Alioto v. Manalo CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 2016
DocketA143926
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alioto v. Manalo CA1/3 (Alioto v. Manalo CA1/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alioto v. Manalo CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 6/28/16 Alioto v. Manalo CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

ANTHONY J. ALIOTO, as Trustee, etc., Plaintiff and Respondent, A143926

v. (City & County of San Francisco MARIA CHRISTINA MANALO, Super. Ct. No. PTR-14-298002) Defendant and Appellant.

The probate court granted trustee Anthony J. Alioto’s petition for modification of a trust to correct a drafting error and Maria Christina Manalo, a trust beneficiary, appeals. Manalo contends that the trustee did not have standing to bring an action to modify the trust; that she was wrongly denied a trial; that extrinsic evidence was wrongly admitted to construe the trust; and that the probate court’s construction of the trust is incorrect. We shall affirm the probate court’s order modifying the trust. Statement of Facts Frank Anthony Alito created a revocable living trust in 1999 and restated its terms in 2010. He amended the restated trust twice, once in September 2011 and again in June 2012. He died in October 2012. The beneficiaries of the trust are the trustor’s adult children, Nunzio and Jennifer; the trustor’s former wife, Suzanne Alioto, who is entitled to alimony pursuant to a dissolution decree; and the trustor’s long-term companion, Maria Christina Manalo. The trustor’s brother, Anthony Joseph Alioto, is the successor trustee.

1 The trust provides that some assets are to be distributed to the beneficiaries upon the trustor’s death and other assets are to be held in two subtrusts with income to the beneficiaries. One subtrust holds common stock in the Nunzio Corporation for the benefit of the trustor’s children. The other subtrust holds a one-half interest in F and A Properties, a general partnership, for the benefit of Manalo and the trustor’s ex-wife.1 Payment from the F and A Properties subtrust to the ex-wife are “specifically restricted to those alimony payments as provided by court order of dissolution.” Payment to Manalo “shall be made in the same manner and in accordance with the same standard of living as [the trustor] may have provided in the past; adjusted as necessary by circumstances and inflation” with a stated minimum annual amount, payable monthly. Any net income in excess of the payments to the ex-wife and Manalo is paid to the children and the children are the successor beneficiaries after payments are no longer due the ex-wife and Manalo. The terms of the restated trust of 2010 and the amended trust of 2012 differ in the distribution of assets and in the stated minimum amount of income allotted to Manalo from the F and A Properties subtrust. As to the distribution of assets, the 2010 trust instrument provided Manalo with a life estate in a California Street condominium or, if she chose to reside elsewhere, $200,000 from the unit’s sale proceeds with the remainder to the children. The 2012 amendment removed Manalo’s life estate option and directed sale of the condominium with Manalo to receive $200,000 from the sale proceeds and the remainder to the children. The 2012 amendment also provided additional assets to Manalo. She was given all personal property not specifically bequeathed, whereas the 2010 trust distributed this property to the children. Manalo was also given the trustor’s interest in a general partnership known as 1395 Golden Gate Avenue, an asset not mentioned in the 2010 trust. Concerning the F and A Properties subtrust, the 2010 trust document provided support payments to Manalo at a minimum amount of $50,000 annually for life. The 2012 amendment changed the support payments to a minimum amount of $75,000

1 The full text of these provisions are set out later in the opinion.

2 annually for five years from the date of the trustor’s death. While the 2012 amendment changed the time period of minimum support payments from life to five years, there was no amendment to a subsequent paragraph stating: “Upon the death of Maria Christina Manalo and the expiration of the payment of alimony . . . all the net income shall be paid equally to or for the benefit of my two children.” The trustee claimed that the failure to amend the subsequent paragraph was a drafting error and that the trustor’s intent was to pay subtrust income to Manalo for five years with all income paid to the children after that five-year period. The trustee maintained that the trust should be modified to provide that all net income shall be paid to the children “[f]ollowing five years from the date of [trustor’s] death” rather than “[u]pon the death of” Manalo. In August 2014, the trustee filed a petition to modify the trust to correct the claimed drafting error and submitted a declaration from the attorney who drafted the amendment. (Prob. Code, § 17200, subd. (b)(13).) The attorney declared that the trustor “expressed his concern of the effect of Ms. Manalo receiving the income from the F and A Properties partnership for life as his children would not receive any of its income until Ms. Manalo’s death which could be in twenty years or more.” The trustor “wanted to provide Ms. Manalo with $75,000 of annual income from the F and A Properties partnership for five years as he wanted his children to receive the benefits of this partnership with his brother in a timely fashion.” Manalo filed a response in which she opposed admission of the attorney’s declaration and modification of the trust. Manalo argued that the amended trust was not ambiguous and interpreted it to provide her with lifetime support at her established standard of living with a guaranteed minimum of $75,000 for five years. Any net income in excess of the annual payment to Manalo was to be paid to the children but, she maintained, the children were not to become successor beneficiaries entitled to all income from the subtrust until Manalo’s death. Manalo also asserted that the amendment reducing the time period of a guaranteed payment from life to five years was in recognition of the fact that alimony payments to the trustor’s ex-wife would expire at the

3 end of the five-year period so Manalo “would not need this extra protection” of a guaranteed minimum. The court held a hearing on the matter at which no court reporter was present and no witnesses were called to testify. The court took the matter under submission and asked the parties to submit proposed orders, which they did.2 The court then issued an order granting the trustee’s request for modification of the trust. The paragraph providing “Upon the death of Maria Christina Manalo and the expiration of the payment of alimony . . . all the net income shall be paid equally to or for the benefit of [the trustor’s] two children” was modified to read: “Following five years from the date of [the trustor’s] death and the expiration of the payment of alimony . . . all the net income shall be paid equally to or for the benefit of [the trustor’s] two children.” (Italics added.) Manalo timely filed notice of appeal on December 16, 2014. Discussion Manalo raises a number of claims on appeal, both procedural and substantive. We discuss these claims in turn.

1. Trustee’s standing to seek modification of the trust.

As an initial matter, Manalo contends that only beneficiaries, not trustees, have standing to bring an action to modify a trust agreement. She acknowledges that a trust agreement, like any other contract, may be reformed and revised under California Civil Code section 3399 to correct a drafting error.

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Bluebook (online)
Alioto v. Manalo CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alioto-v-manalo-ca13-calctapp-2016.