Estate of Lufkin
Before: Smith
Synopsis
The facts are stated in the opinion.
[292]
SMITH, C.
Appeal from order making allowance to widow "of deceased of forty dollars per month for maintenance pending administration.
The application was contested by the daughters, and the children of a deceased son of a former marriage. The grounds of opposition were: 1. That the widow had separate property sufficient for her maintenance;
2.
That there was no property in the estate from which the allowance could be paid; and 3. That under the will of the deceased she was put to her election between her right to family allowance, and the legacy bequeathed her.
The estate consists of a note and mortgage of the value of between seven thousand and eight thousand dollars, held by the California State Bank as security for an indebtedness of the deceased amounting at the date of hearing to two thousand five hundred dollars. The widow, it appears, has property of her own amounting to something over three thousand dollars, consisting of sixteen hundred and twenty-one dollars in bank and the balance in solvent promissory notes, and she has also the interest for life on two thousand dollars—her income being two hundred and four dollars and seventy-three cents per annum.
With regard to the first point, this court cannot say that the separate property of the widow was sufficient for her maintenance. Her can it entertain the question whether it was the duty of the court below to consider the separate property of the widow in fixing her allowance; for there is nothing in the record to show whether it did consider it or not. Hor— whether it did or did not consider it—this court cannot say that the allowance was not reasonable, or that it was more than was necessary for the maintenance of the widow. By the provisions of section 1466 of the Code of Civil Procedure the function of determining those questions is vested in the lower court, and from the nature of the case must rest largely in the discretion of the court. With that discretion, if not exercised on erroneous principles, we cannot, unless in extreme cases, interfere. The only point to be considered, therefore, is as to the construction of the will.
[293]
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