Estate of Clark CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 2020
DocketA159182
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Clark CA1/5 (Estate of Clark CA1/5) 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 Clark CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 9/29/20 Estate of Clark CA1/5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

Estate of DAMON CLARK, Deceased.

ELIZABETH SCHNEIDER CLARK, A159182 Petitioner and Appellant, v. (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RP17881782) SUSAN RADELT, Objector and Respondent.

Damon Clark (Damon)1 died an untimely death in September 2017 at the age of 39. He left a will in which he bequeathed his three rental properties to his wife, appellant Elizabeth Schneider Clark (Elizabeth) and granted his mother, respondent Susan Radelt (Susan) “a life estate of either (1) residency rent-free in the smallest of my real properties, or (2) the rental income of the property of up to the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00).” The trial court issued an order

We use the parties’ first names not from disrespect, but to 1

ease the reader’s task.

1 requiring the disputed language to be interpreted as “anything any other tenant of the apartment would be expected to pay as rent to the landlord,” with a cap of $2,000 per month. The parties agree the will gives Susan the right to live rent-free in the smallest unit Damon owned at the time of his death, located on the Sonoma Highway in Sonoma. But they disagree about whether the term “rental income” if she elects to live elsewhere refers to the gross or the net amount of the rent, whether the $2,000 cap should apply on an annual or monthly basis, and whether Susan is entitled to the fair market rental value of the property even when it is not in fact rented out. We agree with Elizabeth that “rental income” is limited to actual income but affirm the court’s order requiring her to pay gross rents, with a cap of $2,000 per month. I. BACKGROUND Damon struggled with drug addiction over the course of his life. He spent some of his teens and early twenties in the custody of juvenile hall and then prison. Despite this, he was able to stay clean and sober for stretches of time. He married his first wife, Kelly Clark (Kelly), obtained his general contractor’s license, and acquired several rental properties. This included a complex of four units on Sonoma Highway, the smallest of which had rented for $1200 per month. In late 2014, Damon and Kelly separated, and he became romantically involved with Elizabeth, who was his high school sweetheart and longtime friend. They began trying to have a baby together and planned on getting married. Because Damon

2 was still married to Kelly, he was concerned that if he died without a will, his property would pass intestate to her instead of to Elizabeth and their unborn child. Using a template pulled from the Internet, he drafted a will. Damon sometimes had a difficult relationship with his mother, Susan. He believed her to be financially irresponsible and was concerned about her inability to handle money. Ultimately, Damon decided to include a gift for Susan in his will to ensure that she had housing. He wanted to give her the chance to live rent-free in the smallest of the apartments he owned,2 but recognized she might decide to live somewhere else. He devised a gift where she could elect to either live in one of his apartments or take the income from that apartment to secure housing elsewhere. In September 2015, Damon signed a final version of the will that left most of his property to Elizabeth, made her the executor, and included monetary gifts to his niece and sister. It also included paragraph 1.b., which provided, “To Susan Radelt of Fairfax, California, I give a life estate of either (1) residency rent- free in the smallest of my real properties, or (2) the rental income of that property of up to the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00).” In 2016, Damon had an email exchange with Susan in which he expressed frustration with her inability to manage

2Damon and Kelly owned several properties together. Because their divorce was not yet final when he drafted his will, he did not yet know which properties would be awarded to him and which would be the smallest property he owned.

3 money. He offered to supplement her monthly income by $300, subject to certain conditions that included making him the trustee of her social security and retirement income payments, signing up for senior housing lists and public assistance, and not asking him for more money. Damon did not end up providing the $300 per month. Damon and Elizabeth married, and their daughter was born in early 2017. Damon died in September 2017 from an overdose of opiates. A dispute arose between Elizabeth and Susan over the distribution of Damon’s estate. Elizabeth, as executor of the estate, filed a “Petition for Determination of Entitlement to Estate Distribution.” The petition alleged, “[Elizabeth] contends Damon intended to give [Susan] the right to live in the smallest unit of one of his properties without any obligation on her part to pay any of the expenses of the property. Alternatively, if [Susan] chose not to live in such unit, Damon intended that she receive the net monthly income from that unit, up to a maximum [of] $2,000 per month. [Elizabeth] therefore seeks an order confirming this as [Damon’s] intention and determining how [Damon’s] estate will be distributed under Article THREE, Paragraph 1.b of [Damon’s] will.” The trial court held a hearing and heard extrinsic evidence regarding Damon’s intent when drafting his will, consisting of testimony by both parties, Damon’s sister, his first wife, Kelly, and his treating psychotherapist, as well as the deposition testimony of his friend and Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) sponsor

4 and email exchanges between Damon and Susan in 2016, after his will had been signed. In her trial brief for the hearing, Elizabeth argued that Damon’s gift to Susan should be construed to allow her to live in the smallest of his properties rent free or to be given the net rental income from that apartment, to be capped at $2,000 per year. Her theory at trial was that Damon had not believed Susan could be trusted with money, and so he would not have wanted to provided her with a monthly sum that might be spent on things other than rent. Elizabeth argued that by providing an alternative of receiving only the rent after expenses had been taken out, and with an annual cap of $2,000, Damon was encouraging Susan to opt for the alternative of living at the Sonoma Highway property and to thereby accept secure housing. The trial court issued a statement of decision in which it concluded that “based on the plain meaning of the will, the term ‘rent-free’ means that if [Susan] chooses to live in the apartment, she would not have to pay any rent. The term ‘rent’ means anything any other tenant of the apartment would be expected to pay as rent to the landlord, petitioner Elizabeth Clark.” It further concluded that “the term ‘rental income’ means that if [Susan] chooses to live somewhere else, she would receive from petitioner an amount equal to the rent any other tenant would pay for the apartment” “up to [a limit of] $2,000.00 per month.” The court noted that rent on the apartment at issue had been as much as $1200 per month, and that if “Damon intended to force [Susan] to stay in the apartment by limiting her ‘rental income’ to $2,000 per year, he would not have any reason to give [Susan]

5 even the choice of receiving any ‘rental income.’ ” It ordered that “[Susan] has the legal right to choose between residing in the apartment . . .

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