Estate of Trikha CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2020
DocketG056841
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Trikha CA4/3 (Estate of Trikha CA4/3) 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 Trikha CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 11/20/20 Estate of Trikha CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

Estate of SATISH TRIKHA,

Deceased.

AVERY M. COOPER, as Administrator, G056841 etc., (Super. Ct. No. 30-2010-00354963) Petitioner and Respondent; OPINION SATISH TRIKHA, JR., et al.,

Petitioners and Appellants,

v.

SUCHITRA TRIKHA, JR.,

Objector and Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, David L. Belz, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.

1 Law Offices of Mohammad A. Fakhreddine, Mohammad A. Fakhreddine for Petitioners and Appellants Satish Trikha, Jr., and Sharmila Trikha. Bidna & Keys, Richard D. Keys and Howard M. Bidna for Objector and Appellant Suchitra Trikha. Avery M. Cooper for Petitioner and Respondent Avery M. Cooper, as Administrator of the Estate of Satish Trikha. * * * Satish Trikha (Decedent) committed suicide while his marriage to Suchitra Trikha was pending dissolution. His death led to a tortured decade-long dispute, with 1 multiple lawsuits and appeals, between Decedent’s children and Suchitra over the ownership and proper disposition of various assets. In the dispute’s most recent chapter, the administrator of Decedent’s Estate filed a petition under Probate Code section 850 (§ 850) to recover the Estate’s half interest in a house in Laguna Niguel, certain financial accounts, and other assets held by Suchitra. The trial court granted the petition in part, but otherwise found most of the disputed assets belong to Suchitra alone. Two of Decedent’s beneficiaries appeal, and Suchitra cross-appeals. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. I. FACTS Below we summarize the facts and proceedings relevant to the issues in this appeal. Additional facts may be found in our prior decisions, Estate of Trikha (2013) 219 Cal.App.4th 791 (Trikha I) and Estate of Trikha (Dec. 27, 2018, No. G054909) [nonpub. opn.] (Trikha II).

1 Because many of the parties involved in these proceedings share the same last name, we refer to them by their first name. We mean no disrespect. 2 Suchitra married Decedent in 1985. During their marriage, they had two sons, Neel Trikha and Rishi Trikha. In 1989, Suchitra and Decedent purchased a house on Kings Road in Laguna Niguel (Kings Road). They used community property funds for the down payment, mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, and improvements, and they lived there from 1990 onward. The couple did not take title to the property in their names, however. Instead, title was taken in the names of Decedent’s brother, Sushil Trikha, and Decedent’s father, Bhim Sain Trikha. According to Suchitra, Decedent told her they could not take title in their own names because of certain “issues,” but he promised her Sushil and Bhim would transfer title to them after a “short period.” That transfer never occurred. Instead, Bhim quitclaimed Kings Road to Sushil in 1997. Over the next decade, Suchitra repeatedly asked Sushil to transfer the title to her and Decedent, but he never did. Decedent told Suchitra he would try to convince his brother Sushil to transfer title to them, but again, title was never transferred. It is unclear from the record whether Decedent tried in good faith to convince Sushil to transfer title and was unsuccessful, or whether Decedent did not actually intend or try to recover title. In hindsight, Suchitra believes Decedent never attempted to have his brother transfer title to Kings Road into their names. In her words, Decedent was “conning” her and “pulling the wool over [her] eyes.” In 2008, Suchitra discovered Decedent was secretly communicating with his two adult children from his prior marriage, Satish Trikha, Jr. (Satish) and Sharmila Trikha. She felt betrayed by Decedent’s secretive conduct. The couple separated a few months later, Suchitra petitioned for dissolution, and Decedent moved out of the Kings Road house.

3 Suchitra told Decedent they could reconcile if he ensured Kings Road was put in their or their children’s names. She also told Sushil she would dismiss the dissolution proceedings if Decedent put all their assets in a trust for Neel and Rishi and if he disinherited Satish and Sharmila in writing. Decedent did not do so. While the dissolution proceedings were pending, Decedent transferred $750,000 to his brother Sushil. The following month, Sushil sent a letter demanding that Suchitra vacate the Kings Road property for nonpayment of rent. In an attempt to recover title to Kings Road as a community asset, Suchitra filed a motion to join Sushil as a party to the dissolution proceedings. Decedent opposed her motion, and he submitted two declarations avowing he and Suchitra never had an ownership interest in Kings Road, they were not in the chain of title for Kings Road, they merely “rent” the property from Sushil, and any payments he and Suchitra made toward the Kings Road mortgage or maintenance over the years were in lieu of rent. In the dissolution proceedings, Suchitra identified Kings Road as a community asset in her Schedule of Assets and Debts. Decedent, by contrast, did not identify Kings Road as a community asset in his Schedule of Assets of Debts. In October 2009, while the dissolution proceedings were still pending, Decedent executed a will leaving his estate to all four of his children (i.e., Neel, Rishi, Satish, and Sharmila), his two grandchildren, and Charles Arrieta, the son of his ex- 2 girlfriend. The will omitted Suchitra. Three weeks later, Decedent committed suicide. After his death, neither the original nor a duplicate original of his will could be located. Suchitra filed a lawsuit (the Civil Case) against Sushil to recover her community property interest in Kings Road and the $750,000 Decedent had transferred to Sushil, among other assets. Her complaint asserted causes of action for imposition of a

2 Decedent’s death terminated the dissolution proceedings by operation of law. (See In re Marriage of Hilke (1992) 4 Cal.4th 215, 220 (Hilke) [“[t]he death of one of the spouses abates a cause of action for dissolution”].) 4 constructive trust, quiet title, conversion, and other claims. Sushil filed a cross-complaint against Suchitra for ejectment. Satish and Charles Arrieta, both named as beneficiaries in Decedent’s will, were later joined in the Civil Case by stipulation. Meanwhile, Satish and Charles filed a petition to probate a copy of Decedent’s will. Suchitra opposed the petition and filed a will contest, alleging Decedent had revoked the will and his assets should pass by intestate succession, under which Suchitra would receive all their community property and one-third of Decedent’s separate property. In 2010, the Civil Case (the lawsuit between Suchitra and Sushil) was tried before Judge Michael Brenner. Ruling from the bench, Judge Brenner found Suchitra and Decedent were the “true owners” of the Kings Road property, Sushil was holding title in trust for them, and Suchitra and the Estate held title to the property as joint tenants. Although there was no written title to that effect, the court presumed Suchitra and Decedent would have taken title to Kings Road in joint tenancy “because that’s how they held [another] property.” The court also imposed a constructive trust on the $750,000 Decedent had transferred to Sushil, noting a creditor could perfect a claim against those funds in the probate case.

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