Estate of Wall

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 2021
DocketC087730
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Estate of Wall, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 8/24/21 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION *

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (San Joaquin) ----

Estate of BENNY M. WALL, Deceased. C087730

CINDY L. WALL, (Super. Ct. No. STKPROPH20170000427) Petitioner and Respondent,

v.

TIMOTHY WALL et al.,

Objectors and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Joaquin County, Lesley D. Holland, Judge. Affirmed.

Kroloff, Belcher, Smart, Perry & Christopherson, Allison Cherry Lafferty and Rebecca H. Sem for Objectors and Appellants.

Blewett & Allen, Inc., Shari L. Allen-Garibaldi and Jason Edmond Chong for Petitioner and Respondent.

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105 and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of Parts II and III of the Discussion.

1 After her husband Benny Wall (decedent) died, petitioner Cindy Wall (wife) petitioned the probate court to determine that a home, titled in decedent’s name, was community property. Decedent’s children, objectors Timothy Wall and Tamara Nimmo (the children) objected unsuccessfully. On appeal, the children contend the trial court erred in (1) determining that the Family Code section 760 community property presumption prevailed over the Evidence Code section 662 form of title presumption; (2) failing to consider tracing evidence rebutting the community property presumption; (3) determining the Family Code section 721 undue influence presumption prevailed over the Evidence Code section 662 form of title presumption; and (4) applying the undue influence presumption where there was no showing of unfair advantage. While the first two contentions have merit, we will affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS After decedent died intestate in 2016, wife petitioned the probate court to determine a home, titled in decedent’s name, was community property. The children objected, and a trial was held. At the trial, testimony was provided by the children, decedent’s sister, wife, a mortgage broker, and a real estate agent.

The Children’s Testimony

As testified to by the children, decedent was born in 1939. He retired in 2001, and he has two children from his first marriage. Around 1998, decedent’s home was foreclosed, and he moved into a home owned by one of his children and her husband. Decedent was charged a significantly reduced rent, allowing him to repair his credit and save. In 2006, decedent inherited over $44,000 from his father and told his family he wanted to invest and save the money to buy a house.

2 Decedent met wife in 2007. They married in 2008. Decedent believed his prior wife took advantage of him, but he said he had learned from the experience and would not be taken advantage of again. When decedent and wife were married, she moved in with him in the home owned by decedent’s child. Decedent and wife did not commingle assets, and they held no joint accounts or assets. In 2010, decedent and wife decided to buy a home. Decedent took title to the home, as “Benny M. Wall, a married man as his sole and separate property.” And he used $99,205.83 from his separate property account for the down payment and financed the balance of the $134,000 purchase price. During the marriage, decedent’s income came only from separate property sources: pension benefits earned pre-marriage and social security benefits. He deposited that income into his bank account and made mortgage payments from that account. In 2013, decedent refinanced the home. He did not include wife on the loan, and the 2013 deed of trust listed the borrower as, “Benny M. Wall, a married man as his sole and separate property.” The children add that, “[t]his would have been a perfect time to include [wife] as a borrower on the loan and add her to title, had [decedent], in fact, intended to transmute the Property. . . .” The children also testified that the decedent and wife’s marriage was not close. They were “more like roommates than spouses.” They also testified that when decedent died unexpectedly in 2016, wife refused to allow the children to access decedent’s safe. She told them she did not find a will when she drilled out the safe the day after his death.

Decedent’s Sister’s Testimony

Decedent’s sister testified to decedent receiving an inheritance from his father, and that the marriage was not close. She also testified that decedent told her that decedent’s

3 wife had signed a deed indicating she had no interest in the home and decedent wanted his assets to go to his children.

Wife, the Mortgage Broker, and the Real Estate Agent’s testimony

Wife testified that in 2008, she wrote decedent a check for $3,500 to use toward the future purchase of a home. In 2010, she and decedent decided to buy the home as joint owners. They applied for a loan as joint borrowers but were denied because she still had a home mortgage from her previous marriage. The mortgage broker testified that when decedent and wife were denied a loan, she suggested decedent apply for the loan himself and add wife’s name to the title later. She recalled that decedent and wife agreed to do this. Decedent then applied as the sole borrower and was approved. Afterward, the mortgage broker sent a congratulations card to decedent and wife congratulating them on their purchase. The mortgage broker testified she understood they both were owners. The real estate agent also testified that he understood that decedent and wife were buying the house together, though he did not know how they took title. Wife testified that a few days after they signed documents at the title company, the escrow officer called and said wife needed to sign another document. Wife was told it was a normal procedure though she did not know what “quitclaim” meant, and no one had explained it to her. Decedent encouraged her to sign the quitclaim and said he would add her to the title later. Wife and decedent then went to the title office and wife signed the quitclaim deed, whereby she “remise[d], release[d], and forever quitclaim[ed]” the home to decedent. Wife testified that after signing, decedent told her the quitclaim meant nothing, and she was the owner of the property. Throughout the marriage, decedent reiterated that she was an owner and it was “their home.” In 2013, she sold her home from her prior marriage, and wrote a check to decedent for half the sale proceeds, $2,500, plus $100 to

4 help pay for dump fees. She said it “should be used towards the purchase of their future home.” The check memo line said “loan/help.” After the home was purchased, wife paid for improvements; she also painted, worked to improve the landscaping, and installed fixtures. Decedent contributed to the home from his separate property funds, paying for a new roof, a cement patio, and new carpet. They split household expenses, with decedent paying the power and trash bill, and both of them purchased groceries. Wife testified that she helped because she believed she was an owner of the home. Also, her son and nephew rented rooms in the house, and she and decedent agreed she was entitled to half the rent. But for convenience, checks were written to decedent, who deposited them into his separate property bank account. Wife testified that decedent’s actions led her to believe she was financially contributing to paying down the mortgage on their home and was an owner of the property. Wife also testified her marriage to decedent was close and intimate.

The Trial Briefs

In her trial brief, wife argued that two Family Code presumptions should apply, sections 760 and 721. Family Code section 760 provides that property acquired during a marriage is community property.

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