Estate of Combs CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 2025
DocketA168896
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Combs CA1/5 (Estate of Combs 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 Combs CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 1/28/25 Estate of Combs CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 JIMMIE D. COMBS, Deceased. DANIELLE SMITH, as Administrator, etc., Petitioner and Respondent, A168896

v. (Alameda County STACEY WILSON, Super. Ct. No. RP17861683) Respondent and Appellant.

The decedent, Jimmie D. Combs, owned real property in Oakland. After Combs’s death, one of her granddaughters – appellant Stacey Wilson – claimed ownership of the property based on a grant deed she had Combs sign in 2009. Another granddaughter – respondent Danielle Smith, as the administrator for Combs’s estate – challenged the grant deed in a petition filed in 2018 pursuant to Probate Code section 850.1 The trial court ruled that the grant deed was void due to undue influence and constructive fraud. Wilson appeals, contending: (1) the court erred in ruling that she was

1 Except where otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Probate Code. Because Danielle Smith and her mother, Joyce Smith, have the same last name, for clarity we will refer to them by their first names, while referring to other individuals primarily by their last name. 1 estopped from asserting a statute of limitations defense; (2) the court abused its discretion in admitting into evidence a redacted settlement offer; (3) Danielle’s attorney committed misconduct; and (4) Danielle is precluded from obtaining equitable relief under the unclean hands doctrine. She also argues that, if a new trial is granted, she has evidence that refutes the undue influence and constructive fraud findings. Finally, she raises matters that are not properly before this court. We will affirm the order. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Danielle filed a Petition for Letters of Administration in the Estate of Jimmie D. Combs in May 2017. The trial court granted the petition and issued Letters of Administration to Danielle. In May 2018, Danielle filed a Report by Administrator to Establish Estate’s Claim of Ownership to Property and for Order Directing its Transfer to Estate. The petition, seeking relief under section 850, challenged the validity of a grant deed that Combs had signed more than eight years earlier (850 Petition).2 As amended during trial, the 850 Petition alleged causes of action for fraud, lack of capacity, undue influence, lack of delivery of the deed, voidness due to alteration, and constructive fraud. It also alleged a general section 850 claim based on voidability. Wilson opposed the 850 Petition and alleged 21 affirmative defenses, including unclean hands, laches, consent and waiver, unjust enrichment,

2 In September 2018, Wilson petitioned for bankruptcy protection to deal with debts unrelated to the Property, resulting in an automatic stay of these proceedings. The bankruptcy court later denied Danielle’s motion for relief from the stay to seek damages or attorney fees and costs, but it allowed an in rem proceeding to determine the validity of the Grant Deed and the ownership interests of Combs’s heirs. 2 equitable offset or contribution, and expiration of the statute of limitations. A bench trial took place on March 14–16, 2023. A. Trial Evidence 1. Family Background Combs, affectionately known as “Big Mama,” owned a home in Oakland, California (the Property), where she lived with her adult children, Charles Grant, Jr. and Joyce. Grant lived in an outbuilding in the rear of the Property, while Joyce lived with Combs in the primary residence. Combs had four grandchildren. Three of them – Wilson, Danielle, and Odetta Hill – were born to Joyce. The fourth grandchild, Paula Turner, was born to Grant. 2. The 2008 Alzheimer Diagnosis Over the years, Combs’s physical and mental health declined, and she became reliant primarily on Wilson and Joyce. In 2008, Wilson and Joyce were managing Combs’s financial affairs and writing checks for her. Wilson and Joyce were also present during Combs’s visit with a neurologist, Dr. Joseph Philip Seab, in March 2008. In his ensuing report, Dr. Seab diagnosed Combs with Alzheimer’s disease, prescribed medication for her, and determined that she was unable to manage her personal or financial affairs by herself, noting that she lacked insight into her deficits. According to the report, Wilson and/or Joyce had apprised Dr. Seab of several concerns, including that Combs had memory problems for about a year, “forgets within seconds,” “eats very little,” “refuses to bathe,” asks a daughter or granddaughter to write checks and then asks why they are writing them, displays paranoia, “thinks her children want to put her away,” “gets depressed and [cries] a lot,” and may not be consistently taking her medication.

3 3. The 2009 Grant Deed Aware of Combs’s mental and physical state, Wilson prepared a grant deed by which Combs would convey all her interest in the Property to Grant, Joyce, and Wilson (2009 Grant Deed or Grant Deed). Combs signed the Grant Deed on February 24, 2009. Wilson, a licensed real estate salesperson, testified that she thought she had drafted a joint tenancy deed that would result in her receiving fee title upon the death of Grant and Joyce. Under that arrangement, Wilson would be the only grandchild of Combs to receive any ownership interest in the Property. Wilson did not, however, inform Combs that she was signing a joint tenancy deed.3 4. Testimony About Combs’s Intentions Combs’s grandchildren and Wilson’s son testified about Combs’s stated intentions regarding the Property. Wilson, her son, and Hill testified that Combs’s primary concern was to keep the Property in the family and believed this could be accomplished best with Wilson on the title. Danielle and Turner emphasized that Combs wanted the Property to go to her children, Grant and Joyce, and, upon their death, to all her grandchildren. a. Wilson Wilson testified that Combs stated “[o]n and off for years” that “she didn’t want her house tied up and [that] she wanted the house out of her name.” Combs told her, “Don’t lose my house.” Wilson believed that Combs trusted her as the most responsible member of the family. Wilson maintained that “if something were to go wrong, which [Combs] anticipated

3 The 2009 Grant Deed did not create a joint tenancy with the right of survivorship, but a tenancy in common by which Grant, Joyce, and Wilson each held a one-third interest that would pass to their respective successors. 4 would go wrong, she trusted me to be the person to correct it. I made her a promise. I know what she went through. I know what the home meant to her. And it’s – I would like to keep it in the family. And it’s important to me.” Wilson claimed that she never talked to Combs or Joyce about the 2009 Grant Deed after the signing date. She claimed to have told Danielle about the Deed “shortly []after” its execution in 2009 – a proposition Danielle would later deny. b. Odetta Hill Hill recalled that she was “in the home” when the 2009 Grant Deed was signed. But she was not “in on the business that they were in,” did not review the instrument, and did not think Wilson “really explained anything.” With respect to Combs’s intentions for the Property, Hill testified that: “[Big Mama] wanted to have . . . [Wilson’s] name on the [title to the] house because she [was] just [] really adamant about” not losing the house and keeping it in the family. Hill did not testify, however, that Combs intended for the Property to be owned solely by Wilson to the exclusion of the other grandchildren.

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