in the lau- . guage of the counsel for appellant, ' the duty of maintaining the family, which the law imposes upon the deceased husband or father in his lifetime, is continued against his estate pending its administration,’ if the estate is not insolvent. It declares that the court must make a reasonable allowance out of the estate if the propert)' set apart to the family is insufficient for their support; and for the court to hold that no allowance shall be made to the widow if she has sufficient property of her own, although»the property set apart to her is insufficient of itself for her support, would be, in effect, an amendment of the law by judicial construction. There was nothing actually decided in Estate of Walkerley, 77 Cal. 643, in conflict with this conclusion, although it may be conceded that there are expressions in the opinion which, considered apart from the facts before the court, lend some support to the argument of respondents to this point.” And the court concluded its decision as follows: “The order appealed from will be reversed, and the superior court will, upon the evidence already before it, and such further evidence as the parties may desire to present, make an order for an allowance to the widow, to continue during the progress of the settlement of the estate, and in such amount as it shall deem reasonable, and without regard to the fact that she may have separate property sufficient for her support. Order reversed.” This language can receive no other construction than that the court below was to allow her a proper support out of the general estate, notwithstanding the special gift in her husband's will of the Buri-Buri rancho as “ her sole and separate property.” In the phrase at the close of the opinion, “without regard to the fact that she may have separate property sufficient for her support,” the word “separate ” was clearly used in the sense in which the deceased used it in his will—to denote, generally, property owned *80by a single individual, and not in the technical sense in which it is used in certain parts of the codes to distinguish, as between a living husband and wife, property owned by both jointly, called “community property,” from that owned by one of the spouses individually called “separate property.” Indeed, in this technical, statutory sense, the word “ separate” is hardly applicable at all to the property of a person at a time when he or she is single or unmarried. Moreover, the language of the court was directed to the facts of the case before it— to the contention that because respondent here received sufficient money from the Buri-Buri rancho to supplj7 her necessaries, therefore, she was not entitled to any allowance. Moreover, the record showed that the jespondeut had no other property than that derived from the Buri-Buri rancho to which the language of the court can be applied.

It is contended that there is a difference between the two appeals in this: that at the first hearing the -record did not affirmatively show that there had been a partial distribution of the Buri-Buri rancho property, while the record on this present appeal does show that fact. If that be so, we cannot see what possible difference it makes. The material point around which appellants’ contention revolves is that respondent received a certain amount of money from this particular Buri-Buri property sufficient to support her, and that therefore she is not entitled to further allowance; but the fact that she received this money appeared just as clearly and just as fully in the first record as in the present one. That being so, how would the situation have been substantially changed by the fact that a formal order of distribution had been made? But the truth is that the former decision was made with the understanding and upon the theory that the order of distribution had been made. When that appeal was pending there were also pending several other appeals growing out of Estate of Lux, which were intimately related to each other, and submitted at the same time, and decided on the same day. *81(See In re Lux, supra.) In one of these, at least — Miller v. Lux, 100 Cal. 609—the transcript showed this distribution. Whether or not the court in deciding one of these appeals had a right to look into the records in the others need not be discussed; because in the appeal we are now discussing—In re Lux, supra—counsel for respondents there (appellants here) stated affirmatively that the distribution had been made, and argued upon that basis. In their brief in that case, speaking of the petition for allowance, they say: “On the contrary, it shows that she has $110,000 derived from said estate through the sale of her life estate in the Buri-Buri rancho, theretofore distributed to her, from which she gets an income of $458.33 per month”; and again: “More than that, her testimony shows affirmatively that the petitioner was not then dependent upon the estate for support; that she had received $110,000 from the sale of her life estate in the Buri-Buri rancho (theretofore distributed to her).” (See Supreme Court Records, vol. 1165, pp. 13,15.) Under these circumstances there is nothing in the very technical point that the record in the former appeal did not show the distribution. (Of course, the contention, even if sound, would not apply to any period prior to the date of the distribution, which occurred in July, 1890.)

It appears by affidavit that since this appeal was taken the respondent has died, and the point is made by the appellants that the right died with her as to all the allowance not actually paid her before her death. The views of this court on the point were pretty fully indicated at the oral argument by conversations between, counsel and the chief justice. It is sufficient to say that, the order, like any money judgment, was the property of the respondent; the appeal merely suspended its operation; but upon its affirmance, if pending the appeal she has died, it goes to her heirs or personal representatives. Of course, there can be no allowance for any time subsequent to her death.

We see no other matters necessary to be discussed. *82On the former appeal this court said: “The amount of the allowance is a question which rests very largely in the discretion of the superior court, and its action in the matter will not be disturbed on appeal unless it clearly appears that the discretion has been improperly exercised. Of course, as was said in In re Stevens, 83 Cal. 325, 17 Am. St. Rep. 252: ‘The court is not restricted in making this allowance to a bare support to the widow. Regard should be had .... to the mode in which she lived during the lifetime of her husband.’ The allowance is to be sufficient to provide all the necessaries of life, and this will include all those things which are rea- ■ sonable and proper for use in the home and in social intercourse, in view of the condition and value of the estate and the station and surroundings of the family.” Tested by these views, the conclusion of the court below cannot be disturbed here, unless we travel beyond the legitimate province of an appellate court.

The order appealed from is affirmed.

'Itaboutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.