In Re Estate of Espinosa
Before: Melvin
Synopsis
APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Monterey County appointing a guardian of the person and. estate of an incompetent person. J. A. Bardin, Judge. Affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
MELVIN, J.
Upon petition of his brother, Salvador Espinosa was adjudged incompetent, and George S. Gould, Jr., was appointed guardian of his person and estate. From the order and decree adjudging him incompetent Espinosa appeals.
There is neither a reporter’s transcript nor a bill of exceptions on file, the record consisting of the clerk’s transcript alone. In appellant’s brief appears a purported “Statement of the Case,” which we must ignore except where it finds support in the clerk’s transcript. Appellant makes three contentions in his brief. These are as follows: 1. The court failed to acquire jurisdiction of the matter. 2. There was no formal adjudication of incompetency. ' 3. The court abused its discretion in appointing Mr. Gould.
Under the first head appellant contends that service of the citation on February 23, 1918, did not give the court the right to hear the matter on the 28'th of the same month. Section 1763 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the alleged incompetent person must be given notice of the time and place of the hearing “not less than five days before” the appointed time. Appellant’s counsel assert the rule to be that where a statute requires an act to be done a given number of days
before
an event, the time must be reckoned by excluding the day of the act and the day of the event. Whatever may be the law in other jurisdictions it is settled in California adversely to appellant’s contention.
(Cosgriff
v.
Board of Election Commrs.,
151 Cal. 407, [91 Pac. 98].)
Appellant also denies the court’s jurisdiction because of the alleged insufficiency of the citation to inform him of the contents of the petition. The citation'designated a time and place for appellant to appear before the court “then and there to show cause ’ ’ why Manuel Espinosa, or some other fit and proper person, should not be appointed guardian of his person and estate, according to the “petition on file.” This was a sufficient compliance with section 1707 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that the citation shall contain “a brief statement of the nature of the proceeding.” But even if a more formal notice were required under our law, we
[191]
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