Estate of El Wardani

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2022
DocketD079406
StatusPublished

This text of Estate of El Wardani (Estate of El Wardani) 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 El Wardani, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 8/31/22

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

Estate of RAMSEY WALTER EL WARDANI, Deceased.

JANINE WHITE EL WARDANI, D079406

Petitioner and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2017-00031536- PR-LA-CTL) ALEXANDRIA EL WARDANI, as Administrator, etc.,

Objector and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, John B. Scherling, Judge. Affirmed. James Michael Hester for Petitioner and Appellant. Chhokar Law Group, Kimberley Victoria Deede and Gian Ducic- Montoya for Objector and Respondent. Ramsey Walter El Wardani died intestate in 2016 and was survived by

his wife Janine and daughter from a previous marriage, Alexandria (Ali).1 Four years into a protracted probate dispute between Janine and Ali, the court removed Janine as court-appointed administrator of Ramsey’s estate. It deemed her ineligible to serve in that role because it found that she was not a United States (U.S.) resident as required by section 8402, subdivision

(a)(4) of the Probate Code.2 Emphasizing her numerous ties to California, Janine appeals her removal as administrator of her deceased husband’s estate. But as we explain, the court reasonably rejected her claim to U.S. residency despite those ties. Janine sold her home in California and moved with Ramsey to Mexico in 2014 intending to retire there. She remained in Mexico “full time” for two years until Ramsey’s death. Although she returned to California for visits thereafter, she did not relocate or plan to move back to the U.S. until the probate case was over. On these facts, the court reasonably found that she was not a U.S. resident within the meaning of section 8402 and did not abuse its discretion in removing Janine as administrator. Accordingly, we affirm the order.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A year after Ramsey died intestate in August 2016, Janine petitioned for letters of administration. She checked the box on mandatory Judicial Council form (DE-111) indicating that she was a California resident and listing a P.O. Box in Bonsall as her address. Claiming Ramsey had

1 Because all parties in this action share a common last name, we refer to them by first name for clarity, intending no disrespect. 2 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Probate Code. 2 misappropriated her separate property, Janine also filed a $285,000 creditor’s claim. In December 2017, the probate court appointed Janine as administrator with limited authority to administer the estate. Janine was required to post a $250,000 bond and could not sell, exchange, or encumber estate property. Janine filed a partial inventory and appraisal in December 2018 listing a 50 percent community property stake in five condominiums she and Ramsey owned and rented as landlords. Janine’s letters of administration expired in June 2019 pursuant to a local rule (Super. Ct. San Diego County, Local Rules, rule 4.8.1(A)). Three months after her letters of administration expired, Janine allowed her own creditor’s claim, purporting to be the estate’s personal representative. Her attached creditor’s declaration claimed $281,867 from Ramsey’s estate. Janine claimed that only after his death did she discover that Ramsey lived a double life, misappropriating her separate property assets. This 2019 declaration contained several factual allegations that would later be used by the court to reject her U.S. residency. Janine explained that she married Ramsey in 2009 and lived in Carlsbad. Ramsey managed the couple’s finances, although each maintained separate property assets from before their marriage. Ramsey wanted to retire in Mexico to live a quieter life, and the couple began searching for properties in Baja California Sur. Janine sold her separate property home in Carlsbad to facilitate their move. She purchased a home in Baja California Sur, Mexico using proceeds from the Carlsbad sale. Janine moved in October 2014 “and lived in that home full time.” Over the next two years, Ramsey left her in Mexico alone for up to a month at a time while allegedly using proceeds from her Carlsbad residence “like his own personal bank account.” All the while, Janine “was setting up

3 the home in Baja, trusting that [her] ‘nest egg’ was safe.” Janine referenced the couple’s “condo rental business” in passing but did not mention any residence outside the one in Mexico. The trial court approved Janine’s creditor’s claim for $281,867 in November. Ali moved to set that order aside, and the court granted her request in January 2020. It noted that Janine’s letters of administration had expired when she purported to allow her own creditor’s claim. Mistakenly believing Janine still had authority as administrator, the court erred in approving that claim. Compounding this error, Janine failed to serve notice of the hearing on Ali or any other heir, meaning the court allowed her creditor’s claim without hearing from any heir or an authorized personal representative. The court cautioned Janine that her letters of administration had expired and that reissuance was “not a foregone conclusion.” After the set aside ruling, Janine filed a document captioned, “First Annual Report and Status of Administration; Request to Allow Ongoing Administration of this Estate; and Request for Extension of Letters of Administration.” Janine explained that she needed additional time to determine the character of the five rental properties and identify other assets and personal property subject to probate. Acknowledging the delay, Janine explained that estate administration had revealed “financial misappropriations, concealed assets and questionable trusts, unknown creditors and income tax potential liability going as far back as 2009”—all of which “has made the administration challenging and time consuming.” She hoped to render an accounting and conclude her administration within a year. Accordingly, she asked the court to extend her letters of administration through July 2021.

4 The hearing on Janine’s request was repeatedly continued. Citing her shortcoming in estate administration, Ali asked the court not to reissue Janine’s letters and instead appoint Ali as administrator. The parties appeared before Judge Scherling on June 11, 2021 on Janine’s petition for reissued letters and Ali’s competing petition for letters. Following an unreported hearing, the court requested supplemental briefing on the issue of

Janine’s residency.3 Pursuant to section 8402, subdivision (a)(4), only U.S. residents are competent to serve as personal representative of an estate unless named as executor in a will. In her supplemental brief, Ali argued that residency was “synonymous with domicile” for purposes of the Probate Code. Although Ali had been under the impression that she lived in Bonsall, California, Janine informed the court at the June 11 hearing that she had never lived there and that the address provided was her brother’s. Summarizing testimony offered at the June 11 hearing and Janine’s past declarations, Ali maintained that Janine resided in Mexico and was statutorily barred from serving as estate administrator. Citing taxation cases construing state residency, Janine reasoned that residency means the place a person is most closely connected to. She filed a declaration describing her many ties with the U.S. While she owned a home in Mexico, she was not a citizen there and had no intention of becoming a citizen or Mexican resident. She grew up in California; all her friends and both her children lived there, as did her extended family. She had a California driver’s license, voted and paid income taxes in California and filed

3 Without a record of proceedings, we cannot be certain what transpired.

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