Estate of Barbour CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 4, 2025
DocketA170303
StatusUnpublished

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Estate of Barbour CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/4/25 Estate of Barbour CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

Estate of BARBARA BARBOUR, Deceased.

RALPH CARDINALE, Petitioner and Appellant, A170303 v. (Contra Costa County ANTHONY BARBOUR, et al., Super. Ct. No. MSP21-01093) Objectors and Respondents.

At issue in this appeal is the meaning of a one-page, typewritten will executed by a wife, Barbara, a small business owner who predeceased her second husband, Michael.1 After having been married for 20 years, the couple executed similar wills on the same date in 2002 in the back room of one of their businesses. The question concerns the meaning of Barbara’s will. Specifically, did she devise all her assets to her surviving husband Michael, so he could pass them to his named heirs when he died? Or, did her will devise him in effect a

For clarity and convenience, we refer to Barbara, Michael and the 1

primary parties to this appeal (Ralph and Anthony) by their first names, since some of them share the same last name. 1 life estate and her brother Ralph half of any of the couple’s assets remaining when Michael died. The trial court ruled that Barbara’s will is unambiguous and was intended to leave all Barbara’s assets to Michael if he survived her, which he did, and nothing to Ralph in that circumstance. It conditionally admitted, and then excluded, the extrinsic evidence offered to prove a contrary meaning. We disagree with the trial court and reverse. Applying de novo review, we conclude Barbara’s will is ambiguous. It is reasonably susceptible to the interpretation adopted by the trial court, but also to the interpretation that if Michael survived her, he could use her half of the assets as he needed or wished during his lifetime, but when he died her half of any remaining community assets would go to her brother, Ralph, and Michael’s half would pass (through his own will) to his son and two of his siblings. Because the will is ambiguous, the trial court erred by excluding the extrinsic evidence— which includes statements Barbara made about her testamentary intent, statements Michael made about their joint intent in her presence and other circumstances surrounding the couple’s simultaneous making of their wills and reflecting Barbara’s intent. Upon consideration of that extrinsic evidence—which is not in conflict—we further conclude on de novo review that Barbara’s will did not disinherit her brother Ralph if she predeceased her husband. Rather, her will left half of all assets in the family estate to Ralph if her husband Michael died first, and if her husband outlived her, which he did, left to Ralph half of any assets remaining in the family estate at the time of Michael’s death (with the remaining half going to Michael’s heirs). This interpretation serves the goals stated in the Probate Code of effectuating the testator’s intent as

2 expressed in the will and giving all provisions of Barabara’s will operative effect, not just the isolated sentences the trial court erroneously focused on.

BACKGROUND

A. Barbara’s Will Barbara’s will is a one-page, typewritten document, witnessed and signed on July 2, 2002. In full, it states:

“THIS IS MY WILL. I REVOKE ALL PRIOR WILLS AND CODICILS. IN THE EVENT OF MY DEATH I LEAVE ALL OF MY ASSETS, PERSONAL BELONGINGS, BUSINESS INTERESTS, CASH IN BANK ACCOUNTS AND ALL PROPERTY TO MY HUSBAND MICHAEL . . . , WITHOUT CONDITION OF ANY KIND. “IN THE EVENT MY HUSBAND MICHAEL DOES NOT SURVIVE ME I LEAVE MY HALF OF OUR FAMILY ESTATE TO MY BROTHER RALPH . . . . IN ITS ENTIRETY. NO OTHER PERSONS, RELATIVES OR OTHERWISE ARE TO RECEIVE ANY PART OF MY ESTATE. MY FIFTY PERCENT OF OUR COMBINED FAMILY ESTATE IS WILLED TO MY BROTHER RALPH JOHN CARDANA(AKA.RALPH JOHN CARDINALE) “EXECUTOR [¶] I NOMINATE GERALD FOLLETT AS FIRST CHOICE AS EXECUTOR. IF FIRST CHOICE DOES NOT SERVE, THEN I NOMINATE RALPH JOHN CARDANA(AKA.RALPH JOHN CARDINALE) AS EXECUTOR. NO BOND SHALL BE REQUIRED OF WHO EVER IS EXECUTOR. “I INSTRUCT EXECUTOR TO LIQUIDATE ALL ASSETS INTO CASH AND DISTRIBUTE MY HALF TO MY BROTHER RALPH JOHN CARDANA (AKA.CARDINALE).”

3 B. Family Background and Circumstances Leading Up to Barbara’s Execution of Her Will. Barbara met and began dating Michael in the early 1970’s shortly after her first husband, a Hayward police officer, died on duty in a car accident. Michael, also a Hayward police officer, was assigned to help Barbara with her husband’s funeral. Barbara used the proceeds of the life insurance she received after her first husband’s death to purchase a townhouse and a small business in Hayward known as Bottle & Book, a combined liquor and bookstore. She and Michael began dating soon after they met and married about a decade after that, in 1982, when Michael was 40, and Barbara, 34. The couple operated Bottle & Book as a team and over time bought five other small businesses, including a bar and lounge called Artie’s, of which they were particularly proud. Barbara managed the employees and front-end operations, and Michael handled the finances. They were proud of the businesses they built together. Barbara had no children, but she was very close to her younger brother, Ralph, who began working for her at Bottle & Book in the early 1970’s after completing his military service. Ralph continued to work with Barbara and Michael there, as well as at some of their other businesses, until 1986, when he moved to Virginia. Even after Ralph moved, he and Barbara remained close. They spoke almost every Sunday and talked about everything. They also emailed, texted and communicated on Facebook Messenger. Ralph visited Barbara and Michael in California at least once a year, and Barbara visited him in Virginia several times. Ralph and his husband also vacationed with Barbara and Michael many times. Michael also had a good relationship with Ralph. When Ralph opened a flower shop in 2002, Michael advised him how to set up the books and do

4 the buying. Ralph and Michael communicated “once or twice a week, sometimes three times” a week during that period. And the couple twice loaned Ralph money, which he repaid. Ralph testified that Barbara first talked with him about her estate plan in 1999 or 2000, when she was visiting him and his husband in Virginia. At the time, Ralph and his husband were having difficulty obtaining a loan on their home because at that time, in Virginia, two men could not legally be on title. Barbara told him he “needed to remember that I was to receive half of their estate when she passed” and “that everything would be all right.” She was referring to her and Michael’s estate. Ralph was surprised but happy. Michael had a son, Anthony, from a prior marriage. Anthony had become addicted to drugs, and Michael was disappointed in him because he hadn’t made anything of his life. Barbara had a strained relationship with Anthony, who rarely visited and upset her when he did. When Barbara talked about Anthony, she was angry or upset. Barbara “wasn’t real happy” with Anthony because she and Michael had bought three cars for him and he’d wrecked all of them. Anthony once called the bar and asked to talk to Michael, and after an employee told Anthony he wasn’t there and gave him Michael’s home number, Michael told him not to do that again because he didn’t want Anthony calling him at home.

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