Estate of Hessler CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
DocketC076166
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Hessler CA3 (Estate of Hessler CA3) 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 Hessler CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 8/31/15 Estate of Hessler CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sutter) ----

Estate of JOHN DENNIS HESSLER, Deceased.

SHAWNA MASSEY, as Executor, etc.,

Petitioner and Appellant, C076166

v. (Super. Ct. No. CVPR11125)

TIMOTHY WADE HESSLER et al.,

Objectors and Respondents.

This appeal arises from a probate court order confirming decedent John Dennis Hessler transferred by quitclaim deed 22.5 acres of real property into his revocable trust shortly before he died.1 If the trial court correctly found the transfer to be valid, the real property was not part of John’s estate when he died and not subject to the directions in his will. John’s will named his daughter, appellant Shawna Massey, as executor of his

1 Because several parties share the same surname, we refer to individuals in this case by their first names.

1 estate. In her capacity as executor, Shawna petitioned the probate court to determine title of the real property. Shawna also successfully sought a hardship discharge for the bankruptcy proceeding initiated for John’s benefit while he was still alive. After the bankruptcy was discharged, John’s other child, respondent Timothy Wade Hessler, recorded the quitclaim deed to the real property. On appeal, Shawna contends (1) the trial court erred by failing to consider her argument that Timothy’s recording of the deed constituted an untimely will contest after the limitations period on a will contest had expired, (2) Timothy and his sons, Shawn T. Hessler and Timothy J. Hessler (Timothy J.), lacked standing to participate in this probate action, and (3) John lacked capacity to execute the quitclaim deed given his non-verbal physical condition, the testimony of his attending physician, and the fact he executed two conflicting testamentary documents at the same time. We conclude Shawna has not preserved for appeal the issue of the trial court’s failure to rule on her argument that the recording of the deed constituted an untimely will contest. The record establishes Timothy, Shawn, and Timothy J. have standing in this probate action because the outcome determines whether they are beneficiaries of the land under the trust or whether the land is part of John’s estate and subject to being sold to cover probate costs. In this judgment roll appeal, we conclude the evidence of John’s testamentary capacity is not subject to attack. And the issue of John signing possibly conflicting testamentary documents has not been preserved for appellate review. Timothy has filed a motion to sanction Shawna for a frivolous appeal. We deny the motion because this appeal is not frivolous and the record does not indicate it was taken solely for purposes of delay.2

2 Although Shawn and Timothy J. join in the respondent’s brief filed by their father, Timothy, they have not joined in the motion for sanctions also filed by their father.

2 BACKGROUND Shawna has elected to proceed solely on a clerk’s transcript. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.121.) Thus, this is a judgment roll appeal. (Allen v. Toten (1985) 172 Cal.App.3d 1079, 1082–1083.) In the absence of a reporter’s transcript or settled statement, we draw the facts from the trial court’s findings after hearing. John filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy in 2010. On July 27, 2011, he was hospitalized after suffering a major stroke. In the hospital, John signed a will, a quitclaim deed, and a revocable trust on August 30, 2011. John died in the hospital on September 2, 2011, before his bankruptcy was discharged. The parties stipulated John had testamentary capacity to execute the will. However, the parties contested whether John lacked capacity to form the intent to transfer the 22.5 acres of real property to his sister as trustee for John’s revocable trust. On this issue, the court “heard testimony from several witnesses regarding the circumstances” of John’s execution of his will, quitclaim deed, and revocable trust. In pertinent part, the trial court found: “It is uncontroverted [that John] suffered a debilitating stroke [on] July 27, 2011 and that he remained hospitalized until his death on September 2, 2011. It is uncontroverted that [John’s] speech was labored and his level of lucidity varied even within any given day. “A Kaiser Roseville hospitalist and Internal Medicine physician, Robert Bruce Jobe, M.D., testified he examined [John] on the morning of August 20, 2011 for the first and only time for about 20 minutes. Dr. Jobe testified based on his training and expertise, patients who have suffered strokes of the severity of [John’s] stroke would probably lack the cognitive ability to understand documents of such complex nature as the Will, Trust and Deed if they heard them read for the first time. However, he conceded that if the content of documents such as the Will, Trust and Deed were

3 consistent with a plan made prior to suffering a stroke, a patient in a state comparable to the state of [John] was more likely to be able to understand the meaning and effect of such documents, if s/he was having a good day. “Dr. Jobe was questioned about nursing notes in [John’s] file entered later on August 30, 2011, which seemed somewhat contradictory to his own recorded observations. He did acknowledge that stroke patients often have good and bad periods, as well as good days and bad days. “Several family members testified [John] was responding well during the day and evening of August 30, 2011. They all, including [Shawna] described [John] to be in a particularly happy mood and quite responsive. [Shawna] testified she had spent much of the day at the hospital and that her father was ‘fine’, ‘in good spirits’, ‘responsive’ and ‘having a great day’ on August 30, 2011. Family members testified that he was able to whisper a few words that day. “Several witnesses testified that for many years, it was known to them [that John] had always intended Shawna would get the money and [Timothy] would get the land. “[John’s] sister, Rosemary Kouretas, testified [John] nodded as [Timothy] Hessler read the documents. When [John] was asked if he understood the documents, Rosemary Kouretas testified, as did several other witnesses present, that [John] actually reached for the pen to sign each of the documents, though he needed [Timothy] to help steady the pen. “[Timothy] testified, inter alia, the reason the land was quit claim deeded to Rosemary Kouretas as the Trustee of the John Dennis Hessler Revocable Trust, and not to him as the plan had always been, was because he was having tax problems and his father wanted the land to remain in the family for the family to use rather than be seized by the government to satisfy [Timothy’s] tax problems.

4 “Based on the totality of the witnesses’ statements and the credibility of the witnesses, as well as the fact that [Shawna] has stipulated that [John] was competent to execute the Will on August 30, 2011, the Court is satisfied that the Deed was signed and is consistent with the wishes of [John] and that [John] had the competency and capacity to form the intent, and had the intent, to deliver the Deed.” After the trial court received a certified copy of John’s bankruptcy plan, the court rejected Shawna’s claim the quitclaim deed conflicted with the bankruptcy proceedings. Specifically, the findings after hearing state: “Under Section VI.

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