Conservatorship of Farrant

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 2, 2021
DocketB307338
StatusPublished

This text of Conservatorship of Farrant (Conservatorship of Farrant) 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
Conservatorship of Farrant, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 8/2/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SIX

Conservatorship of the Person 2d Civil No. B307338 and Estate of NORMA (Super. Ct. No. 56-2016-00483787-PR- FARRANT. CP-OXN) (Ventura County)

ANGELIQUE FRIEND, as Conservator, etc.,

Petitioner and Respondent,

v.

DUANE FARRANT,

Objector and Appellant.

This case serves as a textbook example of how a fiduciary should not proceed. Appellant continues to demonstrate that he has no concept of his duty to his elderly and incapacitated mother and her conservatorship estate. This is Duane Farrant’s third appeal concerning the conservatorship of the person and estate of his mother, Norma Farrant (Norma or conservatee). (See Conservatorship of Farrant, (Aug. 22, 2019, B289203) [nonpub. opn.] and (Feb. 22, 2021, B306501) [nonpub. opn.].) 1 He appeals from orders requiring him to pay $63,448.90 for misappropriation of Norma’s assets, surcharging in the same amount appellant’s share of interpled funds, and imposing sanctions of $121,000 for failing to timely file an accounting of his actions relating to Norma’s estate. Appellant contends that the probate court erroneously (1) ordered him to render an accounting because he did not owe a fiduciary duty to the estate, (2) based its decision on affidavits and declarations, and (3) denied his request for an evidentiary hearing. We affirm. Factual and Procedural Background Norma was born in 1926. In 2008 she executed a durable power of attorney granting appellant, as her attorney-in-fact, broad powers to manage her property. The power of attorney would become effective upon a determination that Norma was “‘incapacitated.’” In September 2015, when Norma was living in Missouri, a Missouri court ordered appellant to account for all transactions conducted by him on behalf of Norma during the one-year period beginning on September 21, 2014. In 2016 Norma moved back to California. In January 2017 Angelique Friend, respondent, was appointed conservator of Norma’s person and estate. In November 2017 Diana Farrant (Diana), Norma’s daughter, filed a

1 In the first appeal appellant appealed from an order directing the sale of a residence in Newbury Park (the Newbury Park property). We dismissed the appeal as moot because the property had already been sold. In the second appeal we affirmed an order voiding a deed in which appellant’s mother had purportedly quitclaimed the Newbury Park property to him before it was sold.

2 petition in the Ventura County Superior Court to compel appellant “to account for his actions on behalf of Norma Farrant for the period September 21, 2014, to date . . . .” As an exhibit to her complaint, Diana attached proof that a physician had examined Norma on June 12, 2015. He opined that Norma is “incapacitated” because “she is unable (completely & totally) to receive & evaluate information or to communicate decisions such that she lacks capacity to meet essential requirements for food, clothing, shelter and safety.” She was living in a skilled nursing facility. In February of 2018, the probate court conducted a hearing on Diana’s petition. Diana’s counsel said his client was “just piggybacking on the Missouri order” that appellant account for the one-year period beginning on September 21, 2014. He asserted that appellant had “never complied with the Missouri order.” At the hearing appellant appeared in propria persona. He told the court that on September 21, 2014, he had control over Norma’s pension checks and her share of the rental income from the Newbury Park property. (See fn. 1 at p. 2, ante.) The probate court ordered appellant “to do a formal account -- for the period September 21, 2014, to January 31, 2018 -- . . . for any pension checks you received on behalf of [Norma] and any rental monies you received on [her] behalf . . . .” The accounting was due on or before March 30, 2018. In a minute order dated July 10, 2018, the court noted that appellant had failed to file the accounting. The court ordered appellant “to appear in person or by video court call on October 16, 2018, . . . and show cause for failure to file his account as ordered.”

3 At the hearing on October 16, 2018, appellant was not present in person or by video court call. His attorney, Mr. Dickens, appeared in court on his behalf. The probate court issued orders to show cause why sanctions should not be imposed against appellant for failing to appear personally or by video court call and for failing to file an accounting. It ordered appellant to file the accounting on or before December 14, 2018. The court warned appellant’s counsel: “Now, make no mistake, Mr. Dickens, the hammer is coming down very hard if I don’t get a good accounting. There are no more excuses. There is no more delay. . . . This is the last . . . continuance that he’s going to get to get this accounting filed . . . .” On January 29, 2019, the probate court conducted a hearing on the orders to show cause. Appellant and his counsel personally appeared in court. Counsel said the accounting had not been prepared. Counsel explained: “[M]y client . . . made diligent efforts . . . trying to get the bank statements and he was unsuccessful, but we will subpoena those records and I will get the accounting in if you give us a reasonable amount of time.” “I believe there was a flood, a lot of [appellant’s] records were damaged, and so that’s why we’re having to subpoena them [from the banks].” Counsel for respondent (conservator Friend) protested: “[T]his is the fourth or fifth time we have been here since the initial order. Each time it’s the same argument. . . . We have racked up over $100,000 in fees . . . , all needlessly.” The court responded: “The Court . . . has heard about every excuse in the book as to why [the accounting] hasn’t been provided. . . . I am left really with no confidence that this will actually occur, despite Counsel’s representations to the contrary. [¶] The Court does

4 find it in the best interest of this estate to impose sanctions [against appellant] of $1,000 per day until the accounting is filed . . . .” On May 31, 2019, appellant filed an accounting. 2 It showed that he had received two payments of rental income for October and November 2014. Each payment was $2,575. For the period from September 16, 2014 through November 10, 2017, appellant listed disbursements totaling $44,322.05 for expenses he had incurred in maintaining the Newbury Park property. The accounting mentioned nothing about Norma’s pension income. The accounting included bank statements on which most of the information had been redacted. At a hearing on September 27, 2019, appellant appeared with new counsel (Mr. Uku). The probate court granted counsel’s request to file an amended accounting on or before December 20, 2019. The due date was later extended to January 30, 2020. The court found that appellant had “failed to file an Amended Account.” In June 2020 respondent filed an objection to appellant’s accounting. After hearings conducted in July 2020, the probate court found that: (1) appellant “was in control of [Norma’s] pension income in the amount of $35,656.76, and failed to report said income in his account, and breached his fiduciary duty by comingling funds and self-dealing by using them for his own purposes”; (2) for the Newbury Park property, appellant received rental income of $101,150, one-half of which ($50,575) belonged to Norma since she owned a half-interest in the property; and (3) expenses for the Newbury Park property totaled $45,565.72, one-

2This was four years after he had been ordered to file an accounting in Missouri in 2015.

5 half of which ($22,782.86) was allocable to Norma’s half-interest in the property.

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Conservatorship of Farrant, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-of-farrant-calctapp-2021.