Estate of Lu CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 2021
DocketA160649
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Lu CA1/4 (Estate of Lu CA1/4) 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 Lu CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 5/12/21 Estate of Lu CA1/4

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

Estate of CHI ZEN LU, Deceased.

HAL LIU, A160649 Petitioner and Appellant, v. (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RP-18-916424) CECILLIA DERPHINE WANG, Individually and as Executor, etc., Objector and Appellant.

CECILLIA WANG, as Trustee, etc., A161583 Plaintiff and Appellant, v. (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RP-18-930905) HAL LIU, Defendant and Appellant.

These consolidated appeals arise out of conflicting claims to interests in two residential properties in Fremont (the properties), one located on Madrid Place (Madrid) and the other on Hidalgo Court (Hidalgo). Hal Liu, surviving spouse of Chi Zen Lu, claims a community property interest in the properties. Cecillia Wang, the decedent’s daughter, contends the properties are owned by the Chi Zen Lu Trust. Following a court trial, the probate court found that

1 Chi Zen’s trust is the sole owner of the properties.1 The court also found that Hal must vacate Hidalgo, where he has been living since Chi Zen died. But the court rejected Cecillia’s claim that Hal owes the trust damages for the rental value of that property. Both parties appeal. We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. The Properties Hal and Chi Zen married in 1989. At that time, Chi Zen was the sole owner of Madrid and held title to Hidalgo in joint tenancy with two of her sisters, Chi Hwa Lu and Chi Chi Lu. In March 1993, Chi Hwa, Chi Chi, and Chi Chi’s husband executed a grant deed pursuant to which they granted Hidalgo to Chi Zen, who was identified in the instrument as an unmarried woman. In November 1993, Hal executed a grant deed, which granted Hidalgo to Chi Zen “as her sole and separate property.” In October 1998, Hal executed a quitclaim deed that divested him of any interest in Madrid and quitclaimed the property to Chi Zen “as her sole and separate property.” In October 1999, Chi Zen executed a revocable trust and a pour-over will. The trust was funded with the properties and an undeveloped lot in Truckee. Chi Zen designated herself trustee, Cecillia substitute trustee, and Cecillia as her sole beneficiary. The trust instrument and will both contain provisions expressly stating Chi Zen’s intention to exclude Hal as a beneficiary because she had provided for him by leaving him other assets outside her estate.

1For clarity, we will use given names to refer to the parties, the decedent, and several witnesses.

2 During the second decade of his marriage to Chi Zen, Hal executed two “Interspousal Grant Deed[s],” which contain statements disavowing Hal’s interest in the properties. A January 2007 deed conveyed all right, title, and interest Hal had in Madrid to Chi Zen “as her sole and separate property.” And a December 2009 deed conveyed all right, title, and interest he had in Hidalgo to Chi Zen as her “sole and separate property.” In 2012 and 2013, Chi Zen and Hal executed a series of four deeds, the nature and impact of which became a focal point of the current litigation. A September 2012 grant deed executed by Chi Zen (the September 2012 Hidalgo deed) contains the following language: “FOR A VALUABLE CONSIDERATION, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, CHI ZEN LU, TRUSTEE OF THE CHI ZEN LU TRUST DATED OCTOBER 5, 1999 hereby GRANT(s) to CHI ZEN LU, TRUSTEE OF THE CHI ZEN LU TRUST DATED OCTOBER 5, 1999 AND HER HUSBAND HAL LIU, AS TENANTS IN COMMON the following described property in the City of FREMONT.” After Chi Zen executed the September 2012 Hidalgo deed, she and Hal used Hidalgo as security to obtain a $406,000 loan. In April 2013, Chi Zen executed a grant deed (the April 2013 Madrid deed), which contains the following language: “FOR A VALUABLE CONSIDERATION, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, CHI ZEN LU, TRUSTEE OF THE CHI ZEN LU REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST DATED OCTOBER 5, 1999 hereby GRANT(s) to CHI ZEN LU, TRUSTEE OF THE CHI ZEN LU REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST DATED OCTOBER 5, 1999 AND HAL LIU, A MARRIED MAN the following described property in the City of FREMONT.” After Chi Zen executed the April 2013 Madrid deed, she and Hal used Madrid as security to obtain a $273,500 loan.

3 On May 27, 2013, Chi Zen and Hal executed a grant deed (the May 2013 Hidalgo deed), pursuant to which they granted Hidalgo to Chi Zen as trustee of her trust. And, on June 3, 2013, Chi Zen and Hal executed another grant deed (the June 2013 Madrid deed), pursuant to which they granted Madrid to Chi Zen as trustee of her trust. Both deeds contain language that the transaction was made for no consideration and that the grant did not constitute a change in ownership under the Revenue and Tax code, as it was a gift. II. Probate and Trust Proceedings In May 2018, Chi Zen died after a long battle with cancer. Chi Zen’s will was admitted to probate and Cecillia was appointed executor of her mother’s probate estate. On October 12, 2018, Hal filed a Spousal Property Petition, in which he claimed an undivided one-half interest in Hidalgo and Madrid. Hal admitted that Chi Zen owned the properties “before marriage,” but alleged that the community acquired interests in them because “successive mortgages were paid with community funds” and his name was “frequently” on the property titles “during the course of the marriage.” Hal also claimed community property interests in the undeveloped property in Truckee, personal property in the Hidalgo house, and “[u]nknown bank and investment accounts” that were opened during the marriage. Cecillia filed objections to the spousal property petition and a cross- petition against Hal. Cecillia objected that Hal not only failed to allege facts to support his claims but ignored evidence defeating them. Cecillia relied on Chi Zen’s estate planning documents, title documents describing the properties as Chi Zen’s separate property, and alleged admissions by Hal that he did not have any interest in the assets held in Chi Zen’s trust. Cecillia’s

4 cross-petition set forth causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, and elder abuse, which were based on allegations that Hal made repeated assurances to Chi Zen that Cecillia would be the sole beneficiary of Chi Zen’s trust, and that Chi Zen relied on these assurances by naming Hal the beneficiary of other assets she held outside her trust, including her pension and retirement accounts. The cross-petition also included a claim for conversion based on allegations that Hal took Chi Zen’s personal property from Hidalgo, which he refused to return. As trustee and beneficiary of Chi Zen’s trust, Cecillia also filed a Petition for an Order Confirming Trust Assets. This petition was filed against Hal and Doe respondents who claimed an interest in the trust’s three real property assets. In her first cause of action, Cecillia sought a determination that the trust holds titles against all adverse claims. A second cause of action against Hal for conversion alleged that Hal reneged on a promise to move out of Hidalgo, took Chi Zen’s personal property from the house, and caused “waste” by allowing Hidalgo to “fall into disrepair and squalid conditions.” Cecillia also alleged a cause of action for declaratory relief, seeking a judicial determination of the parties’ respective rights to the properties. A trial date for Hal’s petition, the cross-petition and Cecillia’s trust petition was set for December 2019. Cecillia had requested that these matters be consolidated with a civil action Hal filed against Cecillia for damages and constructive trust.

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