Davis v. Mandekic (In re Estate of Kerkorian)

228 Cal. Rptr. 3d 78, 19 Cal. App. 5th 709
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedJanuary 19, 2018
DocketB283132
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 228 Cal. Rptr. 3d 78 (Davis v. Mandekic (In re Estate of Kerkorian)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Mandekic (In re Estate of Kerkorian), 228 Cal. Rptr. 3d 78, 19 Cal. App. 5th 709 (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

BAKER, J.

*81*713Probate Code section 11704 requires an executor to obtain court permission before taking sides in a proceeding to determine who is entitled to a distribution of estate assets. We are asked to decide whether the probate court complied with the statute's requirements when it allowed the executor of Kirk Kerkorian's (Kerkorian's) estate to oppose a petition filed by Kerkorian's former wife seeking a third of her late husband's assets.

I. BACKGROUND

Kerkorian executed a will in July 2013 to govern the distribution of his substantial assets upon his death. On March 30, 2014, Kerkorian married petitioner and appellant Una Davis (petitioner).

Two days before the wedding, Kerkorian gave objector and respondent Anthony Mandekic (Mandekic) $10 million with written instructions to give the money to petitioner upon their marriage "as a transfer from [Kerkorian] to [petitioner] outside of [Kerkorian's] estate and ... in place of any transfer to [petitioner] that [Kerkorian] might make upon [his] death." The day before the wedding, petitioner signed a "Waiver of Marital Rights" (the waiver) in which she relinquished any right to receive assets of Kerkorian's estate through intestate succession, under Kerkorian's will, or as an omitted spouse pursuant to statute. Mandekic then transferred $10 million to petitioner as directed, and petitioner and Kerkorian separated roughly two months later.

Kerkorian died just over a year thereafter, in June 2015. His will was admitted to probate, and Mandekic was qualified to serve as executor of the estate. The July 2013 will is not part of the record on appeal, but it is undisputed the will (1) does not mention petitioner, (2) provides approximately $40 million in specific bequests to several individuals, including Mandekic (whose bequest has already been distributed), and (3) gives the remainder of Kerkorian's estate, valued at approximately $2 billion, to unidentified charitable organizations to be selected by a committee appointed in the will.

Pursuant to Probate Code section 11700,1 petitioner petitioned the probate court for an order determining her right to a distribution of Kerkorian's estate as an omitted spouse.2 Petitioner's second amended petition alleges Kerkorian's $10 million gift to her, and her execution of the waiver, did not preclude *714her from being treated as an omitted spouse because the relevant documents were not signed by both petitioner and Kerkorian, as required; petitioner did not voluntarily sign the waiver; Kerkorian (who was in his 90's at the time) lacked capacity and was subject to undue influence; petitioner did not *82receive adequate disclosure of Kerkorian's property and financial obligations before signing the waiver; and petitioner was not represented by independent legal counsel.

Mandekic sought court approval, pursuant to section 11704, subdivision (b),3 "to oppose [petitioner's] Omitted Spouse Petition." Mandekic asserted there was good cause to grant such approval because he was "responsible for implementing what he kn[e]w[ ] to be the testamentary wishes of [Kerkorian], ... there [were] no named charitable beneficiaries available to defend [Kerkorian's] estate plan, ... [Mandekic] ha[d] no remaining personal interest in the [e]state, and ... the burden of opposing [petitioner's] petition should not be borne by the people of the [S]tate of California." Mandekic informed the probate court that if he "were directed to refrain from litigating the Omitted Spouse Petition, he would still remain involved in the litigation as a witness, and in his role as the Executor."

The Attorney General, who was deemed to be a person entitled to distribution of Kerkorian's estate for probate purposes (because Kerkorian's will provided for a devise to unidentified charitable beneficiaries), supported Mandekic's request to oppose the omitted spouse petition. The Attorney General reasoned Mandekic was "in a unique position to defend ... Kerkorian's estate plan, as he [wa]s most familiar with [Kerkorian], his [e]state, and his estate plans."

Petitioner objected to Mandekic's request to oppose her petition. She contended his participation was unnecessary because the Attorney General was both obligated and able to represent the only interests adverse to her petition-those of the unidentified charitable beneficiaries. Petitioner acknowledged Mandekic could provide relevant witness testimony in the proceeding, but she contended he had not shown good cause to oppose her petition as a litigant because the Attorney General already had a statutory duty to represent the unidentified charities and legislative history materials for *715section 11704 indicated an executor's participation in heirship proceedings should be "the exception rather than the rule."4

The probate court granted Mandekic's request to oppose petitioner's omitted spouse petition. The court reasoned "[t]he legislative history of Probate Code section 11704(b)(2) does not prevent a personal representative from participating in heirship proceedings. It just requires prior court approval, upon a showing of good cause." The court expressly found such good cause existed, giving the following reasons: (1) Mandekic's "familiarity with [Kerkorian's] financial and personal affairs [placed him] in a unique position to best advocate for what [Kerkorian's] intentions were with respect to the omission of [petitioner] from the will"; (2) Mandekic had no financial interest in Kerkorian's estate, having already received a cash distribution not challenged by petitioner; (3) Mandekic was "not otherwise improperly motivated to participate in the proceedings at the estate's expense"; (4) it would "waste resources to require ... Mandekic to educate the Attorney General on the facts underlying this litigation and then have the Attorney General conduct the litigation, all at the expense of either the State of California or the estate"; and (5) allowing *83Mandekic to participate as a party would "result in a speedier conclusion of the estate proceeding and speedier distribution of assets to the beneficiaries, whomever they may turn out to be." The court additionally believed "[Mandekic]'s participation [would] be helpful in determining the rightful beneficiaries of the estate in accordance with [Kerkorian's] intent."

II. DISCUSSION

Petitioner contends the probate court misapplied section 11704, subdivision (b) by conducting only part of the analysis it requires. She complains the court allowed Mandekic to oppose her petition based merely on its determination of "good cause," and without evaluating what she sees as a separate showing that must be made under the statute, namely, whether Mandekic's participation as a party was "necessary to assist the court." ( § 11704, subd. (b)(2).) Petitioner also contends that even if the court applied the correct legal standard in finding only good cause, the good cause finding was an abuse of the court's discretion.

Petitioner is wrong on both counts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 Cal. Rptr. 3d 78, 19 Cal. App. 5th 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-mandekic-in-re-estate-of-kerkorian-calctapp5d-2018.