Estate of Fox CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 2024
DocketH051471
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Fox CA6 (Estate of Fox CA6) 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 Fox CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/7/24 Estate of Fox CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

H051471 Estate of GERALD C. FOX, Deceased. (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. 20PR187714) GERALD C. FOX FOUNDATION,

Petitioner and Respondent,

v.

RICHARD B. FOX,

Objector and Appellant.

Richard B. Fox appeals from a judgment in favor of the Gerald C. Fox Foundation (Foundation) on its amended petition to probate a lost will of the decedent, Gerald “Jerry” C. Fox. The will provides specific monetary bequests to seven individuals, gives certain stock and partnership interests to two other people, and leaves the remainder of the estate to the Foundation. On appeal, we address whether the Foundation has standing to probate the will as an “ ‘interested person’ ” within the meaning of Probate Code section 48, subdivision (a).1 We also decide whether substantial evidence in the record supports the trial court’s finding that the will was duly executed.

1 All further unspecified references are to the Probate Code. For the reasons stated below, we answer both questions in the affirmative and affirm the judgment admitting the will to probate. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2 A. Fox Family and Foundation Background Dr. Richard B. Fox and David K. Fox are brothers of the late Gerald C. Fox (“Jerry”).3 The brothers were raised in Minnesota after the family settled there in 1952. The brothers’ father, Bill C. “B.C.” Fox founded an industrial distribution business called the Lakeland Companies. The Lakeland Companies prospered and branched into several subdivisions. Jerry had developmental challenges (described at times by the parties as “reduced mental capacity”) throughout his life. After graduating from high school in the late 1960s, Jerry worked in the warehouse of one of his father’s Lakeland companies. Between 1985 and 1987, B.C. transferred shares of stock in various Lakeland companies to his personal attorney, John Tambornino, to be held in trust for Jerry. B.C. instructed Tambornino to pay earnings from the shares back to the Lakeland Companies, which Tambornino did over many years. Jerry owned his home and lived independently until 1995, when he suffered a broken hip. Following his hip injury, Jerry moved to an assisted living facility in Minnesota. Richard, who had become a physician and moved to California in 1989, visited Jerry several times between 2005 and 2010. He found Jerry wheelchair-bound

2 This appeal is one of several actions that have been filed concerning the trust and estate of Gerald “Jerry” C. Fox, his foundation, and financial wrongdoing perpetrated against Jerry during his lifetime. We address requests for judicial notice of court filings related to those proceedings where relevant to provide context for the arguments raised in this appeal. (See fn. 5, post.) The facts set out here are drawn from the trial court’s final written statement of decision, the trial testimony, and the record on appeal. We recite the facts in the manner most favorable to the judgment, resolving conflicts and drawing inferences in favor of the Foundation. (See Nwosu v. Uba (2004) 122 Cal.App.4th 1229, 1233, fn. 2.) 3 For clarity, we generally refer to Fox family members by their first names. 2 and in poor health. In 2011, Richard made arrangements to move Jerry to California so he could oversee Jerry’s care. Richard and his wife cared for Jerry until Jerry’s death in 2017. In 1999, Jerry established the Foundation, a Minnesota nonprofit corporation. Jerry intended the Foundation to be his legacy and to support a number of organizations, including one that had helped him recuperate from surgeries stemming from his hip injury. The Foundation’s bylaws direct that it make distributions to specified Minnesota- based charities. The initial directors of the Foundation included Jerry, Jerry’s father B.C., Jerry’s brother David, and Jay Johnson, who also served as an accountant and chief financial officer for the Lakeland Companies. In August 2011, before Richard moved Jerry to California and assumed his care, B.C. established the Intervivos Trust of Gerald C. Fox (the trust) for Jerry and asked Richard to serve as trustee. B.C. told Richard that he (B.C.) would handle the financial aspects of the trust and that Richard should let B.C. know how much money he needed for Jerry’s care. Richard, Jerry, and B.C. met with attorney Tambornino to execute the trust agreement. Richard served as trustee of the trust from August 2011 until October 2019, when he resigned the trusteeship. The trust contained assets worth millions of dollars. B.C. Fox died in March 2017. Jerry died in October 2017. Shortly before Jerry’s death, Richard drafted a second amendment to the trust (second amendment). Richard visited Jerry in the hospital’s intensive care unit and had him sign the second amendment, giving rise to the trust litigation discussed herein (pt. I.B., post). After Jerry died, Richard began reviewing Jerry’s accounts in his capacity as trustee and discovered that Johnson had been writing checks to himself from Jerry’s trust account. Richard initiated legal proceedings, discussed below (pt. I.B., post), against Johnson and others. In 2018, the Foundation’s directors removed Johnson from the board for misappropriation of Jerry’s assets. David’s spouse, and later his children, Allison Greene 3 and Charles Fox, were appointed to the Foundation’s board. In 2020, one week after the trial court entered judgment in the trust litigation, the Foundation filed a verified petition for probate, initiating the present action. The probate court appointed Bank of the West as special administrator for the estate. B. Trust Litigation and Related Lawsuits The trust, established in 2011, was amended in 2013 to incorporate additional assets. The trust agreement provided that upon Jerry’s death, the trustee would distribute certain capital stock and limited partnership interest equally to Jerry’s niece and nephew, Allison and Charles, and would then distribute the remaining assets, including the trust principal, to the Foundation. After Jerry’s death, the Foundation learned of the second amendment, which added language distributing the trust balance (after specific bequests to Allison and Charles) to Richard and his son (45 and 5 percent, respectively) and the Foundation (50 percent), rather than distributing the entire balance to the Foundation. This alteration allegedly decreased the assets to be distributed to the Foundation by over $7 million. Allison, Charles, and the Foundation sued Richard in 2018 (hereafter, the trust litigation) seeking to invalidate the second amendment, remove Richard as trustee, find him liable for financial elder abuse (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 15610.30), and impose compensatory and punitive damages against him. After initially defending the validity of the second amendment, Richard conceded before trial that the second amendment was invalid and subject to recission. Richard nevertheless sought to invalidate the trust entirely, arguing it was void from inception due to Jerry’s lack of capacity to execute the trust when it was established in 2011. After a 2019 bench trial, the trial court in the trust litigation found against Richard and rejected his contention that the trust was invalid. The court entered an amended judgment declaring the second amendment to the trust void and awarding costs and attorney fees to the Foundation, Allison, and Charles. Richard removed himself as 4 trustee and appealed.

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