This is an appeal from an order directing the payment out of the funds of the estate of a commission to a real estate broker engaged by a commissioner on partition of real and personal property of the estate. A sale for the purpose of partition was ordered by the court in due form and, acting under a special order of the court, the commissioner engaged the real estate broker to find a purchaser for the property. Through the aid of this broker the commissioner offered for confirmation a sale of the property for seventy thousand dollars, but at the time of the hearing certain heirs of the estate procured a bid of seventy-seven thousand dollars and this offer was confirmed by the court. The matter of the payment of the broker's commission was continued for hearing to a day subsequent to the order of confirmation and in a special order, made September 24, 1921, the court directed the payment of three thousand five hundred dollars to the broker. It is from this order that the appeal is taken.
[1] Respondent insists that the order is not appealable. The question seems to have been settled by the order of the supreme court in denying a rehearing in Estate of Seng, 52 Cal.App. 149, 152 [198 P. 809, 810]. In that case the appeal was from a similar order which we are informed is *Page 476 peculiar to the superior court of Santa Clara County, and which, as here, bestowed a bounty upon a real estate broker who procured an unsuccessful bidder. The appeal was taken by the broker who procured the successful bidder complaining of the award made to the broker who was unsuccessful. The appellate court of the first division of this district dismissed the appeal on the ground that the appellant was not aggrieved by the allowance made to the other broker.
In denying a transfer to the supreme court the latter court said: "We are satisfied that the order appealed from is not an appealable order. In probate proceedings appeals lie only as prescribed by our statutes, and an order of the character here involved is not among those specified as appealable. The appeal, therefore, was properly dismissed by the district court of appeal. Our denial of the petition is, of course, not to be taken as indicating any view on our part as to the correctness of the practice of the trial court in the matter of the fixing and apportionment of commissions of real estate agents under section 1559 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or as to the allowance thereunder of a commission to an agent on account of a purchaser to whom the sale is not confirmed."
[2] Appellants insist that their appeal differs from the Seng case because the order here under consideration is in effect an order "directing the distribution or partition" of a part of the estate within the meaning of section 963, subdivision 3, of the Code of Civil Procedure, designating the orders in probate from which an appeal may be taken. [3] We are satisfied that these words are used in the section in their ordinary sense referring to distribution or partition to the heirs and those entitled to share in the estate and that they do not refer to the payment of claims or charges against the estate for services rendered in the course of probate.
Appeal dismissed.
Langdon, P. J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred. *Page 477