Clary v. Clary
Before: Fleet
Synopsis
Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Alameda County ordering an administrator to account, and from an order refusing to settle a bill of exceptions. W. E. Greene, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Van Fleet, J. The administrator, upon distribution, took the share of the estate (consisting of moneys), distributed to an heir, and appropriated and used it in his own business through a series of years, concealing from the heir, a minor residing in his household, any knowledge that there was anything coming to her from the estate.
In due time, after arriving at the age of majority and discovering her rights, the heir applied to the probate court, the administrator not having been discharged of his trust, to require the latter to pay over to her such distributive share, with interest.
The court ordered the administrator to pay over the amount, with legal interest from the date of its appropriation, compounded annually.
From this order, and an order refusing to settle a bill of exceptions, the administrator appeals.
[294]There is nothing in the point that the probate court lost jurisdiction in the premises upon the entry of the decree of distribution, and that the only remedy of the heir was by civil action against the administrator. Jurisdiction by the probate court over an administrator or executor does not cease until his final discharge (McCrea v. Haraszthy, 51 Cal. 146; Dohs v. Dohs, 60 Cal. 255; Ex parte Smith, 53 Cal. 204); and it is only after the payment and delivery of all the property of the estate to those entitled, and production of satisfactory proof of the fact, that he is entitled to his final discharge. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1697.) Until such final discharge, the probate court retains jurisdiction, not alone of the administrator, but of the property of the estate in his hands, and may compel the proper disposition of the latter, in accordance with it's decree, by punishing the delinquent trustee, if necessary, as for contempt. (Ex parte Smith, supra; Wheeler v. Bolton, 54 Cal. 302.)
It is urged, however, that, even if the court could require the delivery of the property distributed, that this power is limited to the specific property or amount awarded by the decree, and that the court is without authority to take an accounting or award interest according to equitable principles, as that can only be done in an action for an accounting. This position is not tenable. Jurisdiction being conceded for the one purpose, it followá necessarily for the other. The awarding of the interest is but an incident to the right to award the principal; and proceeding, as it does, in accordance with the principles of equity (In re Moore, 96 Cal. 522; Estate of Clos, 110 Cal. 494), the probate court must be held to have jurisdiction to afford complete and adequate relief in the premises, since equity does nothing piecemeal. (See Hyland v. Baxter, 98 N. Y. 610; Verdier v. Roach, 96 Cal. 478.)
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