Estate of Hutaff CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 2024
DocketG062900
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Hutaff CA4/3 (Estate of Hutaff CA4/3) 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 Hutaff CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/25/24 Estate of Hutaff CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

Estate of CAROLINE HUTAFF, Deceased.

RITA KAHLER et al.,

Petitioners and Respondents, G062900

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2019-01089519)

VENUS T. MYNATT, as Executor, OPINION etc.,

Objector and Appellant.

Appeal from an appealable order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Aaron W. Heisler, Judge. Reversed and remanded. Law Office of Alan S. Yockelson and Alan S. Yockelson, for Objector and Appellant. Bunt & Shaver and David N. Shaver for Petitioner and Respondent. * * * INTRODUCTION When Caroline Hutaff died in 2019, she left a will (the Will) creating a testamentary trust naming her sister Venus Thecla Mynatt 1 (Mynatt) as trustee and her only child, her son Jason Christopher Kahler, as beneficiary. The Will provides that if Jason were to die “before becoming entitled to receive distribution of his entire trust,” then the trust property would be distributed to Mynatt outright. A year later, while Hutaff’s Will was still in probate, Jason died intestate. From out of the woodwork appeared Jason’s three half-siblings—children born to Jason’s father after leaving Jason and his mother when Jason was a newborn—to claim the property that was in the testamentary trust. The probate court, in granting the half-siblings’ petition for instructions, concluded that under the terms of Hutaff’s will Jason was, at the time of his death, entitled to receive distribution of the entirety of the trust property. Accordingly, the court ruled the trust property would pass to the half-siblings as Jason’s heirs. Exercising de novo review, we reverse. We conclude that, under the plain meaning of the terms of the will, Jason died before he was entitled to receive the trust property because a condition for that entitlement—the trustee’s division of the property into shares—had not been met. Although equitable title to the trust property passed to Jason upon Hutaff’s death, equitable title did not in itself confer on Jason the right to receive distribution of the trust property. Thus, the property that would go into the testamentary trust must be distributed to Mynatt, a result which is keeping

1 We refer to Jason Christopher Kahler as Jason to avoid confusion with his father, Roger James Kahler (Kahler).

2 with Hutaff’s firm and unequivocal intent that her estate be used to take care of Jason and, outside of that goal, to go only to Hutaff’s own family members. BACKGROUND I. UNDERLYING FACTS Hutaff created the Will dated July 18, 1986. She died on March 3, 2019 at the age of 80. The Will was admitted to probate on September 18, 2019. Hutaff was married twice; both marriages ended in divorce. Her first marriage was to Kahler. Hutaff and Kahler had one child, their son Jason, who was born on October 18, 1962. Kahler left Hutaff when Jason was a newborn. Hutaff and Kahler divorced in 1964. Kahler remarried five times (once before his divorce from Hutaff was final) and sired three more children: Krystal K. Kahler, Rita Ann 2 Leilani Kahler-Zatco, and Roger James Kahler II . Jason knew nothing about his father and was never aware of any half-siblings. Jason died intestate on March 21, 2020 at the age of 57. He never married and had no children. He was living with Hutaff at her home at the time of her death and continued to live there until he died. Hutaff had four siblings, including her sister Mynatt. Hutaff and Mynatt were very close. In creating an estate plan, Hutaff’s main concern was for Jason to be taken care of. Outside of that, Hutaff wanted her estate to go to Mynatt by means of a trust which Mynatt would manage.

2 We refer to Krystal Kahler, Rita Ann Leilani Kahler-Zatco, and Roger James Kahler II collectively as the Kahlers.

3 II. SIGNIFICANT PROVISIONS OF THE WILL Three articles of the Will are significant here. Under Article II, all of Hutaff’s personal and tangible property is bequeathed to Jason. Under Article III, the residue of Hutaff’s estate is placed in a testamentary trust of which Mynatt is appointed trustee. Article III states in part: I give the residue of my estate, in trust, to the Trustee, Venus Thecla Mynatt. . . . My Trustee shall hold, administer and distribute said residue as follows. . . .” Section 2 of Article III addresses distribution of the trust principal. Section 2 provides: “When Jason Christopher Kahler attains age thirty-five (35), the Trustee shall distribute to the child one-half (1/2) of the principal of the child’s trust as then constituted; when the child attains age forty (40), the Trustee shall distribute to the child the undistributed balance of his trust. If the child has already attained age thirty-five (35) or forty (40) at the time the trust estate is divided into separate shares, the Trustee shall, upon making the division, distribute to the child one-half (1/2), or all of his share, respectively.” Section 3 of Article III and section C of Article IV, which concern the contingency of Jason’s death, are at the core of this dispute. Section 3 of Article III provides: “If my child dies before becoming entitled to receive distribution of his entire trust, then my estate shall be distributed outright to Venus Thecla Mynatt or if she is not living to Mary F. Correa.” Section C of Article IV provides: “If at the time of my death, or at any later time before full distribution of the trust estate, all my issue are deceased and no other disposition of the property is directed by this Will, the trust estate or the portion of it then remaining shall thereupon be distributed to those persons who would then be my heirs, their identities and respective

4 shares to be determined as though my death had then occurred and according to the laws of the State of California then in effect relating to the succession of separate property not acquired from a parent, grandparent, or previously deceased spouse.” The word “issue” of necessity refers to Jason.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY When the Will was admitted to probate, Mynatt was appointed executor by minute order dated September 18, 2019. Letters testamentary were issued to Mynatt on November 15, 2019. In May 2021, the Kahlers filed two petitions in the probate court: (1) Petition for Instructions Regarding Testamentary Will and Testament of Caroline Hutaff and (2) Petition for Removal of Venus Mynatt as Executor and Appointment of Public Administrator. The Kahlers claimed that Hutaff’s estate should be distributed directly to them as Jason’s heirs.3 The Kahlers contended that Jason had a fully vested interest in the testamentary trust upon Hutaff’s death and, therefore, at the time of his death was entitled to receive distribution of the trust property. Mynatt opposed both petitions. The parties submitted trial briefs, a joint list of stipulated facts, exhibits, and excerpts from Mynatt’s deposition. A trial and oral argument were conducted in January 2023. The probate court issued a final statement of decision and orders approving in part the Kahlers’ petition for instructions and denying the Kahlers’ petition to remove Mynatt as trustee of the testamentary trust. As to the petition for instructions, the court concluded: (1) the Will is not ambiguous in any way relevant to resolving the dispute; (2) the personal

3 A March 2022 order entered in the matter of Jason’s estate determined that each of the Kahlers was entitled to receive one-third of Jason’s estate.

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