Estate of Mays CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 2014
DocketC070568
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Mays CA3 (Estate of Mays 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 Mays CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 6/30/14 Estate of Mays CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (San Joaquin) ----

Estate of MERVER LEE MAYS, Deceased.

TOBY DOUGLAS, as Director, etc., C070568

Petitioner and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. PR77507) v.

BETTY BEDFORD, Individually and as Administrator, etc.,

Objector and Appellant;

ROY FLEMONS,

Real Party in Interest.

Betty Bedford brings this pro se judgment roll appeal from a judgment entered in favor of the Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) after an unreported bench trial concerning Bedford’s administration of the estate of her mother, decedent Merver Lee Mays. DHCS sought an accounting in view of its creditor’s claim for reimbursement of

1 $83,000 in Medi-Cal benefits provided to Mays before she died. The probate court ruled that Bedford, whose petition for appointment as administrator of the estate was granted pending issuance of a bond, could not disavow her fiduciary obligation to the estate notwithstanding her subsequent failure to secure the requisite bond, and Bedford’s failure to fulfill her fiduciary duties as acting administrator rendered her liable to DHCS for amounts owed on its creditor’s claim. Bedford contends the probate court erred in finding her liable to pay any portion of DHCS’s creditor’s claim because she was never formally appointed administrator of the estate, and the $75,000 she received from her brother in “settlement” of the estate did not represent estate property. While we disagree with the probate court’s reasoning, we agree with its conclusion on other grounds. We conclude Bedford is liable to DHCS because as an heir, she received estate property to which DHCS was entitled by virtue of its valid and unpaid creditor’s claim. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND We treat this case as an appeal on the judgment roll, because it reaches us based on a clerk’s transcript. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.832 (undesignated rule references are to the California Rules of Court); cf. Dumas v. Stark (1961) 56 Cal.2d 673, 674; Allen v. Toten (1985) 172 Cal.App.3d 1079, 1082-1083.) When the case is presented in this posture, we presume the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence, and its conclusions of law are binding upon us unless error appears on the face of the record. (Bond v. Pulsar Video Productions (1996) 50 Cal.App.4th 918, 924.) Mays died intestate in April 2006. She was survived by two children, appellant Bedford and Roy Flemons. At her death, Mays lived in a home on West 4th Street in Stockton (the residence). After Mays’s death, Bedford petitioned to be appointed administrator of the estate. In her petition, Bedford declared Mays’s estate consisted principally of the residence,

2 which Bedford valued at $245,000. The probate court granted Bedford’s petition, and indicated letters of administration would issue “upon filing [of a] Surety Bond in the sum of $245,000.” Thereafter, DHCS filed a creditor’s claim in the probate action in the amount of $83,799.03 for health care services and premiums paid by Medi-Cal on Mays’s behalf. Flemons filed a creditor’s claim for $35,147.36 for expenses related to the residence. Bedford never posted the bond and letters of administration were never issued. She nonetheless filed a “Personal Representative’s Allowance or Rejection” form allowing only $3,559 of the claim by Flemons and rejecting the balance. Bedford also filed a final inventory and appraisal, and petitioned for final distribution of the estate and approval of attorney fees. In that petition, Bedford averred Mays’s estate consisted 1 wholly of the residence, and DHCS’s creditor’s claim in the amount of $83,799.03 “has been approved and will be paid from the proceeds of the sale of” the residence. Just prior to Mays’s death, Flemons had deeded the residence to himself using a power of attorney granted by Mays, and he objected to Bedford’s petition for final distribution of the estate by asserting he, not the estate, was the sole owner of the residence. Bedford petitioned the probate court for an order determining ownership of the residence (Prob. Code, § 850), and the probate court ruled Mays’s estate owned a one-half interest in the residence, and Flemons owned the other half, as his separate property. Flemons did not transfer to the estate its one-half interest in the residence and the probate court did not act on Bedford’s request for final distribution of the estate. Instead, Bedford and Flemons reached a written “settlement” intended to “resolve all claims disputed and undisputed.” Flemons agreed to pay Bedford and her attorney $75,000 and,

1 In the final inventory and appraisal, the probate referee stated the residence’s appraised value was $280,000.

3 in return, Bedford agreed to “release any and all claims known and unknown,” and agreed her attorney would cease all litigation activity. An “order for settlement,” which recites the settlement terms, and indicates nothing about paying DHCS’s outstanding creditor’s claim, was signed by the probate court. Thereafter, Flemons transferred the residence in its entirety to himself and his wife in joint tenancy and used the residence as security for a $90,000 loan. DHCS initiated a separate civil action against Flemons and Bedford (in her individual capacity and as the personal representative of Mays’s estate) for reimbursement of the $83,799.03 it expended on Mays’s behalf for health care services and premiums (Maxwell-Jolly v. Bedford, San Joaquin Superior Court case No. 39-2009- 00221877-CU-CO). A default judgment was entered in the civil action against Flemons for $70,000 plus interest and Bedford in her individual capacity for $75,000 plus interest and in her representative capacity for $83,799.03. Bedford’s appeal from the denial of her motion to set aside the default judgment entered in the civil action was dismissed. While its civil action was pending, DHCS filed the instant petition in the probate court for an order requiring Bedford, as Mays’s personal representative, to account for her administration of Mays’s estate. Specifically, DHCS sought an accounting of the estate’s one-half interest in the residence, and of Bedford’s receipt of $75,000 from Flemons in the settlement. Bedford and her attorney filed reports in response to the petition, to which DHCS objected. After an unreported court trial, at which Bedford, Flemons, and DHCS’s representative testified, the probate court ruled DHCS has a valid claim against the estate for $83,799.03 and Bedford is liable to DHCS in the amount of $66,750 (the $75,000 she 2 received from Flemons, less the fees she paid to her attorney).

2 The probate court also found Flemons liable to DHCS for the entire amount of its creditor’s claim, and ordered a lien securing payment of the claim on the estate’s one-half

4 The probate court issued a lengthy statement of decision it incorporated into the judgment. In the court’s view, Flemons, Bedford, and her attorney all “thought they found a way to get what they wanted without dealing with [DHCS’s] claim.” The court rejected Bedford’s assertion she made the settlement in her “individual capacity as an heir of the estate and not as an Administrator” by virtue of her failure to post the required bond. Rather, “Bedford was acting as Administrator in the estate even though she was not properly authorized to do so.

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