This is an appeal.from an order settling the final account of the executor of the will of Lorenzo De Santi, deceased, and involves the validity of that portion of the order directing the debts of the decedent and expenses of administration to be paid from the property specifically devised and bequeathed to persons not related by blood to the decedent, and that no part thereof be paid from the property
The will was holographic, and written in Italian. Translated, the pertinent parts thereof are as follows: “Article 2nd I give to Livio and Carolina Pardini my four lots No. 2, 3, 4 and 5 with my house and furniture which will be found on said lots in Block 5332. Article 3rd I give to Rinaldo and Emilia Bianchi my nephew and niece, my four lots No. 15, 16, 17 and 18 in Block 5332 all of which said lots will be found in my name on the register of the assessor of San Francisco, California. Article 4th All of the rest of my property I give in equal parts to my heirs according to the laws of succession of the State of California.” Livio and Carolina Pardini, the appellants herein, and Rinaldo Bianchi are not related by blood to the decedent. The latter is the husband of Emilia Bianchi, the decedent’s niece. The heirs of the decedent were his three daughters, namely Erminia Giorgi, Ida Lombardi, and Jennie Pellinacei, to whom the residue of the estate was bequeathed. The estate was appraised at $21,-193.76; the specific devise to appellants, consisting of decedent’s home and furniture, was valued at $3,050; the specific devise to Rinaldo Bianchi was valued at $300, and to Emilia Bianchi, $300. Hence a residue of $17,543.76 remained in the estate prior to the payment of debts and expenses of administration ; and the debts and expenses of administration amounted to $2,463.61. The probate court’s order was: “. . . that the sum of $2,463.61, the total disbursements and expenses in said estate, as set forth in said account, be and the same is hereby made charge above against the bequests and legacies of those devisees and legatees not related by blood to said decedent, namely: LIVIO PARDINI, CAROLINA PARDINI and RINALDO BIANCHI, and that no part of said sum be chargeable against the bequests and legacies to EMILIA BIANCHI, ERMINIA GIORGI, IDA LOMBARDI and/or EGIZIA PELLINACCI, also known as JENNIE PELLINACCI, the kindred of said decedent.” The foregoing order is not sustainable.
Section750 of the Probate Code provides: “If the testator makes provision by his will, or designates the estate to be appropriated, for the payment of his debts, the expenses of administration, or family allowance, they must be paid according to such provision or out of the estate thus appropriated, so far as the same is sufficient. If insufficient, that
Respondents concede that section 750 is controlling where all parties taking under a will are kindred of the testator or all are non-kindred; but they contend that where as here a portion of them are kindred and a portion non-kindred, section 752 governs and if so that the provisions thereof require that all debts and expenses of administration shall be charged first to the legacies of non-kindred, before resort may be had to any of the estates bequeathed to kindred. There is no merit in the contention. Section 752 as it read at the time the will was executed, and upon which respondents rely, was as follows: “Unless a different intention is expressed in the will, abatement takes place in any class only as between legacies of that class, and legacies to a spouse or to kindred are chargeable only after legacies to persons not related to the testator. ’ ’ (Italics ours.) Assuming, as respondents contend, that the provisions of said section 752 apply to the payment of the debts of the estate and expenses of administration, as well as to abatement of legacies, it is clear that the plan of abatement provided for therein takes place with a preference to kindred only as between the legacies of the same class, as those classes are listed in section 161 of the Probate Code, namely, specific,
The foregoing view finds support in the decisions rendered in Estate of Wever, 12 Cal. App. (2d) 237 [55 P. (2d) 279], and Estate of Apple, 66 Cal. 432 [6 Pac. 7]. While the precise questions presented in those cases were not the same as the one here involved, the language used therein in interpret' ing the code sections now under consideration and their predecessors is pertinent to the situation here presented, and doubtless sustains appellants’ contention that as to the payment of debts and expenses preference to relatives takes place only as between legatees of the same class. For instance, in the Estate of Wever, the court said: “Beading the sections as a whole, the reasonable interpretation is this: Section 750 mjakes all property of the estate liable for debts, expenses of administration, and family allowance, with the single exception of property covered by specific devises and legacies under certain conditions. The order in which the property is to be resorted to for that purpose is clearly defined, and no devise or legacy is exempt except as noted. . . . The reasonable interpretation of this section [752] is that abatement takes place equally between all legatees of a certain class and cannot apply to one only of one class and one of another. The ‘class’ mentioned in this section is any one of the five kinds of legacies stated and defined ‘according to their nature’ in section 161 of the Probate Code. . . . The obvious intention of the sections is that, ‘unless a different intention is expressed in the will,’ legacies to spouse and kindred shall be preferred over other legacies of the same class when the property is insufficient to pay all such legacies in full, but that all property of the estate shall be liable for the debts, expenses of administration and family allowance, with the single exception of the specific legacies and devises mentioned in section 750.” In the Estate of Apple, in referring to former section 1361 of the Civil Code, which with section 1362 was the predecessor of section 752 of the Probate Code, it was
It is our conclusion, therefore, that the provisions of section 750 alone are here controlling, and that accordingly the property bequeathed to the residuary legatees is liable for the payment of the debts of the decedent and the expenses of administration. The order appealed from is therefore reversed, with directions to revise and re-enter the same in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Peters, P. J., and Ward, J., concurred.