Castellini v. Cunningham CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 11, 2013
DocketC069714
StatusUnpublished

This text of Castellini v. Cunningham CA3 (Castellini v. Cunningham CA3) 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
Castellini v. Cunningham CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 7/11/13 Castellini v. Cunningham CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Nevada) ----

GAIL CASTELLINI, as Cotrustee, etc., C069714

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. P14621)

v.

WILLY CUNNINGHAM, as Cotrustee, etc.,

Defendant and Respondent.

Don Cunningham (decedent) succumbed to pneumonia in December 2004 at the age of 85. In October 2007, his daughter, Gail Castellini, filed a petition for an order instructing her (in the performance of her duties as the successor cotrustee for the Cunningham Family Trust (Trust)) to obtain an accounting from Willy Cunningham (decedent’s widow and cotrustee of the Trust) from December 2004 to present; to demand that Willy1 restore Trust assets and lodge a true copy of decedent’s will (Will);

1 In keeping with the practice of the parties, we will refer to them by their given names.

1 to recover damages from Willy; and to remove Willy as a cotrustee.2 In her response,3 Willy contested only the issue of whether the Trust remained revocable after the death of her husband.4 In December 2007, Willy lodged what she represented as being a true copy of the Will. Willy filed a voluntary accounting in February 2008 and a restated voluntary accounting in May 2009. In response to the instant litigation, she also filed an amendment to the Trust in May 2008 that sought to remove Gail as a successor cotrustee.

Following 10 days of trial in September 2010, the trial court issued a proposed statement of decision, entertained Gail’s objections, issued a statement of decision in May 2011, vacated that decision and entertained further objections, issued a slightly different judgment in June 2011, and reiterated that judgment in September 2011 after denying a motion for new trial. The court concluded the Trust remains revocable until the death of the surviving settlor, Willy; for this reason, Willy did not owe any duty to account to beneficiaries, her actions as trustee did not result in any damages to beneficiaries, and there was not any basis for ordering her to restore assets. The court also found insufficient evidence to remove Willy as cotrustee. Gail’s timely notice of appeal followed. (Briefing was completed in December 2012.)

On appeal, Gail focuses on the finding that the Trust remains revocable until Willy’s death, asserting this false premise permeated the judgment and rendered its

2 Gail filed another petition in December 2007 (and a supplementary petition in December 2008) seeking a determination that a February 2003 amendment to the Trust was invalid, raising issues of mental incapacity, undue influence, and elder abuse. At trial, Willy stipulated to the invalidity of the amendment and the trial court rejected any claim of incapacity or elder abuse. Gail does not present any arguments about these theories on appeal. We therefore will omit any reference to evidence involving them. 3 Willy also filed a petition for instructions essentially raising the same issues.

4 Gail had also sought a ruling that her petition did not violate the no-contest provisions of the Will and Trust. Willy conceded the point.

2 findings erroneous as well. She requests we reverse the judgment with directions to order her requested relief. We shall reverse the judgment, but remand with directions to reconsider the ruling in light of this opinion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Willy and decedent married in 1983. Willy was 11 years his junior. He had four children from his first marriage, born between 1948 and 1954, of whom Gail is the eldest.

On March 15, 2000, decedent executed his Will. He and Willy executed the Trust on the same day.

The Will (containing 16 articles) provided that if any of its provisions conflicted with the Trust, the latter should prevail. (Art. 5.)5 It specified that “[a]ll of the property in Schedule A of the [trust] shall be given to my wife, [Willy], for her lifetime. Upon her death, the remaining property listed in Schedule A, with the exception of the Certificates of Deposit at Placer-Sierra Bank, shall go to my then-living children. The Certificates of Deposit . . . shall go to my grandchildren, Laura . . . and Brian Castellini.” (Art. 6, italics added.) All of the property listed in Schedule B of the Trust was to be divided among his surviving children. (Art. 6.) The remainder of his estate was to be distributed under the terms of the Trust. (Art. 9.) The Will named Gail as executor, but withheld the power to probate the Will and limited her powers to enforcing the Trust. (Arts. 12, 13.)

The Trust (in paragraphs numbered ordinally, First through Tenth) provided that the settlors “reserve the power during their lifetimes to withdraw [assets] at any time” or to revoke the Trust entirely. (Par. Second, subpar. A(1).) The Trust was to become irrevocable “[o]n the death of [the] surviving” settlor. (Par. Third, italics added.) As a guide for interpretation of the instrument, the Trust stated that its “primary purpose . . . is

5 For clarity, we shall include references to articles of the Will and paragraphs of the Trust.

3 to provide for the [settlors], and the rights and interests of all others are incidental to that purpose.” (Par. Sixth, subpar. E(1).) The trustees were authorized to distribute to the settlors any sums of both income and principal deemed in their discretion as being “necessary for the benefit and comfort” of the settlors. (Par. Fifth, subpar. A.)

In the provisions central to this appeal, “[o]n the death of either of the [settlors]” (par. Sixth, subpar. A), the Trust’s entire balance “shall be distributed to the surviving [settlor], for his or her own total and exclusive use during his or her lifetime” (par. Sixth, subpar. (A)(2), italics added). The Trust included two provisos: “ ‘[T]otal and exclusive use during . . . her lifetime’ shall be interpreted to mean” that Willy had the right to live in the Penn Valley family residence listed in Schedule A (or rent it out should she need to move closer to her health care facility) until her death, even during decedent’s lifetime. (Par. Sixth, subpar. (A)(2)(a).) Also, on the death of decedent, “all items of property listed on Schedule B hereto shall be distributed to his children . . . .” (Par. Sixth, subpar. (A)(2)(b).) “Upon the death of the last surviving [settlor],” the successor trustee must give the notice required for a trust that has become irrevocable (Prob. Code, § 16061.5),6 distribute the Penn Valley home to the surviving children of decedent (along with decedent’s “share of the remaining community property of the parties”), and distribute any property in “Schedule C” pursuant to Willy’s will. (Par. Sixth, subpar. (A)(3) & (4)(a).) Gail was designated as the successor cotrustee upon the death of either settlor. All decisions regarding the Trust required the unanimous vote of all trustees. (Par. Eighth, subpars. A & B.)

Schedule A to the Trust included the Penn Valley residence, two certificates of deposit at Placer-Sierra Bank, a Kemper Passport account, and two Templeton Growth Fund accounts (with numbers ending -363 and -981). Schedule B included Canadian real

6 Undesignated statutory references are to the Probate Code.

4 estate located in New Brunswick, another certificate of deposit at Placer-Sierra Bank, and gold and silver coins. It is not disputed that the assets listed in the two schedules were the separate property of decedent.7 Schedule C included Willy’s separate property.

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Castellini v. Cunningham CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castellini-v-cunningham-ca3-calctapp-2013.