Estate of Lindsey CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 2025
DocketD083008
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Lindsey CA4/1 (Estate of Lindsey CA4/1) 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 Lindsey CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 5/27/25 Estate of Lindsey CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

Estate of EDNA JETER LINDSEY, Deceased. D083008 JANE LINDSEY,

Petitioner and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2012-00151045- PR-TR-CTL) CHARLES LINDSEY, et al.,

Objectors and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Loren G. Freestone, Judge. Reversed and remanded. David A. Kay for Plaintiff and Appellant. Hughes & Pizzuto, Laurie E. Barber and Anne M. Rudolph for Objectors and Respondents. When Edna Jeter Lindsey passed away, her testamentary trust had as its three named beneficiaries her son Charles, her daughter Jan, and another daughter, Jane, with whom Edna lived for the last ten years of her

life.1 Under the trust, Edna’s bank accounts and home were to be divided equally among the three children. This case arises because, as is often the circumstance with testamentary dispositions, the best laid plans can sometimes go awry. Following Edna’s death, Jane sought an order from the probate court requiring that the trustee of the trust (trustee) distribute all the trust assets to her based on two independent arguments. She first claimed that the trust was or should have been amended to disinherit Charles and Jan because they pursued involuntary conservatorships over Edna and her estate after she gave her attorney and the trustee the discretion to disinherit any child who took those steps. Jane also invoked the doctrine of promissory estoppel, claiming that she reasonably and detrimentally relied on a promise Edna made to leave her the entire estate if she provided live-in care for the rest of Edna’s life. Neither theory was successful below, and Jane accordingly appeals. We agree with the probate court that Edna’s instruction to her attorney was deliberately couched in discretionary language inconsistent with a mandate to disinherit any of her children. Thus, we do not disturb that ruling. As for Jane’s promissory estoppel claim, the probate court found that Edna’s promise as to exactly which trust assets Jane would receive was uncertain and ambiguous, that Jane’s reliance on a promise to receive Edna’s entire estate was not reasonable because Edna would not have wanted to

1 Because the parties and other individuals share the same last name, we will refer to them by their first names for clarity. 2 totally disinherit her other children, and that Jane failed to show that she lost any professional opportunities in detrimental reliance on the promise. But the undisputed evidence from multiple sources revealed that, at the very least, Edna intended to leave the house to Jane. It also established that Jane’s reliance on this narrower promise would have been both reasonable— because Charles and Jan would still inherit their share of Edna’s financial accounts—and detrimental—for the personal sacrifices Jane made which the probate court disregarded. We therefore reverse the court’s ruling on Jane’s promissory estoppel claim and remand with instructions to resolve Charles and Jan’s allegations that Jane procured this promise through undue influence.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Edna created a revocable trust in 1986 in which she named her four children as beneficiaries: Charles, Jane, Jan, and Gweneth Lindsey. (Lindsey v. Brito (July 20, 2018, D073145) [nonpub. opn.] (Lindsey)). At the time of her death in September 2011, the only surviving beneficiaries were Charles, Jane, and Jan, as Gweneth predeceased Edna and had no children. (Ibid.) Under the terms of the trust, Jan was to receive Edna’s personal property. The remaining trust assets—Edna’s house and her investment and bank accounts—were to be divided equally among the named beneficiaries or their survivors. In her petition with the probate court, Jane claimed that either of two actions Edna took after the last trust amendment on December 2, 2002 required an order directing the trustee to distribute Edna’s entire estate to her.

A. Edna’s December 2002 Letter to Karen Black

On December 9, 2002, Edna signed a letter she and her then-attorney Karen Black had drafted (the 2002 letter). It instructed Black, “If any of

3 my children attempt to obtain a conservatorship against me, I hereby authorize you, or the agent under my power of attorney, to amend the Edna Jeeter [sic] Lindsey trust, to exclude as a beneficiary of my estate any child that has been involved in trying to obtain a conservatorship after this date, unless you and my trustee believe the conservatorship is appropriate at that

time.”2 Edna further explained, “I trust your judgment in this respect, and I believe you will resist a conservatorship as long as it can be avoided.” The conservatorship Edna mentioned was part of a long simmering discord between Edna and two of her children—Charles and Jan—with Jane tending to support Edna. Edna’s husband passed away in April 2000 while they were living in San Diego, California. At that time, Charles lived in Tucson, Arizona, whereas Jane and Jan lived in different communities near Santa Cruz, California. Shortly after her husband died, Edna moved to an apartment in Tucson to be close to Charles. In September 2001, with Jane’s help, Edna moved back into her San Diego house without telling Charles or Jan. Rather than return to Santa Cruz, Jane moved into Edna’s house and lived there until Edna’s death in 2011. Shortly after Edna returned to San Diego, Charles and Jan sought involuntary conservatorships over Edna’s person and estate. They took this step because they had been unable to reach Edna for three weeks after she left Tucson. Charles and Jan accused Jane of “abduct[ing]” Edna in Tucson, helping “unload” one of Edna’s checking accounts, and “shutting [Edna] away from the rest of her family and friends.” Adding to Charles and Jan’s

2 By this time, Beverly Brito, a professional fiduciary, had been appointed as both Edna’s attorney-in-fact under a durable power of attorney and the trustee of her trust. 4 concerns was the fact that Edna had been suffering from dementia and other cognitive and behavioral issues. Edna wrote letters to Charles and Jan, making it clear that although she loved all her children “very much,” she was “royally pissed” that they were trying to “take [her] and [her] activities over, tell [her] where to live, and “control [her] bank accounts and investments.” Edna initially indicated she “did not want to see or talk to” either of them unless they withdrew their conservatorship petition. But by the time she signed the 2002 letter, she had planned to meet with all her children to discuss her wishes. In the 2002 letter, however, she instructed Black, “Should my children continue to harass me, or attempt in any fashion to control the management of my estate or my person . . . you are hereby directed to seek a restraining order on my behalf. If they continue to try to dictate where I live, with whom I live, and how I spend my time, I do not want anything more to do with them.” When Edna signed the 2002 letter, the conservatorship proceedings had been suspended at Charles and Jan’s request, but they were put back on calendar in January 2003. Although Black filed an opposition to the petition, she was also attempting to settle the case with a limited conservatorship to facilitate communications between Edna and her children. The parties resolved the matter in February 2004 after Edna agreed to this arrangement and the appointment of a conservator.

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