Estate of Gordon CA2/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 2014
DocketB245041
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Gordon CA2/3 (Estate of Gordon CA2/3) 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 Gordon CA2/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 11/14/14 Estate of Gordon CA2/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

Estate of KENNETH R. GORDON, B245041 Deceased. (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. YP011741) ROSE MARIE GORDON,

Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

HOLLY H. REAMER, as Executor, etc.

Objector and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Douglas G. Carnahan, Commissioner. Affirmed.

Rose Marie Gordon, in pro. per., for Petitioner and Appellant.

Joseph Di Giulio and Howard Posner for Objector and Respondent.

_____________________

1 INTRODUCTION Rose Marie Gordon appeals from an order denying her petition to receive a statutory distribution as an omitted spouse from the estate of her late husband, Ken Gordon.1 In November 2001, Rose and Ken executed a premarital agreement that contained a mutual waiver of all rights in the other’s estate by reason of the proposed marriage. In denying Rose’s petition, the trial court made the requisite factual findings for enforcement of the inheritance waiver under the relevant provisions of the Probate Code. The court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence. We affirm. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Ken and Rose Gordon were married December 1, 2001. Ken was 63 and Rose was 54. Ken had been divorced twice, and Rose was divorced once. Ken was an attorney, Rose was a real estate broker. Ken had a daughter from a previous marriage, who is the prime beneficiary of his will. Rose has a son and a daughter. Seven months before they were married, Rose moved into Ken’s Manhattan Beach residence. On November 28, 2001, three days before their wedding, Ken presented Rose with a premarital agreement while they were running errands for the wedding. They had “chatted” about the agreement before, and Rose understood the agreement was meant to ensure that she kept “what [she] came in with” and Ken kept “what he had.” Paragraph 10 of the agreement, entitled “WAIVER OF RIGHTS IN RESPECTIVE ESTATES,” provides for a mutual waiver and relinquishment of all rights “in the other’s property, income and estate by reason of the proposed marriage.” Rose testified that she did not read paragraph 10 before initialing and signing the agreement, which took only a few minutes. Apart from a provision concerning waiver of spousal support, Ken did not direct her to read anything in the agreement before signing it. Rose thought she should see an attorney before signing the agreement, but decided not to because Ken assured her the agreement could be changed at any time.

1 We refer to Ken and Rose Gordon by their first names for the sake of clarity and not out of disrespect.

2 In Exhibit A to the premarital agreement, Ken disclosed his existing assets, including approximately $500,000 of equity in his Manhattan Beach residence, cash totaling $35,000 in various bank accounts, house furnishings and jewelry valued at approximately $8,000, and a term life insurance policy for $10,000 with no cash surrender value. Ken also disclosed his law practice, a 1984 Corvette, a 1972 Mercedes, a 1976 motor home and two boats made in the mid-1970s, all of which were listed as “value unknown.” Rose disclosed her assets in Exhibit B to the premarital agreement. The list included numerous pieces of furniture and furnishings, signed or numbered art work by Chagall, Mirò and Dali, three sets of Spode dishes, a fox coat, three mink coats, a 1992 Volvo, and her real estate business, all without stated values. The list also included jewelry valued at $31,800, a $70,000 deed of trust on a Redondo Beach property, and a $35,000 certificate of deposit. Rose testified that two other assets listed on Exhibit B—a 401K worth $110,000 and an $250,000 investment plan—were greatly overvalued, and that a life insurance policy listed at $1,000,000 was actually a term policy with no cash value. According to her trial testimony, Rose was “financially comfortable” when she signed the premarital agreement. She had a successful real estate business, with “some very high-profile clients at that time,” and an income of approximately $10,000 per month. Ken reported an annual income of $25,191 on his 2000 taxes and $25,905 on his 2001 taxes. In accordance with the premarital agreement’s terms, Ken and Rose kept their finances largely separate during their marriage. They kept their incomes and bank accounts separate, and they contributed jointly to household expenses. When Rose lent Ken cash, she had him sign for it. In 2009 and 2010, when Rose’s business suffered, Ken loaned her money, and Rose documented each advance and kept track of the balance. In 2011, when Rose filed a bankruptcy petition, she alerted her bankruptcy attorney that Ken was not involved in the bankruptcy case because they had a premarital agreement and kept their assets separate.

3 In January 2012, the executor of Ken’s estate petitioned for probate of his will. The will, which Ken executed in June 1983, made no provision for Rose to receive any share of Ken’s estate. Rose petitioned for distribution as an omitted spouse pursuant to Probate Code section 21610. After a hearing, which included testimony by Rose, Ken’s daughter, and the executor of Ken’s estate, the probate court issued a written decision and order denying Rose’s petition.2 Among other things, the court found Rose was intelligent and sophisticated “in business and legal matters” when she signed the agreement; the agreement was a “standard sort of pre-nuptial agreement between parties who wish to become married, but in many respects wish to live separate lives, especially as regards their financial affairs”; Rose “had, or should have had, an adequate knowledge of [Ken’s] obligations and property” when she signed the agreement; Ken and Rose followed the agreement, sometimes accounting to each other for household expenses in “great detail”; during her 2011 bankruptcy, Rose “clearly indicated that she was still aware of [the agreement] [and] intended to rely upon it so as not to have her bankruptcy affect

2 In her briefs, Rose repeatedly refers to a stroke she suffered some months before the hearing to insinuate that the probate court erred by allowing the hearing to go forward. We find no support for this in the record. Though Rose was represented by counsel below, there is no record of a request for continuance of the hearing. Indeed, her stroke was not mentioned until after she completed direct examination and was cross- examined about the records she and Ken kept to divide their expenses. She remarked that “my stroke keeps me from not thinking [sic] as quickly as I should[,] [b]ut just bear with me a little bit.” The stroke was not mentioned again until the second hearing session a week later, when the probate court asked about it as “a matter of clarifying [its] notes.” Rose affirmed that she suffered a stroke roughly five months earlier and told the court she had “a letter from my doctor if you wish to see it.” Apparently not wanting to intrude on a private medical matter for which neither Rose nor her counsel had requested accommodation, the probate court responded, “No. That’s all right.” In its statement of decision, the court accepted Rose’s representation about her stroke, and made a factual finding that “Petitioner has recently suffered a stroke, but is not noticeably impaired.

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