Estate of Locklin CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 2026
DocketB342148
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Locklin CA2/1 (Estate of Locklin CA2/1) 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 Locklin CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/30/26 Estate of Locklin CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 ONE

Estate of DOROTHY JEAN B342148, B345086 LOCKLIN, Deceased. (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BP138469) FREDERICK MARC COOLEY,

Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

TUP 1597 W37ST HOUSING LLC,

Objector and Respondent;

ZACHARY GUY JONES et al.,

Respondents.

APPEALS from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Jessica A. Uzcategui, Judge. Dismissed in part and affirmed in part. Frederick Marc Cooley, in pro. per., for Petitioner and Appellant. Cunningham, Treadwell & Bartelstone, James H. Treadwell and G. Richard Gregory III, for Objector and Respondent TUP 1597 W37ST HOUSING LLC. No appearance for Respondent Zachary Guy Jones. No appearance for Respondent Lynn Jacobs. ____________________

Appellant Frederick Marc Cooley is a pro. per. litigant and an heir to the estate of his deceased mother. He filed a notice of appeal seeking review of an order confirming the sale of the estate’s 50 percent interest in certain real property to respondent TUP 1597 W37ST HOUSING LLC (TUP). Several days after Cooley filed that notice of appeal, a grant deed conveying the estate’s interest in the property to TUP was recorded. Cooley thereafter filed a petition pursuant to Probate Code1 section 850 for the purpose of quieting title to the property. At bottom, Cooley alleged the recording of the grant deed to TUP violated subdivision (a) of section 1310, which statute he claims automatically stayed the operation and effect of the order confirming the sale pending disposition of his appeal from that order. We ultimately affirmed the confirmation order in an unpublished opinion. The probate court later granted judgment on the pleadings for TUP on Cooley’s section 850 petition without leave to amend and issued an order dismissing TUP from the

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Probate Code.

2 petition. The court also denied, without prejudice, Cooley’s ex parte application for, inter alia, orders restoring the estate’s interest in the real property and removing the estate’s administrator for breach of fiduciary duty. Cooley appeals from the order granting judgment on the pleadings without leave to amend, the order of dismissal, and the order denying his request for ex parte relief without prejudice. Because the probate court’s orders granting judgment on the pleadings and denying Cooley’s ex parte application without prejudice are not appealable, we dismiss his appeals from those orders. Further, Cooley fails to show the court erred in concluding that recordation of the grant deed to TUP was merely a ministerial act that did not violate section 1310, subdivision (a), or that the court abused its discretion in denying him leave to file an amended petition. We thus affirm the order dismissing TUP from Cooley’s petition.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2 We summarize only those facts pertinent to our disposition of these consolidated appeals.

2 We derive our Factual and Procedural Background in part from the parties’ admissions in their appellate briefing and undisputed aspects of the probate court’s order granting judgment on the pleadings. (Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs v. County of Los Angeles (2023) 94 Cal.App.5th 764, 772, fn. 2 (Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs) [employing this approach].) Our Factual and Procedural Background is also derived in part from our prior opinion from case No. B322049. (See, e.g., People v. Czirban (2022) 77 Cal.App.5th 1050, 1058, fn. 4 [relying

3 Prior to her death in June 2010, Dorothy Jean Locklin owned a 50 percent interest in a residential property located at 1597 West 37th Street in Los Angeles (the real property or the property). (Estate of Locklin (Jan. 18, 2024, B322049) [nonpub. opn.] [2024 WL 191261, at p. *1] (Locklin).) Locklin’s brother owned the other 50 percent interest in the property. (Ibid.) Locklin died intestate, leaving three heirs to her estate, to wit, Cooley (one of her sons), Zachary Guy Jones (another of her sons), and Cooley’s and Jones’s sister. (See id. at pp. *1, *4, *7.) Locklin’s 50 percent interest in the real property was the only asset of her estate. (Id. at p. *1.) In February 2013, Cooley was appointed the administrator of Locklin’s estate. (Locklin, supra, B322049 [2024 WL 191261, at p. *1].) Lynn Jacobs, as trustee of the Jacobs Family Trust, later acquired Locklin’s brother’s 50 percent interest in the real property. (See id. at pp. *1–2.) In or around 2021, Cooley was removed from his position as administrator of the estate in part because “he did not sell the real property and close the estate during the eight-year period that he was the administrator.” (See Locklin, supra, B322049 [2024 WL 191261, at p. *1 & fn. 2].) The probate court later appointed Jones as administrator of Locklin’s estate, but granted him only “ ‘limited authority,’ meaning . . . that he required court approval of a sale of the estate’s real property.” (See id. at p. *1.) In February 2022, TUP agreed to purchase all interests in the real property at a private sale. (See Locklin, supra, B322049

in part on the Court of Appeal’s prior opinion in summarizing the factual and procedural history of that case].) We, sua sponte, take judicial notice of the prior opinion. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (d), 459.)

4 [2024 WL 191261, at pp. *1–2].) The purchase price of the estate’s 50 percent interest was $400,000 in cash. (See id. at p. *2.) Jones filed a petition for an order confirming the sale of the real property. (Locklin, supra, B322049 [2024 WL 191261, at p. *1].) Jacobs supported the sale, and Cooley’s and Jones’s sister did not object to it. (See id. at pp. *3–4, *7.) On the other hand, Cooley opposed the sale, arguing, inter alia, that the estate owned 100 percent (and not merely 50 percent) of the real property. (See id. at p. *4.) On May 20, 2022, the probate court issued a minute order that granted Jones’s petition for an order confirming the sale and directed him to “prepare an order after hearing.” (See id. at p. * 5.) On June 21, 2022, the probate court entered an order confirming the sale of the property. (See Locklin, supra, B322049 [2024 WL 191261, at p. *5].) On July 5, 2022, Cooley filed a notice of appeal from the order confirming the sale. (Ibid.) On July 12, 2022, a grant deed transferring the real property to TUP was recorded. Jacobs, as trustee of the Jacobs Family Trust, had signed the deed on May 27, 2022, and Jones, as administrator of the estate, had signed it on May 28, 2022. On September 26, 2022, Cooley filed a verified petition under section 850, seeking to quiet title to the real property, redemption pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code sections 4101 and 4113, and declaratory relief. The only claim leveled against TUP in the petition was a quiet title claim pursuant to section 850. Additionally, although Cooley filed a supplement to his petition on April 11, 2023, TUP was not named as a party in that supplemental petition.

5 On January 18, 2024, we issued our opinion affirming the June 21, 2022 order confirming the sale of the real property. (Locklin, supra, B322049 [2024 WL 191261, at pp. *1, 9].) The court clerk issued the remittitur on March 20, 2024.3 On September 23, 2024, TUP filed a “Motion for Order of Dismissal,” which Cooley opposed.

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Estate of Locklin CA2/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-locklin-ca21-calctapp-2026.