Estate of Selditch
Before: Doran
91 Cal.App.2d 62 (1949) Estate of HERMAN SELDITCH, Deceased. CLARA FORTH, as Executrix, etc., Petitioner and Appellant,
v.
ANNIE LEVINE, Contestant and Appellant; BEN GOULD, as Guardian, etc., et al., Legatees and Appellants; NETTIE ROBBINS et al., Legatees and Respondents.
Civ. No. 16673. California Court of Appeals. Second Dist., Div. One.
Apr. 1, 1949. Ben Gould, in pro. per., and for Petitioner and Appellant.
Bachrack & Wilson and Ralph Wilson for Contestant and Appellant. [63]
DORAN, J.
Herman Selditch, a resident of Los Angeles County, died on August 15, 1946, at Mexico City. Thereafter, one Clara Forth, named as executor, petitioned for probate of two holographic documents written upon Western Union telegraph blanks, together with a typewritten will signed by decedent but attested by only one witness, the latter document being sometimes referred to as the "incomplete will." These documents were found in decedent's safe deposit box. The theory of the petition and of appellant is that the so-called "incomplete will" was entitled to probate by reason of its incorporation by reference in the holographic Western Union documents. The trial court refused to adopt this theory.
A contest to the probate of the above described documents was filed by Annie Levine, a sister of decedent, who would be entitled to succeed to a part of the estate under the California laws of succession. The trial court found that the Western Union holographic documents constituted the decedent's will but refused probate of the so-called "incomplete will" either by itself or as a part of the Western Union documents.
The petitioner, Clara Forth, has appealed from that portion of the judgment denying probate of the "incomplete will," and also from the trial court's denial of a continuance sought for the purpose of producing additional evidence. Annie Levine has appealed from that portion of the judgment granting probate to the holographic Western Union documents.
In the language of the trial court's findings, the so-called "incomplete will" found in the decedent's safe deposit box was, "a typewritten document bearing date of July 12, 1946, ... signed by the decedent and witnessed by one John W. Buzzell, and ... no other subscribing witnesses."
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