Bank of America v. Angel View Crippled Children's Foundation

85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 117, 72 Cal. App. 4th 451, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3915, 99 Daily Journal DAR 4969, 1999 Cal. App. LEXIS 509, 1999 WL 324119
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 24, 1999
DocketA083625
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 117 (Bank of America v. Angel View Crippled Children's Foundation) 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
Bank of America v. Angel View Crippled Children's Foundation, 85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 117, 72 Cal. App. 4th 451, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3915, 99 Daily Journal DAR 4969, 1999 Cal. App. LEXIS 509, 1999 WL 324119 (Cal. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*454 Opinion

MARCHIANO, J.

Probate Code section 21350 presumptively invalidates a donative transfer to an attorney-beneficiary who drafted the instrument providing for the gift. Probate Code section 21351 permits the transfer if, inter alia, the drafter-beneficiary can show by clear and convincing evidence that the transfer was not the result of fraud, menace, duress or undue influence. In this case we hold that these statutes, enacted in 1993, apply retroactively.

Three residual beneficiaries of a living trust—Angel View Crippled Children’s Foundation, St. Jude Hospital, and Heartspring, Inc.—appeal from an order of the probate court insofar as it allows the drafter of the trust instrument, respondent Alan D. Liker, Esq., to receive a distribution as a beneficiary of the trust. Because Probate Code section 21350 is applicable to the transfer in this case and because a hearing under section 21351 is required, we reverse and remand.

I. Facts

On July 5, 1974, Forrest and Glenda Shaklee established a living trust known as the Forrest Clell Shaklee, Jr., and Glenda Belle Shaklee Trust No. I. 1 By the express terms of the trust instrument, this trust was revocable and subject to amendment by the trustors. The Shaklees twice amended the trust, once on December 14, 1979, and again on May 24, 1985. The 1985 amendment expressly recites that the trust can be revoked or amended. The 1985 amendment also names over two dozen beneficiaries of the substantial assets of the trust. The beneficiaries include respondent, who is to receive a cash distribution of $50,000 plus 6 percent of the trust residue. It is undisputed that respondent, apparently a lifelong Shaklee family friend and legal adviser, drafted the 1985 amendment. The Forrest Clell Shaklee, Jr., and Glenda Belle Shaklee Trust No. 1., as amended in 1985, is hereafter referred to as “the Parents’ Trust.”

Forrest and Glenda’s son, Clifford Shaklee, established his own living trust, the Clifford J. Shaklee Trust No. 1 (hereafter Clifford’s Trust), on July 30, 1974. He amended Clifford’s Trust on December 14, 1979, to provide that on his death the Clifford’s Trust assets would be held for the benefit of Forrest and Glenda Shaklee, “so long as they shall live,” provided that his *455 parents “could not distribute or cause to be distributed any of the income or principal of [Clifford’s Trust] to themselves, their estates, their creditors, or the creditors of their estates, except ... for their proper support and medical and health care.” Following the death of the survivor of Forrest and Glenda, virtually all the assets of Clifford’s Trust were to be distributed outright to the Parents’ Trust.

Clifford Shaklee died on April 6, 1985. On October 2, 1986, Forrest and Glenda Shaklee executed an instrument entitled “Partial Revocation of the Forrest Clell and Glenda Belle Shaklee Trust No. 1.” By this instrument Forrest and Glenda Shaklee partially revoked the Parents’ Trust by withdrawing all trust assets and transferring them to a new trust, the 1986 Forrest and Glenda Shaklee Trust, created that same day. The Parents’ Trust, now essentially an empty shell without assets, was to “continue” for the purpose of receiving the assets of Clifford’s Trust in accordance with the Clifford’s Trust terms, i.e., on the death of the survivor of Forrest and Glenda Shaklee.

The last paragraph of the partial revocation recites that Forrest and Glenda “hereby acknowledge that they do not have any power to alter the plan of disposition [of Clifford’s Trust] and therefore are not in this instrument in any way exercising any such power or in any way amending the plan of disposition or any of the other terms set forth in the [Clifford’s Trust].” The partial revocation does not state that it, or the Parents’ Trust, is irrevocable. It is undisputed that respondent also drafted this document. Indeed, the Parents’ Trust instrument continued to state that it was revocable in paragraph 5.1.

Glenda Shaklee died on March 31, 1994. Forrest Shaklee died on September 26, 1995. On November 25, 1997, the probate court administering Clifford’s Trust ordered that all the assets of Clifford’s Trust be distributed to Bank of America (the Bank), as trustee of the Parents’ Trust, and in turn to be distributed to the beneficiaries of the Parents’ Trust according to that trust’s terms.

The Bank was uncertain whether certain beneficiaries were entitled to distribution, and if so in what amounts. Accordingly, the Bank filed a petition for instructions with the probate court. The Bank’s petition raised the issue whether respondent was entitled to a distribution as a beneficiary of the Parents’ Trust, in light of Probate Code sections 21350 and 21351. 2

Respondent invoked section 21355, which provides that sections 21350 and 21351 only apply to instruments which became irrevocable on or after *456 September 1, 1993. Respondent claimed the Parents’ Trust became irrevocable before that date, either on Clifford’s death on April 6, 1985, or on the date the partial revocation was executed, October 2, 1986. Respondent based his claim of irrevocability on the premise that Forrest and Glenda Shaklee could not alter the terms of the disposition of Clifford’s Trust after Clifford had died, or after reciting in the partial revocation they had no power to make such an alteration. Respondent did not argue that sections 21350 and 21351 could not apply retroactively to instruments executed in 1985 and 1986. Indeed, he seemingly agreed that the statutes applied to instruments which became irrevocable on or after September 1, 1993, even if executed before that date.

In reply, the Bank, as petitioner below, suggested that respondent should be precluded from receiving a distribution because the Parents’ Trust did not become irrevocable any earlier than March 31, 1994, the date of Glenda Shaklee’s death. The Bank contended that although unable to alter the terms of Clifford’s Trust, Forrest and Glenda retained the power to revoke or amend their own trust by changing the complex scheme of Parents’ Trust beneficiaries. Thus, the Parents’ Trust became irrevocable after September 1, 1993, and sections 21350 and 21351 therefore applied.

At the hearing on the petition, the probate court raised sua sponte the question of statutory retroactivity, which had not been raised by any party: “This all relates to activity of Mr. Liker that preceded by quite a while the enactment of section 21350. . . . [H] I don’t know of any case that discusses the ex post facto aspect of [section] 21350 and whether it is intended to prohibit prospective behavior, or whether it is intended to reach back and invalidate bequests made whenever they are made, provided that the trust to which they pertain is . . . irrevocable [on or after September 1,] 1993. ft[] But I’m satisfied in circumstances like this that it should not be applied to prohibit the bequest of Mr. Liker, and that is my ruling.” The court expressly stated it was not making a determination whether the Parents’ Trust was revocable or irrevocable as a result of the partial revocation.

II. Discussion

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85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 117, 72 Cal. App. 4th 451, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3915, 99 Daily Journal DAR 4969, 1999 Cal. App. LEXIS 509, 1999 WL 324119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-america-v-angel-view-crippled-childrens-foundation-calctapp-1999.