Cunningham v. Eaton
Before: McFarland
Synopsis
MOTION to dismiss appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Contra Costa County denying a petition to revoke the probate of the will of a deceased person. Joseph P. Jones, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
McFARLAND, J.
This case is before us on a motion to dismiss the appeal. The appeal is from a judgment or order of the superior court sitting in probate, entered on the fourth day of March, 1899, denying the petition of appellants that the probate of the will of the deceased be revoked. The motion to dismiss is based on several grounds, and, among others, that the order attempted to be appealed from is not appealable because not one of the “probate matters” with respect to which an appeal is provided by the third subdivision of section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and, as the appeal must be dismissed on this ground, there is no need of considering the other grounds.
[312]
The third subdivision of section 963 does not provide for an appeal from a judgment or order refusing to revoke the probate of a will; and it was expressly held in
Estate of Hathaway,
111 Cal. 270, that there is no appeal from such order, the court there saying as follows: “Neither is that portion of the order striking out and dismissing the petition for the revocation of the probate the subject of an appeal. This court has appellate jurisdiction in such probate matters only as may be provided by law, and while section 963, subdivision 3, of the Code of' Civil Procedure authorizes an appeal from an order revoking the probate of a will, it does not authorize an appeal from an order denying the revocation of the probate of a will, or from an order dismissing the petition therefor.” (Citing cases.) Counsel for appellants say in the brief, generally, that section 963 has been amended since the decision in the Hathaway ease by an amendment passed in 1897. (Stats. 1897, p. 209.) But there is no statement of any particular in which the section was amended, and upon examination of the amendment we find nothing in it affecting the question here involved. The same rule was declared in a number of other cases. (See
In re Ohm,
82 Cal. 162;
In re Smith,
98 Cal. 639;
In re Walkerly,
94 Cal. 352;
In re Sbarboro,
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