Estate of Bush CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 7, 2023
DocketE079439
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Bush CA4/2 (Estate of Bush CA4/2) 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
Estate of Bush CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 9/7/23 Estate of Bush CA4/2

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

Estate of LERAE BRITAIN MOELLER BUSH, Deceased.

CAROLINE LEE HOLMES et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, E079439

v. (Super.Ct.Nos. PRIN1801843, PRIN1802480) GIOVANNI A.C. BUSH, Defendant and Appellant;

GIOVANNI A.C. BUSH, E079539 Petitioner and Appellant. (Super.Ct.No. PRIN1802480) v.

CAROLINE LEE HOLMES et al., OPINION Objectors and Respondents

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. John G. Evans, Judge.

Affirmed.

REQUEST FOR JUDICIAL NOTICE. Granted. Giovanni A.C. Bush, in pro. per., for Defendant, Appellant and Petitioner.

Bochnewich Law Offices and Peter M. Bochnewich for Plaintiff, Respondent and

Objector Caroline Lee Holmes.

Sklar & Sklar and Bryan E. Sklar for Plaintiff and Respondent Jennifer Haas.

Lerae Bush amended her living trust several times. Initially, the successor trustee

was Caroline Lee Holmes; however, after Bush legally adopted Noel Montes Cazares,1

she made him the successor trustee. She also gave the trustee more and more discretion

to choose the beneficiaries.

Cazares was never a beneficiary of the trust. Under the terms of the trust,

however, if he were successor trustee, he could choose the beneficiaries of the bulk of the

trust corpus — he could even choose himself (although Holmes argues that this would be

prohibited as self-dealing by a fiduciary).

Bush died in a fire. Cazares was arrested and charged with her murder. The trial

court therefore removed him as trustee, “until all matters related to the death of [Bush]

are fully understood and adjudicated, or further order of the Court,” and it appointed

Holmes and Jennifer Haas, a professional independent fiduciary, as cotrustees.2

1 After the adoption, Cazares took the name Giovanni Adakaris Cazares Bush. However, he refers to himself as “Noel Cazares/Giovanni Bush,” suggesting he does not mind being referred to by his former name. To avoid confusion, we refer to him as “Cazares” and to Lerae Bush as “Bush.” 2 Holmes and Haas have consistently taken identical positions in the litigation. Accordingly, all references to Holmes include Haas, unless the context otherwise requires.

2 Holmes filed a petition seeking approval of her choice of beneficiaries. Cazares

— still in jail — asked the trial court to stay the petition “until my criminal issues are

resolved.” The trial court granted Holmes’s petition; it ruled that, because Cazares was

not a trustee or a beneficiary, he had no standing to oppose it. Cazares attempted to

appeal, but his notice of appeal was untimely.

Thereafter, the charges against Cazares were dismissed, and his arrest record was

expunged. He then petitioned to be appointed trustee (and executor of Bush’s estate).

The trial court denied these petitions, ruling again that he lacked standing.

From one point of view, this seems deeply unfair. Cazares had been removed as

trustee because of the criminal charges against him. Once he was a free man, it would

seem he should be entitled to be trustee again; at a minimum, it would seem he should

have standing to request reappointment.

Another point of view, however, is that the moving finger writes; and having writ,

moves on. Cazares had to be removed — if only because he was in jail and unable to

fulfill the duties of trustee; he conceded as much below. Holmes, in her capacity as

trustee, was entitled to choose the beneficiaries. The trial court ruled that Cazares lacked

standing to oppose her doing so. Because he failed to file a timely appeal, he must be

deemed to have acquiesced in that ruling. He is not allowed to undermine it now.

3 I

STATEMENT OF FACTS

In 2014, Bush established a living trust. She named Holmes as the original

successor trustee. The original beneficiaries were all charities, except that the trustee had

discretion regarding the distribution of tangible personal property.

At the same time, Bush executed a pour-over will. She nominated as executor

“the then-acting Trustee or Trustees” of her trust.

Later in 2014, Bush amended the trust so as to also give the trustee discretion

regarding the distribution of certain real property.

Still later in 2014, she further amended the trust so as to name Holmes and

Cazares as successor cotrustees.

In January 2015, she amended the trust so as (1) to remove all charitable

beneficiaries (except that any dog-related art was still to go to the “Dog Museum”), (2) to

give the trustee complete discretion to distribute the trust corpus (other than dog-related

art), and (3) to remove Holmes as successor trustee, leaving Cazares as the sole successor

trustee.

In February 2015, Bush legally adopted Cazares.

In July 2015, Bush made one last amendment to the trust, naming Cazares as

cotrustee with her during her lifetime, as well as the sole successor trustee.

In February 2018, Bush died in a fire at her home in Bloomington, Indiana.

Cazares was arrested and charged with her murder, along with arson and other crimes. In

4 2020, he was released from jail. In 2021, the charges against him were dismissed. In

2022, his arrest record was expunged.

II

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

In May 2018, Holmes started a trust proceeding by filing a petition to remove

Cazares as trustee and to be appointed trustee herself, either as sole trustee or as cotrustee

with an independent fiduciary. She argued that he was disqualified because he had

murdered Bush and/or had obtained amendments to the trust by fraud or undue influence;

and, in any event, he was unavailable to act as trustee while he was in jail.

Cazares’s response is not in the record. He tells us, however, that he did not

object to the petition, provided the trial court appointed an independent cotrustee.

The trial court granted the petition. Thus, it removed Cazares as trustee “until all

matters related to the death of [Bush] are fully understood and adjudicated, or further

order of the Court,” and it appointed Holmes and Haas.

In October 2018, Holmes started an estate proceeding by filing a petition for

probate of Bush’s will and for letters of administration. The trial court granted the

petition and appointed her as special administrator.

In 2020, Holmes filed a petition in the trust matter to give her discretion to

determine the beneficiaries of the trust. She proposed to distribute the trust corpus in

accordance with the original version of the trust, including to the originally designated

5 charities. Cazares filed an opposition, asking that the petition be stayed “until my

criminal issues are resolved.”

On March 17, 2020, the trial court held a hearing on the petition. At the time,

Cazares was still in jail in Indiana. His criminal defense counsel notified the court clerk

that Cazares could not appear telephonically because he was under a COVID-19

quarantine.

On March 24, 2020, the trial court granted Holmes’s petition. It ruled that Cazares

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