Egeline v. Hagelstein
Before: Goodell
GOODELL, J. pro tem.
This is an appeal from orders denying the petitions of Mazie Egeline for (a) a family
[369]
allowance, (b) the setting apart to her of a probate homestead, and (c) the setting apart to her of certain personal property exempt from execution.
The decedent, Robert E. Egeline, and the appellant, Mazie Egeline, had been married for some years. In 1937 he filed a complaint for divorce against her. They were already separated, and summons was served upon the wife by publication. She defaulted, and on April 5, 1938, an interlocutory judgment was awarded to the husband on the ground of her extreme cruelty from which no appeal was taken. On March 16, 1939, the husband died.
As in the
Estate of Ruiz,
just decided,
ante,
p. 363, [127 P. (2d) 945] the appellant is, of course, the decedent’s widow, and the record shows that she has no income except that produced by her own labor; she is therefore within the letter of sections 660 and 680 of the Probate Code.
In this case a property settlement agreement was entered into the day after the hearing of the case, wherein the community property therein inventoried (with the exception of certain articles of wearing apparel and of personal adornment assigned to the wife), was transferred to the husband as his separate property. This was followed by a deed from wife to husband quitclaiming the same property. The agreement expressly provided for a separation of the parties. The interlocutory judgment approved and confirmed the settlement.
The appellant states the two questions involved herein as follows:
“1. Does a property settlement in which no specific waiver of widow’s rights appear, forfeit the rights of the widow to a widow’s allowance, probate homestead, and the setting aside of exempt property?
“2.
Can a finding in a judgment in a divorce action, in which the defendant was served by publication, bind the defendant in a probate proceeding in which the defendant in the divorce action is the widow petitioning for a family allowance, setting aside the probate homestead, and the setting aside of exempt property?”
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