Estate of Neth CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 2021
DocketA159314
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

Filed 6/30/21 Estate of Neth CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 DORENE NETH, Deceased. LAUREL GAIL NETH, Petitioner and Appellant, A159314

v. (Alameda County LESLIE M. BYRNE, Super. Ct. No. RP16814353) Respondent.

Laurel Gail Neth, the stepdaughter of decedent Dorene Neth, petitioned to invalidate a transfer of assets that Dorene made from a subtrust of the Neth Living Trust (the NLT), which was a trust created by Dorene and her late husband, to the Dorene Neth Trust (DNT), a trust Dorene created after her husband’s death. Petitioner is an income beneficiary of the NLT, and she became the NLT’s trustee after Dorene’s death. Petitioner argued that Dorene did not have sufficient mental capacity to transfer assets from the NLT’s subtrust to the DNT, and further contended the transfer was the product of undue influence. After a multiple-day bench trial, the trial court entered judgment in favor of respondent, a court-appointed successor trustee to the DNT. Petitioner seeks reversal of the judgment, arguing that the trial court erred by: (1) applying the incorrect legal standard to assess

1 Dorene’s mental capacity; (2) finding that the common law presumption of undue influence did not arise; and (3) finding that petitioner had not established undue influence by clear and convincing evidence. Petitioner also argues that Dorene did not properly exercise her right to withdraw assets from the NLT subtrust and that the trial court’s exclusion of witness testimony constitutes reversible error. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND A. Creation of the Trusts and the Deaths of the Trustmakers Dorene was Clifford Neth’s second wife, and Clifford was the only person for whom Dorene harbored unalloyed affection. During their marriage, Clifford and Dorene acquired a family home and several income properties in Alameda. The properties were well-maintained and a source of pride. In 1992, Clifford and Dorene created the NLT and funded the trust principally with their real properties. The NLT provided that, upon the death of one of them, the survivor would create three subtrusts. One subtrust, the Family Trust, would consist of the portion of the separate property and the community property share of the deceased spouse that would qualify for an estate tax exemption. Another subtrust, Marital Trust (Share One), would consist of the separate property and the community property share of the surviving spouse. The third subtrust, Marital Trust (Share Two), would consist of that portion of the remainder of the deceased spouse’s separate and community property that did not qualify for an estate tax exemption. The surviving spouse was entitled to the income from the various subtrusts and could otherwise dispose of the principal of Share One; the surviving spouse’s access to the principal of the Family Trust and

2 Share Two was as necessary for general support. Upon the death of the surviving spouse, the property remaining in the subtrusts would continue to be held in trust with petitioner as the income beneficiary. Upon petitioner’s death, the property would pass to her descendants. Dorene failed to allocate the trust property among the subtrusts after Clifford passed away. In 2013, she sought the help of a lawyer to create a new trust with her assets. Heather Reynolds was one of several lawyers recommended to Dorene. Reynolds met with Dorene and told Dorene that Dorene first had to do the subtrust allocation. Over the course of several weeks, Reynolds corresponded with Karen Finch, Dorene’s friend, tenant, and bookkeeper, to obtain necessary information for the proper allocation and creation of the DNT. Dorene signed documents executing the subtrust allocation and creating a new trust, the DNT, on August 13, 2013. The DNT was a revocable living trust of which Dorene was the initial trustee and Finch was the successor trustee. The new trust was funded with Dorene’s assets from Share One and called for the distribution, upon Dorene’s death, of the trust residue to “one or more charitable organizations or foundations for the benefit of animals created or chosen in the sole and absolute discretion of the trustee.” The same day she created the DNT, Dorene signed an advanced health directive, an approval of the subtrust allocation, and a form withdrawing the assets from Share One. On or around August 13, 2013, Dorene also changed beneficiary designations on her retirement accounts, designating the Friends of the Alameda Animal Shelter and the Ohlone Humane Society as the beneficiaries on some, and on annuities, apparently changing the beneficiary on at least two from the NLT to the DNT.

3 After Clifford’s death in May 2002, Dorene cut a colorful figure on the streets of Alameda. She took great pride in her appearance, dressing well and remaining fit. She walked a great deal, dropped into various businesses to see acquaintances, and frequented garage sales. She was a gossip and something of a busybody, but she was remembered fondly as an eccentric local personality. She was blunt in her assessments of others and not reticent to share those assessments. The trial court found that the evidence showed a feisty, strong-willed, independent woman. The trial court also found that, over time, these same characteristics isolated Dorene from family members, including petitioner. Dorene spent her last years relying on the assistance of nonrelatives, including Finch. In the end, Dorene’s “implacable independence” made it difficult for even these individuals to assist her or, in many cases, even to be aware of her need for assistance. Consequently, she died alone in a squalid home that had once been a showplace. Finch assumed the trusteeship of the DNT after Dorene’s death in May 2015. At the time of Finch’s death in March 2016, neither woman had created or chosen a charitable organization or foundation for the benefit of animals to receive the trust residue.1 B. Petitioner’s Lawsuit and Trial As is relevant here, petitioner filed a petition challenging Dorene’s withdrawal of assets from Share One, the changes in

1 Finch appointed Malik AboRashid, who was a neighbor of Dorene and of Finch, as successor trustee to the DNT; the trial court nullified that appointment because the DNT did not give Finch the power to appoint her successor. The court instead appointed respondent as trustee of the DNT.

4 beneficiary designations, and the creation of the DNT on the basis of incapacity, undue influence, and fraud. The court held a fourteen-day bench trial. Petitioner’s Evidence Petitioner testified that she and her mother moved to Alameda when she was in sixth grade and lived on the same block as her father and stepmother, Dorene. Petitioner left California in 1979; thereafter, she saw her father three times when he visited her in Florida, and she saw Dorene twice when Dorene visited Florida. After her father’s death, Finch and Dorene became friends. Petitioner maintained contact with Dorene by phone until 2013. After that, petitioner tried to email Dorene, but did not get any response. Thereafter, petitioner did not remember trying to call Dorene. In 2011, Dorene told petitioner that she had a boyfriend named Michael Monahan who was her arborist. Dorene said that Monahan was madly in love with her and he would stay at night in her house, guarding her with a gun. That same year, Dorene similarly told petitioner that her primary care physician loved her.

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Estate of Neth CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-neth-ca14-calctapp-2021.