Probate Research
Lawrence M. Friedman (Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law, Stanford University – School of Law), Christopher Jay Walker (Chambers of Judge Alex Kozinski), and Ben Hernandez-Stern (Stanford University – Law School) have published the abstract of their article The Inheritance Process in San Bernardino County, California, 1964: A Research Note on SSRN. The full article will be published in Volume 43, Houston Law Journal (March 2007).
Probate records are ubiquitous. Virtually every American county has records of estates of the dead. These records contain rich source material for any study of American legal and social history. They have a lot to tell us about family life, about the economy, about love and death and every aspect of life in America. Yet very few scholars have tried to tap these records. There are very few empirical studies that use as their main source probate records, probably no more than a dozen or so, and even fewer in California. This research note is a modest attempt to add to the stock of knowledge, and to document some basic facts about the probate system at work in one place and at one time (San Bernardino, California, 1964). We analyze 513 probate records – both intestate and testate proceedings – of decedents who died in 1964 and whose probate proceedings took place in San Bernardino County, California.
Part I of this article provides a brief historical background on San Bernardino County and the state of probate law in California in the 1960s. Part II then describes the research methodology: the sample, the data collection process, and the typical testate and intestate files. Part III outlines the findings of this research, both with respect to intestate and testate proceedings, followed by some concluding remarks.
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