Court Opinion

ID: 5446445
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:11:33.715348+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:12.381821
License: Public Domain

Garotttte,
record in this case is in a condition of hopeless entanglement, but sufficient appears to require a reversal of the judgment. One Navarro was named as executor and made a devisee by the last will and testament of Catarina P. Whetton, deceased. He qualified as such executor and entered upon the discharge of his duties. James Whetton, husband of deceased, filed a contest asking for revocation of his letters testamentary, and that the will be declared null and void. A citation was issued to Navarro to show cause upon a certain day why his letters should not be revoked and the will set aside as void. Navarro appeared as executor, and filed a general demurrer to the petition.
What occurred subsequently to the foregoing events is not made plain by the record, but sufficient appears therefrom, aided by the light furnished from the briefs of respective counsel, to indicate that the court was of the opinion that the executor, as such, had no right to support and defend the will, and he was thereupon denied such right. This position is not well founded. When a will is attacked after probate, section 1327 of the Code of Civil Procedure makes the executor a necessary party to the proceeding, and requires that a citation issue to him personally to show cause why the probate should not be revoked. It would be an absurdity to cite him to show cause, and when he appears in court in obedience to the citation to refuse to consider the reasons which he is prepared to advance why the will should not be set aside and annulled. It is not only his privilege to make such showing, but it is his duty under his trust. While it has been held in many cases that an administrator cannot appeal from a decree of distribution, because he has no interest in the final judgment, whatever it may be, yet that principle is in no sense analagous to the right of an executor to support a will, especially so when it has once been probated.
For the foregoing reasons let the judgment and decree setting aside the will, revoking the probate thereof and distributing the estate, be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Paterson, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.