Donkin v. Donkin

314 P.3d 780, 58 Cal. 4th 412, 165 Cal. Rptr. 3d 476, 2013 WL 6827050, 2013 Cal. LEXIS 10617
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 2013
DocketS202210
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 314 P.3d 780 (Donkin v. Donkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donkin v. Donkin, 314 P.3d 780, 58 Cal. 4th 412, 165 Cal. Rptr. 3d 476, 2013 WL 6827050, 2013 Cal. LEXIS 10617 (Cal. 2013).

Opinion

*415 Opinion

CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.

Rodney E. Donkin and Mary E. Donkin, a married couple, executed a revocable trust in 1988 (the Family Trust) as part of their estate planning, naming their four children as equal primary beneficiaries after they both had died. 1 Rodney died in 2002. Shortly before her death in 2005, Mary executed a second amendment to the Family Trust instrument (hereafter the Trust’s Second Amendment) altering the provisions governing the allocation of the Family Trust’s assets after her death. Both the Trust’s Second Amendment and the original Family Trust instrument contain a “no contest” clause. In 2009, Annemarie and Lisa (hereafter the beneficiaries) filed a “safe harbor” proceeding in the probate court seeking a determination that the petition they proposed to file, challenging the conduct of the successor trustees under the asserted authority of the Trust’s Second Amendment, would not trigger the no contest clauses of the amended Family Trust instrument.

We consider in this case whether the no contest clause law that became operative on January 1, 2010, while the beneficiaries’ safe harbor application was still pending (Prob. Code, § 21310 et seq.; hereafter the current law) or the no contest clause law operative at the time of the filing of their safe harbor application (Prob. Code, former § 21300 et seq., repealed by Stats. 2008, ch. 174, § 1, p. 567; hereafter the former law) applies to the beneficiaries’ proposed petition and whether under the applicable law the beneficiaries may pursue their proposed claims without risk of being disinherited. 2

We conclude that safe harbor proceedings filed before 2010 are not affected by the repeal of former section 21320, which previously authorized safe harbor applications, and therefore, the probate court did not err in ruling on the beneficiaries’ application. As to the substantive question of whether the beneficiaries’ proposed claims trigger the no contest clauses, we conclude that the current law is applicable because the amended Family Trust instrument became irrevocable after January 1, 2001. (§ 21315, subd. (a).) We further conclude that under the current law, the no contest clauses in the *416 amended Family Trust instrument are unenforceable against the beneficiaries’ proposed petition. We recognize that a party may be able to qualify for a fairness exception (§ 3, subd. (h)) to the presumptive applicability of the current law to instruments that became irrevocable after January 1, 2001, if application of the former law would compel a different conclusion as to enforceability of a no contest clause and it is established that the trustor(s) of the trust instrument drafted the no contest clause in reliance on the former law. Here, however, the successor trustees are not able to claim such a fairness exception, because application of the former law would yield the same conclusion regarding the unenforceability of the no contest clauses. We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal, which determined that certain of the beneficiaries’ claims constituted a contest violating the no contest clauses of the amended Family Trust instrument under the former law.

I. The Donkins’ Estate Plan

Federal law allows the property of a deceased spouse to be passed to the surviving spouse without payment of federal estate tax through the allowance of a “marital deduction.” (Int.Rev. Code, § 2056.) The value of the estate of the surviving spouse is increased by such a passage of assets and it may be enlarged to the point where it will exceed the federal unified tax credit allowable to the estate when the surviving spouse dies. (Id., § 2010; see 2 Drafting Cal. Revocable Trusts (Cont.Ed.Bar 4th ed. 2003) Bypass and Disclaimer Trusts, § 14.1, pp. 14-2 to 14-3 (rev. 9/13).) A common method of addressing such a situation, having the purpose of minimizing the estate taxes owed, is to provide for the transfer to the surviving spouse of only as much of the deceased spouse’s property as necessary to reduce the deceased spouse’s estate tax to zero with use of the applicable federal estate tax exemption. The property remaining in the deceased spouse’s estate is placed in a bypass trust, which makes those assets available for the surviving spouse’s use but does not give the surviving spouse rights to the property in the bypass trust that would cause any of the undistributed trust property to be included in the taxable estate of the surviving spouse upon his or her death. (Int.Rev. Code, § 2041; 1 Drafting Cal. Revocable Trusts, supra, Marital Deduction Formulas and Funding, § 11.IB, pp. 11-4 to 11-5 (rev. 9/13); 2 Drafting Cal. Revocable Trusts, supra, Bypass and Disclaimer Trusts, § 14.1, at pp. 14-2 to 14-3 (rev. 9/13).) Thus, “the undistributed assets of the decedent’s estate . . . ‘bypass’ the survivor’s estate.” (2 Drafting Cal. Revocable Trusts, supra, Bypass and Disclaimer Trusts, § 14.1, at pp. 14-2 to 14-3 (rev. 9/13).) “To avoid federal estate tax inclusion in the surviving *417 spouse’s estate, the bypass trust must be irrevocable and unamendable on and after the first spouse’s death.” (2 Drafting Cal. Revocable Trusts, supra, Revocation and Amendment, § 20.6, p. 20-14 (rev. 9/13), italics added.)

In August 1988, the Donkins executed the original Family Trust instrument, along with their individual wills. The Family Trust was formed to hold title to the couple’s real and personal property for their benefit during their lives and ultimately after their deaths to provide for the transfer of their assets to their beneficiaries. The Family Trust was a revocable “grantor” trust (IntRev. Code, § 676) for as long as the Donkins were both living.

On the death of the first spouse, the Family Trust instrument requires the trustee to divide the trust estate into two shares—a survivor’s share that is designated “Survivor’s Trust A” and a decedent’s share that is designated “Decedent’s Marital Share.” Survivor’s Trust A consists of the surviving spouse’s separate property and his or her one-half interest in the community property. It remains revocable during the life of the surviving spouse, and becomes irrevocable upon the surviving spouse’s death. Decedent’s Marital Share consists of the decedent spouse’s separate property and his or her interest in the community property. It is to be divided into two shares: Decedent’s Trust B and Decedent’s Trust C. The Family Trust instrument states that upon creation these subtrusts “are irrevocable.” The Family Trust instrument specifies that Decedent’s Trust B is to contain property with a value equal to the largest amount possible that will not result in a federal estate tax being imposed on the estate of the deceased spouse. (IntRev. Code, § 2010.) Decedent’s Trust C is a marital deduction trust, which is to contain essentially the residue of the deceased spouse’s estate not allocated to Decedent’s Trust B. (See generally id., § 2056.)

The Family Trust instrument provides that the surviving spouse is entitled to all of the income of the Survivor’s Trust A, and as much principal as requested. The surviving spouse retains the right to change the beneficiaries of the Survivor’s Trust A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
314 P.3d 780, 58 Cal. 4th 412, 165 Cal. Rptr. 3d 476, 2013 WL 6827050, 2013 Cal. LEXIS 10617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donkin-v-donkin-cal-2013.