Conservatorship of Thomas CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 24, 2020
DocketB292792
StatusUnpublished

This text of Conservatorship of Thomas CA2/1 (Conservatorship of Thomas CA2/1) 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 Thomas CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 9/24/20 Conservatorship of Thomas CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

Conservatorship of the Person B292792 and Estate of FLORENCE THOMAS. (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 16STPB03259)

ZENO TURNER,

Petitioner and Respondent,

v.

EARL TURNER,

Petitioner and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Clifford Klein, Judge. Affirmed. Earl Turner, in pro. per., for Petitioner and Appellant. Zeno Turner, in pro. per., for Petitioner and Respondent. _______________________________ Earl Turner (Appellant), a self-represented litigant, appeals from the probate court’s order appointing his brother, Zeno Turner (Respondent), and his sister, Joyce Sharpe,1 conservators of their mother’s estate and denying his competing petition to be appointed conservator of the estate. Appellant has shown no error, and we affirm the order. BACKGROUND In August 2016, Respondent filed a petition in the Los Angeles County Superior Court Probate Division, seeking to be appointed conservator of the person of his mother, Florence Thomas. In November 2016, Appellant, Respondent’s brother, filed multiple oppositions to Respondent’s petition. Simultaneously, Appellant filed a competing petition in the San Bernardino County Superior Court Probate Division, seeking to be appointed conservator of the person of his mother.2 Both

1 Joyce Sharpe did not appear on appeal. 2 At the time the petitions were filed, Respondent lived in Los Angeles County, Appellant lived in San Bernardino County, and their mother, Florence Thomas, lived in a residential care facility in San Bernardino County. About a year before Respondent filed his petition, he and Thomas were living together in her home in Los Angeles County. Appellant was dissatisfied with the care Respondent was providing to Thomas, and believed his siblings were stealing money from Thomas, so he removed Thomas from her home in or around July 2015 and placed her in the residential care facility in San Bernardino County, without notifying Respondent (or their sister, Joyce Sharpe, who also lived in Los Angeles County and assisted Respondent in caring for Thomas).

2 Appellant and Respondent filed their petitions as self- represented litigants. In May 2017, Appellant’s petition was transferred to the Los Angeles County Superior Court Probate Division and assigned the same case number as Respondent’s petition. In August 2017, the probate court held a bench trial on the two petitions, at which Appellant and Respondent represented themselves. On September 8, 2017, the probate court issued an order granting Respondent’s petition to be appointed conservator of the person of Florence Thomas and denying Appellant’s petition. The court found Thomas had dementia and lacked capacity to make health care decisions for herself. Thomas was represented by a Probate Volunteer Panel (PVP) attorney in connection with the petitions. On October 26, 2017, the court issued its order appointing Respondent conservator of Thomas’s person.3 On August 8, 2017, during the above-mentioned trial, Appellant, as a self-represented litigant, filed an amended

3 The petitions for appointment of conservator of the person and the October 26, 2017 order appointing Respondent conservator of the person of Florence Thomas are not before us on appeal. Any challenge in Appellant’s appellate brief to these prior proceedings is time-barred because the time to appeal had long passed when Appellant filed the current appeal in September 2018. The matter before us involves only the competing petitions for appointment of conservator of the estate, filed by Appellant on the one hand and Respondent and Sharpe on the other, the August 7, 2018 order granting Respondent and Sharpe’s petition, and the October 1, 2018 order appointing Respondent and Sharpe conservators of the estate of Florence Thomas, which we address below.

3 petition under the same probate case number, seeking appointment as the conservator of Thomas’s estate, in addition to conservator of her person. On September 11, 2017, Respondent, through counsel, filed a competing petition to be appointed conservator of the estate. The same day, Respondent’s counsel also filed on his behalf an ex parte petition for appointment as temporary conservator of the estate. At an October 18, 2017 hearing, the probate court granted Respondent’s petition to be appointed temporary conservator of Thomas’s estate. On January 6, 2018, Respondent and Sharpe, through counsel, filed a joint petition for appointment as conservators of their mother’s estate. On March 23, 2018, Thomas’s PVP attorney filed a report regarding the competing petitions for appointment of conservator of the estate, recommending the probate court appoint Respondent and Sharpe as conservators of Thomas’s estate and reject Appellant’s bid to be conservator. Counsel stated in the report that Appellant had “acted contrary to [Thomas’s] best interests in the matter of her estate.” Specifically, after Respondent and Appellant had filed their petitions for appointment of conservator of the person and Appellant had filed his petition for appointment of conservator of the estate, Appellant sold Thomas’s residence, “[u]sing a power of attorney, which was subsequently determined by the [probate] Court to be invalid,” and failed to turn over to the PVP attorney a portion of the proceeds from the sale or provide an accounting for that portion of the proceeds. Appellant also attempted to sell Thomas’s rental property, “but the sale was cancelled.” For these reasons, counsel did not “see [Appellant] as a legitimate candidate to handle [the] estate.” Counsel also stated in the

4 report that he had “no hesitation” in recommending the probate court grant Respondent and Sharpe’s petition to be conservators of the estate, as they “apparently have both the interest and time to devote to the administration of the property and to prosecute actions to recover any estate assets to which the conservatorship is entitled.” Counsel noted, however, that at the time of the August 2017 trial, Thomas had expressed a preference for Appellant as a potential conservator. Respondent remained the temporary conservator of Thomas’s estate through the bench trial on the petitions for appointment of conservator of the estate, held in July 2018. Respondent and Sharpe were represented by counsel at the July 2018 trial; Appellant represented himself; and the PVP attorney represented Thomas. Respondent and Sharpe testified at trial. Appellant cross-examined Respondent and conducted direct examination of Sharpe. Apparently Appellant testified at the July 2018 trial on the petitions for appointment of the conservator of the estate, but that testimony is not included in the record before us.4 After the July 2018 trial, the PVP attorney submitted another report, reiterating his recommendation that the probate court appoint Respondent and Sharpe as conservators of Thomas’s estate and reject Appellant’s bid to be conservator. Counsel stated in the report that Thomas now had no preference

4 If any additional witnesses testified at the July 2018 trial, the testimony is not included in the record before us. The reporter’s transcript from July 9-10, 2018, that is included in the record on appeal, states that it is a “partial” transcript of the proceedings held on these two days.

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Conservatorship of Thomas CA2/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-of-thomas-ca21-calctapp-2020.